absinthe
Opening Night: January 1, 1970
Closing: January 1, 2009
Theater: Spiegelworld
Absinthe, the number one NYC summer event since 2006, will once again take New York by storm with a brand new line up of talent from the seediest and sexiest cabaret dens of the world.
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August 18, 2008
Yes, there’s an R-rated stripper and a foul-mouthed M.C. with a lumpy stuffed crotch. But for all its lip service to decadence, “Absinthe,” the naughty circus-meets-burlesque show in the Spiegeltent at Pier 17, succeeds best at its most innocent.
READ THE REVIEWJoe
Dziemianowicz
August 18, 2008
If you can’t get enough of the gymnastics from Beijing, there are awesome acrobats bending and balancing at the Seaport sporting racy getups that would be sure to raise howls from the U.S. Olympic Committee.
READ THE REVIEWRebecca
Lewis-Whitson
September 7, 2008
It won’t matter if the subway doors close on you as you’re trying to board the 6 train and an air conditioner drips liberally on your head from the fourth floor of an apartment as you walk down Broadway moments before a taxi blares it’s horn and speeds past you while you have the walk signal; the experience of going to a show like Absinthe reminds you just how much you love living in New York City.
READ THE REVIEWMatthew
Murray
August 10, 2008
It’s often said that summer belongs to the young. And after this year’s incarnation of Absinthe, the European cabaret circus returning for its third year to a Spiegeltent at the South Street Seaport, it’s going to be hard to disagree.
READ THE REVIEWMarch 17, 2010
There may be some nifty roller-skating going on at Xanadu and some sensual stripping over at Gypsy, but the acts in the quasi vaudeville-circus Absinthe makes those feats — and pretty much all else in New York — more than pale by comparison. This ultra-eclectic show has returned to the beautiful Spiegeltent — an authentic glass-and-wood performance space temporarily ensconced at the South Street Seaport — and even if this year’s edition isn’t quite as successful as the first one, it still provides 100 minutes worth of often-dynamic entertainment.
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