Suvarna Garge (Editor)

A New Day...

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

Venue
  
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace

Start date
  
25 March 2003 (2003-03-25)

End date
  
15 December 2007 (2007-12-15)

Box office
  
US $400 million ($462.01 million in 2017 dollars)

A New Day... was a Las Vegas residency show performed by Canadian singer Celine Dion at the 4,000-seat Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. It was created and directed by Daniel Herrera (known for his work with Cirque du Soleil) and premiered on 25 March 2003. 90-minute event, A New Day... introduced a new form of theatrical entertainment, a fusion of song, performance art, innovative stage craft and state-of-the-art technology. Dion was originally contracted for three years (Dion received about $100 million, plus 50 percent of the profits during the three-year contract), however, due to its immediate success, the show continued for an additional two years. A New Day... ended on 15 December 2007, after a 5-year run of more than 700 shows and 3 million spectators. It reached one of the highest concert grosses in music history, grossing over $400,000,000 in its entire run.

Contents

Dion returned to Las Vegas on 15 March 2011 to perform her new show, "Celine".

Background and creation

The original inspiration for the show occurred when Dion and her husband René Angélil visited Las Vegas in 2000, at a time when she was taking a break to start a family, and they watched a performance of O by Cirque du Soleil at the Bellagio. Dion was so moved and impressed by O that she insisted on going backstage afterwards to get to know the performers. Franco Dragone in turn heard about Dion's favorable reception of his work, and several weeks later, wrote a letter to them to put forth the idea of an artistic collaboration. Angelil called Dragone, they arranged an in-person meeting, and A New Day... was the result.

Dion initially intended for the show to be named Muse, but the band of the same name owned worldwide performing rights. Dion offered $50,000 for the rights, but the band declined, with lead singer Matthew Bellamy explaining that he didn't want people to think they were Celine Dion's backup act.

The Colosseum venue was built using fast-track construction processes in only about 140 days. The stage was designed to slope upward at 5.7 degrees away from the audience, to provide the best acoustics possible in a circular theatre. The other purpose of the sloped stage was to show lighting details, designs, and textures of the stage for Dion's show. This proved extremely hard on the dancers' bodies, and a few were forced to leave the show early as a result of their injuries.

The original plan for the stage backdrop/scenery was to simply use a giant video projector, but when the lighting designer, Yves Aucoin, pointed out that this would create unacceptable shadows when dancers ran in front of it, Angelil went back to Phil Anschutz, whose AEG Live was underwriting the production, and persuaded him to contribute an extra $10 million for the construction of the largest indoor LED screen in North America. The LED Screen was produced by Mitsubishi Diamond Vision LED Screens. This was a HDTV LED Screen Installation with a 8mm Display "Dot Pitch". The screen consisted of many separate LED panels put together.

Celine and her family moved to a house in Lake Las Vegas, located in Henderson, Nevada where they lived during the five years of the show.

Critical reception

The year the show opened, A New Day... received mostly mixed reviews in the press, commenting on how there was not enough of a balance between concert and theater. In TheaterMania.com, an article by Christine Westley praised the sets but wrote that Dion's performance was "inconsequential at best... The most uncomfortable moments come when the music stops, the dancers disappear, and it's just Dion and her audience. This is when the show's split personality truly emerges: Dragone's alternate world is gone and now we have a Celine Dion concert, during which the star attempts witty banter as her fans scream out the mandatory declarations "We love you, Celine!" and then hold their breath, waiting for her to stop talking and start singing again."

Phil Gallo of Variety praised the sets like the former article, but criticized choices in covers. He stated, "Her run through a nostalgic trio — Etta James’ first hit, 'At Last,' Peggy Lee’s version of 'Fever' and the Frank Sinatra-phrased 'I’ve Got the World on a String' — magnified her lack of soulfulness, but they did display her capacity for mimicry: She phrases everything exactly as her predecessors did. For 'First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,' it appeared Dion and her musical director Claude (Mego) Lemay had the softness of Roberta Flack’s original in mind. But they then go out on a bizarre limb, progressively bloating the arrangement and her vocal interpretation. Worse yet, Dion ascends 70 feet into the heavens with dancers all around her. Nice effect, but another song would be more appropriate for it.... It’s conceivable that future audiences will have more rapport with Dion and her music than opening night’s high rollers and invited guests. Dion never looked like she was struggling, but if she didn’t ask for audience participation, she wasn’t going to get any anyway."

In the documentary, A New Day... The Secrets, included as a bonus in the Live in Las Vegas: A New Day..., Dion and Dragone commented on making changes to the show through the years to include more appearances of the band members, or to change Dion's look to make it more like what fans expected.

