A fire-breather's gamble launches Cirque du Soleil in Baie-Saint-Paul.

A former fire-breather co-founded a circus with no animals; just humans, music, and a big top named for the sun.
Guy Laliberté, a former fire-breather and accordion player, co-founded Cirque du Soleil with Gilles Ste-Croix on 16 June 1984. The company grew out of Le Club des Talons Hauts, a street performance troupe based in Baie-Saint-Paul, Quebec. Their first production, 'Le Grand Tour', was staged as part of the 450th anniversary celebrations of Jacques Cartier's arrival in Canada, funded by a Quebec government grant. The name, meaning 'Circus of the Sun', was chosen by Laliberté because, as he later explained, the sun symbolised youth, energy, and radiant force. From the start, there were no animals. Just humans, music, and a blue-and-yellow big top.

















