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Cirque du Soleil founder reaches for the stars

Circus man on mission to bring humour to space
The billionaire founder of the Cirque du Soleil show was Wednesday to blast off on a Russian rocket on a mission to bring humour into the ultra-serious world of space flight. Guy Laliberte, 50, a Canadian citizen, will visit the International Space Station (ISS) for a two week mission as the latest "space tourist" to spend millions from a personal fortune on going into orbit. He will blast of from Russia's Baikonur cosmodrome, located in neighbouring Kazakhstan, at 0714 GMT alongside a professional Russian cosmonaut and US astronaut. "All the work on the launch pad has been carried out according to plan. I wish you success and thank you for the good preparation," said the head of the Russian space agency Roskosmos, Anatoly Perminov, as he bade farewell. The crew boarded the Soyuz space craft under a gleaming blue sky several hours ahead the the launch, waving at cheering onlookers. Laliberte, a former fire-eater and stiltwalker, is taking nine red clown noses into space -- one for each member of the ISS crew -- and has said he will not abandon his lighter side once the mission starts. "I am going with my sense of humour. Even in serious things you need to leave a place for humour," he said ahead of the mission. But on a more serious note, he also intends to use his trip to raise awareness of water problems worlwide. The circus founder, the seventh person to go into space as a tourist, could be the last for some time as seats will be limited aboard the Soyuz craft once NASA takes is shuttles out of service from 2010. He is travelling with US astronaut Jeffrey Williams, a veteran of two space flights and Russia's Maxim Surayev, a member of Russia's space team for a decade who will also be undertaking his maiden flight. When they dock with the ISS, the station's crew will increase to nine before before Laliberte returns to Earth in a fortnight with Russian cosmonaut Gennady Padalka and Michael Barrett of the United States. Laliberte has not disclosed how much he paid for the trip, although the last space tourist, US software pioneer Charles Simonyi, paid 35 million dollars (28 million euros) for the privilege.
by Staff Writers
Montreal (AFP) Sept 29, 2009
Cirque du Soleil's founder, who will soon rocket into space, went from pauper to circus mogul by turning a troupe of ragtag street performers in 1984 into a global entertainment empire.

At 0714 GMT Wednesday, Canadian Guy Laliberte will celebrate his recent 50th birthday by becoming the seventh space tourist to rocket from Baikonur, Kazakhstan to the International Space Station for a 12-day "poetic, social mission."

Near the end of his 35-million-dollar trip, on October 9, he will direct a "planetary artistic event" in 14 cities on five continents.

The social dimension will be represented by his One Drop foundation, which works to improve access to water resources and to raise awareness of water-related issues.

"I've been introduced in a number of different ways in the past -- as a fire-eater, an artist, an entrepreneur, an entertainer, and I have to admit that (now) being introduced as a space explorer is quite something for me," he told a news conference in June.

"I am profoundly touched by this," he said, recalling a television interview during the Cirque's early years in which he quipped: "One day I hope I can take the Cirque du Soleil into space."

An eternal dreamer with a keen business sense, an impish smile and a shaved head, Laliberte is said to be as much at ease walking on stilts as steering his circus dynasty, valued by Forbes magazine at three billion dollars.

From Auckland to Zurich, the Cirque du Soleil has traveled the world over, setting up its big tops in vacant city lots for weeks at a time, as well as permanent installations in Las Vegas, Walt Disney World in Florida, and next year in Dubai.

Its bold acrobatics set in mystical and colorful scenes, coupled with haunting music, have thrilled more than 80 million people under roving big tops or specially-built facilities. Nineteen shows are currently touring.

Laliberte's own winged rise to 261st richest man in the world, with a personal fortune valued at 2.5 billion dollars, was not foreseen in his early life.

At 14-years-old, he left home.

Four years later, with only 50 dollars in his pocket, he headed for France, where he learned to busk, doing stilt-walking and fire-breathing for tips on the streets of European cities.

Upon his return to Canada, Laliberte joined a band of street performers in Baie-Saint-Paul, Quebec, known as le Club des Talons Hauts (the High Heels Club).

Two years later, in 1984, he obtained a government grant to organize a show for the 450th anniversary of French explorer Jacques Cartier's discovery of Canada.

The Cirque du Soleil was born.

It was an instant success, and Cirque caravans set out for cities throughout Canada and the United States, its performers drawing ovations night after night.

In the early 1990s its iconic striped big tops were erected in Paris, London and Tokyo, while the company built its first semi-permanent installation at the Mirage Hotel on the Las Vegas strip.

It was in this desert oasis in 2006, that Laliberte, by now an influential entertainment tycoon and jet-setter, introduced "Love" -- a tribute to the Beatles.

Its launch brought together for the first time in decades former Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono and George Harrison's widow Olivia.

Laliberte said he was first inspired by the idea of traveling in space by the 1967 Universal Exhibition in Montreal: it was the Soviet space pavilion that captured his imagination.

Since May 10, he has followed the obligatory pre-flight training for cosmonauts at Star City and has passed all his medicals. "They told me I had a heart of a cosmonaut," he said smiling.

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Circus man ready to make 'fairy tale' come true in space
Star City, Russia (AFP) Sept 10, 2009
The billionaire founder of the Cirque du Soleil show said Thursday he was ready to realise a boyhood dream of going to space as he prepared to blast off with two professional astronauts this month. Canadian citizen Guy Laliberte, 50, will visit the International Space Station (ISS) for a two week mission as the latest "space tourist" to spend millions from a personal fortune on going to ... read more







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