The year when A New Day... was going to close, Mike Weatherford of Las Vegas Review-Journal wrote a positive review. He stated how Dion "...grew into 'A New Day' over the years, and for better or worse the show evolved into more of the diva showcase people expected at the outset: an upscale pop show with some artsy flourishes, not the swing-for-the fences collaboration with Cirque du Soleil director Franco Dragone that often tried too hard. Some early mistakes disappeared quickly. It's been a long time since Dion flew on a harness rigging, or dressed up like the "Pat" character on 'Saturday Night Live,' with slicked-back hair and hitched-up, man-boy suspenders. Other changes replaced the audacious with safe and sure-footed, but more ordinary choices. The show now opens with—wouldya believe it? -- the title song 'A New Day' instead of the solitary, a capella take on "Nature Boy." The standards "Fever" and "At Last" were replaced in May 2006 with a now-common tech trick, splicing in Frank Sinatra to help croon 'All the Way.' And the homestretch now celebrates the cast as a bonded unit with the Ike & Tina Turner classic 'River Deep—Mountain High.' Dragone would have found it cheesy back in '03. Now, he probably realizes the show needed an energy that had been stifled in its overproduced infancy. The world's largest hi-def screen no longer steals the show as it did before Best Buy shoppers knew the difference between a 720p and 1080p TV. But Dragone's elegant spectacle still makes the jaw drop now and then."

Broadcasts and recordings

The originally scheduled DVD release date was postponed because of changes and improvements made to the show since the initial filming. Instead, a live CD was released in June 2004.A New Day... was re-shot in high-definition during the 17–21 January 2007 week and released on DVD on 7 December 2007 and on Blu-ray Disc on 5 February 2008. The two disc set, which contains more than 5 hours of never-before seen footage, including the concert and three exclusive documentaries: Because You Loved Me (A Tribute to the Fans), A New Day: All Access and A New Day: the Secrets, became very successful on the music DVD charts around the world.

According to the Quebec press, Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... was completely sold-out in the province less than a few hours after its release. In addition, Dion made history on 18 January 2008 when Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... became the only music DVD to be certified triple diamond in Canada, selling over 300,000 units. Only five other DVDs have ever reached double diamond status in Canada. Dion's DVD also garnered the largest debut in Nielsen SoundScan history for a DVD-only release, with over 70,000 copies sold in its first week, which is something that has never occurred before in Canadian music history. Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... held the number 1 position on the Music DVD Chart in Canada for many weeks after its release. Outside Canada, the DVD peaked at number 1 in the United States, United Kingdom, France, Japan, Netherlands, Belgium, Denmark, New Zealand and Estonia. It reached number 2 in Portugal and Sweden, number 3 in Argentina, Australia, Ireland and Greece, number 4 in Austria, number 6 in Italy and number 7 in Czech Republic. Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... also debuted in the top 10 in Finland and Germany. Nearly 500,000 copies of the DVD were sold worldwide in its first week of release. Live in Las Vegas - A New Day... was certified 3x diamond in Canada, diamond in France, 4x platinum in Australia, platinum in Brazil, Portugal, Argentina and New Zealand, and gold in the Netherlands and Belgium. In Japan, it sold 30,000 copies during the first three months of its release. As of 26 September 2010, the DVD has sold 433,000 copies in the U.S. and has been certified 7x platinum (it is now eligible for 8x platinum after selling 400,000 copies).[16] According to Billboard, the DVD was the third best-selling music DVD of 2008 in the U.S. and the best-selling by a female artist.[17] At the end of 2009, the DVD was still charting in the top 10, being the tenth best-selling DVD in the U.S.

Boxscore

  • Pollstar's "Top 100 Tours 2003": #2
  • Total Gross: US $80.5 million
  • Total Attendance: 593,120
  • No. of shows: 145
  • Pollstar's "Top 100 Tours 2004": #2
  • Total Gross: US $80.4 million
  • Total Attendance: 589,494
  • No. of shows: 154
  • Pollstar's "Top 100 Tours 2005": #3
  • Total Gross: US $81.3 million
  • Total Attendance: 597,632
  • No. of shows: 155
  • Pollstar's "Top 100 Tours 2006": #6
  • Total Gross: US $78.1 million
  • Total Attendance: 577,095
  • No. of shows: 147
  • Pollstar's "Top 100 Tours 2007": #4
  • Total Gross: US $65.3 million
  • Total Attendance: 462,616
  • No. of shows: 113
  • Total

  • Total Gross: US $400 million
  • Total Attendance: 2,819,957
  • No. of shows: 714
  • Personnel

  • Director: Franco Dragone
  • Associate Director: Pavel Brun
  • Musical Director: Claude (Mego) Lemay
  • Set Designer and Image Creator: Michel Crête
  • Lighting Designer: Yves (Lapin) Aucoin
  • Sound Designer: Denis Savage
  • Projection Content Designer: Dirk Decloedt
  • Costume Design: Annie Horth, Dominique Lemieux, Seble Maaza, Richard Ruiz
  • Choreographer: Mia Michaels
  • White Character: Elijah Brown
  • Dance Captains :Deon Ridley,Tina Cannon, Lavert Benefield,Andrea Ziegler
  • Band

  • Conductor and Piano: Claude (Mego) Lemay
  • Violin: Jean-Sebastien Carré
  • Guitars: André Coutu
  • Percussion: Paul Picard (till 2006), Nannette Fortier (joined in 2007)
  • Keyboards: Yves Frulla
  • Bass: Marc Langis
  • Drums: Dominique Messier
  • Cello: Julie McInnes
  • Background Vocals, Cello and Tin Whistle: Élise Duguay
  • Background Vocals: Mary-Lou Gauthier, Barnev Valsaint
  • References

    A New Day... Wikipedia