No one mixes high concept art with acrobatics and spectacle quite like Cirque du Soleil, and they are bringing one of their latest shows, Echo, to Grand Prairie in 2026, setting up the big top at Lone Star Park at Grand Prairie from April 9 to May 9.

Like all Cirque du Soleil performances, Echo has a detailed storyline told through a thrilling combination of physical motions and music. Echo follows Future, a woman who stumbles across a cosmic cube that shows her all the ways humanity’s actions affect the world. She and her best friend, a dog named Ewai, go on a journey together exploring new ways to shape the Earth.

“I think it’s important when people come to Echo to be blown away by the performances and acrobatics, and at the same time, I want them to leave feeling empowered,” says author and director Mukhtar Omar Sharif Mukhtar.

Cirque du Soleil Echo Performers inside The Cube.Photo by Jean-François Savaria

The world of Echo is built on the idea that people can learn from their interactions with the world. Humanity’s impact on the natural world and the animals that inhabit it is a key them explored by Future and Ewai. As the name suggests, much of the choreography revolves around the way actions reverberate from their initial impact. Echoes dominate the world.

Key to the production is the cube. No mere prop, the cube is as much a character as Future and Ewai. Approximately the size of a two-story building, the cube rotates, displays videos, and cast members perform on top and inside of it. By showing them the power of connectedness and cooperation, it leads the various actors through trials and expressions.

That’s not to say that the classic Cirque du Soleil experience has been traded in for a pure narrative. Echo features dancers suspended by their hair, slackwire acts, wall acrobatics, contortionists, and juggling.

Cirque du Soleil Echo The performance also features the jaw-dropped acrobatics Cirque du Soleil is known for.Photo by Jean-François Savaria

In addition, Echo ups the musical component by being the first Cirque du Soliel production to feature six live vocalists. Most of the musicians on stage also sing.

“Our most natural instrument is the human voice, and so it makes sense conceptually to use vocals to establish a symbiotic relationship between humanity and the environment,” says band leader Michael Lieberman.

Tickets for the Echo will be available at cirquedusoleil.com/echo starting on Monday, October 27.