Elle - USA (2019-06)

(Antfer) #1

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she did there?) “My mom put all her dreams aside because we needed


her at home.” Music was the family’s lifeblood. They performed Von


Trapp–style when Céline was still a baby. At 12, she recorded a French


song cowritten by her mom and brother Jacques. Her mother then sent


the tape to Angélil, already an established manager in Quebec, who im-


mediately registered Céline’s potential. Hers wasn’t just any other voice.


It was a voice so promising, Angélil famously mortgaged his home to


ensure it reached the masses. A voice so powerful it would drive sales


of over 245 million albums worldwide. And a voice so astonishing and


singular it would inspire the building of its own $95 million, 4,298-seat,


state-of-the-art arena.


The Colosseum at Caesars Palace was specifically constructed for


Céline’s first Vegas outing, A New Day. The show opened in March


2003, ran for nearly five years, and remains the city’s most successful


residency to date, cashing in at over $385 million. When it was first


announced, however, “people thought we were absolutely bazooka


for performing here!” Céline says. At the time, long runs in Vegas were


considered a death knell to relevancy, the fast track to early retirement.


“I was supposed to be here for two months, maybe two years? I don’t


know, I don’t count. I’ve been here a while.”


She took a four-year break from performing to


have her twins and care for her husband before


returning to the stage in March 2011 with her


current eponymous show. This month, on June


8 to be exact, she’ll take her final bow. In the 16


years since everyone bet against her, she’s not


only obliterated their expectations but, most


importantly, ushered in a new era of music’s


most relevant artists—Lady Gaga, Cardi B, and


Drake—settling into Sin City for extended stays.


I tell Céline she is basically the mayor of


this town. “You think so?” she asks. A rare cold


snap has just hit Vegas. “I’m starting to believe


it, because it snowed a lot!” She laughs, hard,


then pretends to be a local. “‘Céline Dion, Cana-


dian! Quebecois! You’re bringing snow to Vegas!


What are you doing to us?’ They’re blaming


me!” Then again, Las Vegans can’t complain


too much. Céline also makes it rain. Millions


upon millions of dollars have poured into the


city since she set up shop.


What Mickey Mouse is to Disney World,


Céline Dion is to Vegas. Hear her echoing


through McCarran International Airport. See


her plastered tens of stories high, gazing upon all as they Uber onto the


Strip. “What brings you to Vegas?” I overhear a receptionist at Caesars


Palace ask a German woman checking into the hotel. “Céline!” she


nearly shouts. “I came all this way to see Céline!”


It’s Tuesday, three days after our interview and Céline’s first night


back at the Colosseum after a monthlong hiatus. I meet the show’s


technical director, Bob Sandon, in the theater’s wings around 5:30 p.m.


Céline is center stage, mid–sound check. “I get wings to fly, I feel like


I’m alive,” she sings, her pitch so perfect I just assume it’s a recorded


track. It’s not. The show starts in two hours, and Sandon is preternat-


urally calm. He’s been with the Colosseum since before the venue was


built and has overseen its slate of productions (Elton John, Cher, and


Mariah Carey, among others) ever since. A New Day was complicated,


he explains. It was more Céline–meets–Cirque du Soleil, with 40-plus


dancers and acrobats on a tricky inclined stage. By comparison, Céline


is a relatively stripped-down affair. Apart from the enormous LED


screens (the largest of their kind when the space opened), it’s just the


singer flanked by a full orchestra and a few backup singers. Much better


for showcasing the main draw, which is, of course...


“That voice, really,” says Zowie from Dublin. She and her friend


Fiona, both 23, are sitting next to me at the show. I’ve asked them what


they love so much about Céline. “Everyone loves her, don’t they?” Fiona


asks rhetorically. “She’s brilliant.” Zowie’s fondness began when she “lis-


tened to her music with me mam.” Dressed in Kardashian-esque biker


shorts and stacked wedge heels, they’re among the younger members


of the audience, not counting a few kids in princess dresses.


For many, if not most, people here Céline is a bucket-list item. A night


they’ve been saving and planning for for months—years, even. Photog-


raphers clad in usher uniforms flatter couples, friends, mothers, and


daughters into posing for pictures available for purchase. In the lobby,


fruity “Beauty and the Beast” and “Encore Un Soir” cocktails sell for


$28 each. (Zowie and Fiona opted for the “I’m Your Angel.”) Want a


program? That’ll be $30, please. This is all part of the Céline Experience.


About the show: Opening with “I’m Your Lady” (naturally), and


for roughly 100 minutes thereafter, Céline gives the audience exactly


what they came for, one greatest hit after another. She briefly stumps


for Vegas, touting its shopping and various shows and “Did I mention


shopping?,” and thanks the crowd, so much, for choosing her. She


clocks miles of her swaggering, sashaying, and salsa-ing across the


stage. What Céline lacks in choreography, it more than makes up for in


the sheer physicality and facial expressions of its star. Céline shoulder-


presses key changes, and she lunges, back-


bends, and squats—so many deep squats—into


crescendos. She whips and twirls her micro-


phone cord, a delightfully analog dance partner.


And she pounds her chest—a signature move—


fist-pumping her pipes to their full capacity.


(“By the way, don’t do that, okay?” she tells the


crowd. “I’ve been doing this for 30 years, and


look what happened to me!,” gesturing to her


nonexistent cleavage.) At one point, during a


cover of Prince’s “Purple Rain,” she actually


sings a guitar solo. The whole production builds


up to the show’s, er, splashiest number. Céline,


standing high on a pedestal above the stage,


performs “My Heart Will Go On,” enclosed by


a curtain of water—two thousand gallons of it


raining down around her.


Back on the night of our interview, it’s late—


11:30 p.m.—when we sit down to talk. She runs


on Vegas time. Surely she needs a reset. Nope.


“Céline Dion is work work work work work,”


she sings. She’s in the process of recording a


new album. “I have about 675 songs, and I want


to sing them all!” she tells me. “I had a great time


when I recorded 20 years ago, but now I really


feel like I can speak up. If I’m not part of my own project, what am I


doing here? Crying at Valentino and spending money on clothes?” Last


November, she launched Celinununu, a line of gender-neutral children’s


clothing in partnership with Nununu. Her aim is to help “young kids to


be who they are, express themselves.” And, according to her, the clothes


smell great. “They have a scent! I don’t know, go to the store—they smell


amazing.” Her oldest, René-Charles, is 18 now. He’s protective of her,


as she is of all three of her boys. “I want them to be good kids, good


men,” she says. “Later in life, maybe they’ll come to me and say, How


am I going to find my right woman? Well, who are you? Do you respect


yourself? Are you generous? Are you kind? Are you aware?”


Two movies about Céline’s life are currently in development. And


on September 18, she’ll kick off her Courage World Tour. The lights will


have barely cooled at the Colosseum before she’s back in front of her


adoring fans. Still, she says that the end of Céline is “bittersweet, because


it is a closure. This whole project started as a dream for René and me, but


you know what? It’s a book. And in life, there are many books. So maybe


we’ll meet again and talk about the next book, I hope?” For now, she has


no plans to relocate. “I’m not even thinking about leaving. I think I can


stay as long as I want, if Las Vegas will want me to stay. I’ll ask them.”


The answer is obvious. Vegas needs the rain—and baby, she’s


worth it. ▪


“IT’S LIKE


I’VE BEGUN ALL


OVER AGAIN.


I AM A WOMAN


ASSUMING


HER OWN DESTINY,


FULL OF ENERGY


AND IN LOVE


WITH LIFE. IT’S


NEVER TOO


LATE TO START.”

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