KOOZA by Cirque du Soleil

Cirque du Soleil returns with their critically acclaimed production

AUCKLAND
AUCKLAND
Alexandra Park
Auckland
16 February - 17 March
+ NEW DATES ADDED
16 February - 17 March
+ NEW DATES ADDED
$69.00 - $317.00*
VIP, Premium, PL1, PL2 & PL3

New dates: 5 - 17 March
Child, Senior and Student tickets available

*Additional fees including Booking, Credit Card & Handling charges may be levied at purchase. Tickets are subject to availability which must be confirmed with the ticket retailer.

Cirque du Soleil rediscovers its origins with the company’s first Big Top show since Totem in 2014. A return to the intimate and fundamental human elements of circus, KOOZA combines thrilling acrobatic performance with the art of clowning. We follow The Innocent as he takes a journey of self-discovery through a comic kingdom of eccentric characters, electrifying thrills and out-of-the-box surprises.

Presented in a colourful mélange, KOOZA springs open like a bejewelled toy box to capture the audience’s imagination and set their pulse racing. Sheer human effort – performance in its rawest, purest form – is showcased in all its splendour and fragility.

The international cast of 50 acrobats, musicians, singers and actors present heart-stopping feats and laugh-out-loud antics to a live soundtrack fusion of jazz, funk and Bollywood beats.

"KOOZA is a show that blends, almost to perfection, its subcontinental sounds, its stunning lighting and costumes with theatrical ingenuity and acrobatic wonder."

THE INDEPENDENT, LONDON

"... a thrilling spectacle jam-packed with white-knuckle acrobatic moments."

LOS ANGELES TIMES

“KOOZA, a back-to-basics affair, presents the usual rubbery contortionists, fearless tightrope walkers and other gravity-defying daredevils. But what is special about this new production is that Cirque introduces some carefully choreographed chaos and old-fashioned sideshow spark… the real pleasures are the genuinely funny clowns.”

THE NEW YORK TIMES

“… my heart stopped, I held my breath and even stifled a gasp.”

THE DAILY MAIL, UK