Cirque du Soleil founder hopes the world will hear him read from space
By Mansur Mirovalev, APThursday, September 10, 2009
Cirque founder plans ecology statement from space
STAR CITY, Russia — The founder of Cirque du Soleil said Thursday he’ll be taking some reading material to the International Space Station this month. Not that he’s worried about being bored, but he wants to read it to the denizens of Earth.
Guy Laliberte wants to use his $35 million trip to promote his concerns about the world’s water supply.
“I’m bringing a text that will be delivered to planet Earth … for creating awareness about the water situation on Earth,” the Canadian billionaire told reporters at the Russian astronaut training center near Moscow.
He said the reading would be part of a string of shows in 14 cities around the world beginning Oct. 9. Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, pop singer Peter Gabriel and Irish rock group U2 have confirmed their participation.
Laliberte is to blast off for the space station on Sept. 30 aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket from the Baikonur launch facility in Kazakhstan.
His crew mates said the items they would bring to the International Space Station would be more personal.
Russian astronaut Maxim Surayev said his mascot will be a plush lion that will hang in front of him after the takeoff to signal the beginning of weightlessness. His preteen daughters kept the toy under their pillows in turns to “make sure that the lion smells of home for the next six months.”
U.S. astronaut Jeffrey N. Williams, a two-time space traveler, said he will have a picture of his family and infant grandson born a month ago.
Williams and Surayev plan to stay in orbit for 169 days, while Laliberte will return to Earth after 12 days in space. Last week, he said he would try to persuade his fellow spacemen to don red clown noses; he is taking nine of them into orbit.
Williams said the team will complete the assembly of the ISS. “As we transition into the full realization of the space station the results will enable us to go beyond and leave the orbit,” he said.
The station’s on-orbit construction began in 1998, and six shuttle flights remain to wrap it up.
The station has already become the largest artificial satellite that weighs more than 710,000 pounds (322,000 kilograms) and orbits the Earth at 220 miles (354 kilometers).
The station has cost more than $100 billion, paid by the United States, Russia, Canada, Japan and the 18-nation European Space Agency.
Laliberte will likely be among the last private visitors to the space station for a few years as NASA retires its shuttle program and turns to the Russian space agency to ferry U.S. astronauts to the space station, crowding out places for tourists.
Laliberte has a 95 percent stake in Cirque du Soleil, which turned 25 this year.
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