Human Nature Live Show

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Human Nature Live Show  is the world's largest production dedicated to  Michael Jackson . It's an immersive musical project that began over 13 years ago. After a meticulous search for talented musicians, dancers, and backing vocalists, and finding a unique frontman who could recreate the illusion of Michael on stage, and after performing on the stages of the greatest theaters in Italy and Europe, they have been recognized as the best tribute to the King of Pop in the world and have even received praise for their work from the Jackson family... The most realistic show ever returns to the stage!

The show faithfully recreates  the sound , sets, and choreography that made the  King of Pop  the most famous artist in the world; he returns more exciting than ever with a tour of Italy's most important theaters, with the exclusive participation of the great frontman and Michael Jackson impersonator,  Miguel Concha . An artist who has never ceased to thrill entire generations.

Human Nature Live Show  is an unparalleled musical project, which has engaged thousands of fans, demonstrating that reality takes shape when, despite obstacles, we don't stop believing in our dreams.

Program and cast

Teatro dal Verme

The Teatro Dal Verme is a theatre in Milan, Italy located on the Via San Giovanni sul Muro, on the site of the former private theatre the Politeama Ciniselli. It was designed by Giuseppe Pestagalli to a commission from Count Francesco Dal Verme, and was used primarily for plays and opera performances throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries. Today, the theatre is no longer used for opera, and is a venue for concerts, plays and dance performances, as well as exhibitions and conferences.

The original 3,000-seat theatre, surmounted by a large cupola, was constructed in the traditional horseshoe shape, with two tiers of boxes and a large gallery (or loggione) which alone contained more than 1000 seats. It opened on September 14, 1872 with a production of Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots and soon established itself as one of Italy's most important opera houses. During its "golden years", the theatre saw the world premieres of Puccini's Le Villi (May 31, 1884); Leoncavallo's Pagliacci (May 21, 1892) and I Medici (November 9, 1893); and Cowen's Signa (November 12, 1893). It also saw the Italian premiere of Lehár's The Merry Widow (April 27, 1907).

By the 1930s, the theatre was mainly being used as a cinema. It was then severely damaged by American aerial bombardment during World War II, after which its magnificent central cupola, which had survived the bombing, was stripped of all its metal parts by the occupying German army. It was partially rebuilt in 1946, and for a period in the 1950s it was used for the performance of musicals. It then reverted to a cinema and a political conference hall.

In 1991, the theatre's interior underwent a major restructuring and renovation project which was completed in 1998. It now has a large modern auditorium, the Sala Grande, with 1420 seats, a smaller performing space known as the Sala Piccola, with 200 seats, and a space for exhibitions and conferences, the Sala Terrazzo. Since September 2001, it has been administered

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