Indeed, the Cirque du Soleil show is very emotional, especially as the almost too-short 90-minute spectacular starts heading toward its finale. I think that may be what did McCartney in, seeing video of the Beatles -- really exceptionally well edited - contrasted with the entire cast of the show dancing to "All You Need Is Love."
The show - which has a magical combination of acrobatics, ballet, video, and fanciful sets and costumes - suddenly gels disarmingly. Realizing the end is at hand is almost upsetting. You want this one last trip to the fantasy that was the Beatles never to end.
But I'm getting ahead of myself.
The real success of "Love" depends a lot on Sir George Martin, the Beatles' producer. Watching the show, you can only think that none of this would be possible if the person who assembled the music didn't know it inside and out. Martin and son Giles have literally taken the Beatles original recordings and, in many instances, turned them inside out.
Some songs are intact, but they are few. Instead, the Martins have pieces together unexpected medleys, woven in bits and pieces of the Beatles music with other fragments, and then stitched them like elements of a tapestry into a larger setting. There's no song list, and I hope I actually caught all the little references. For example, one of the central pieces is a masterpiece rendering of "Octopus's Garden." The Martins have configured it so that another Ringo song, "Good Night," is playing behind it until the whole thing becomes a nursery rhyme. It's just splendid.
Imagine that the show begins with the opening night of "A Hard Day's Night" segued right into the drum solo from the end of "Abbey Road." These two things ordinarily would have nothing to do with each other. They are followed by a snippet of "Because" and then "Get Back," the song that sets the tone for the show. Suddenly we're in London during the Blitz, when each of the Beatles was born. "Eleanor Rigby" depicts Liverpool in World War II, and "I Am the Walrus" takes on new significance. (Director Dominic Champagne told us he loves the lyric "I am he/As you are he/As you are me/And we are all together.")
Then, quickly, it's the Sixties, all Beatlemania and Carnaby Street: "I Want to Hold Your Hand," "Drive My Car," "What You're Doing" and "The Word" comprise a thrilling medley as the video projections and the actors recall an innocent time.
From then on, the plot - such as it is - doesn't really matter. "Love" begins mixing and matching all the material from "Penny Lane" and the "Sgt. Pepper" album through the "White Album" and "Abbey Road." Each number is a self-contained little gem, almost like a Joseph Cornell box stuffed full of unusual artifacts.
Some favorites: George Harrison's "Within You, Without You" features a bed that rises to the ceiling and unleashes a massive, billowing white sheet that covers all 2,000 audience members. "Lady Madonna" is a stomping percussive number depicted by many pairs of children's slicker yellow boots dancing on tricycles. "Strawberry Fields" takes place inside Cirque du Soleil's idea of a lava lamp.
With no exception, each number is its own little masterpiece. But there are bigger pieces, too, like a wild Dr. Seuss-type carnival that breaks out for "Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite." In "Help," teams of extreme skaters dressed in black and white like football refs are choreographed on curved ramps. This is sure to be one of the most popular numbers, and one that we see on TV as a clip. As Ed Sullivan used to say, the kids are going to love it.
Sometimes less is more, as in a cool ballet solo number by Charlotte O'Dowd performed to "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." And other times, it's all about being awesome as when "A Day in the Life" becomes a multimedia event that culminates in a Volkswagen Beetle (get it - there are two of them, used as metaphors) suddenly breaks apart into pieces.
And there's a longish medley - "Can You Take Me Back," "Revolution" and "Back in the USSR" that finishes with a previously unreleased (no one could place it, and it's not from a Beatles Anthology) acoustic version of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" that is breathtaking.
There are plenty of other songs, too, don't worry: "Hey Jude," "Something," "Come Together," "Yesterday," "Blackbird" and "Here Comes the Sun" - staged with remote-control miniature trains carrying little dishes of light - are all in there. There are bits of "Let it Be," "Tomorrow Never Knows" and "Magical Mystery Tour." And some that I thought were missing - like "In My Life" and "We Can Work It Out" - who knows? Maybe they'll turn up in a sequel.
"Love" is just an exhilarating, phenomenal show; one that will not only revive the Beatles catalog but bring their music to a whole new generation. The fact that it works at all is due not only to the Martins, but to director Champagne (what a name) and his incredibly talented cast and crew. They mix video, light and sound in what seem like groundbreaking ways. That it all seems new and fresh and alive is a real achievement. (The huge theater is actually bifurcated four ways by see-through scrims that are also video screens.)
Now every rock group from The Stones and the Who to the Beach Boys and even Three Dog Night will want a show like this. But there's only one Beatles, and with "Love," they've participated in yet another cultural milestone.