Cirque du Burlesque Berlin show ticket

REVIEW · BERLIN

Cirque du Burlesque Berlin show ticket

  • 4.3259 reviews
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  • From $21
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Operated by Lieschen Mueller Bar · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Neon circus hits right in Berlin-Mitte. At Lieschen Mueller beneath the Berlin TV Tower, you get burlesque, acrobatics, comedy, and neon-style showmanship in the thick of Alexanderplatz. It’s an easy night to pair with sightseeing, because you’re already in a major transit hub.

I like the sheer variety of the lineup. One ticket lets you experience classic burlesque mixed with pole dancing, boylesque energy, comedy beats, and neon-themed segments, with artists from Berlin bringing that club-scene attitude to the stage.

I also like the extras before the lights drop. You’re in a real cocktail bar with 150+ cocktail creations, Berlin-inspired food, and an in-house pastry shop for sweet breaks. One consideration: the venue can feel tight, and some seats (or couples placed at the bar area) may mean a less-than-perfect view of the stage.

Key points to know before you go

  • Under the TV tower at Alexanderplatz: Find it fast once you’re at the S-Bahn and U-Bahn hub
  • 150+ cocktail creations: Order and pace yourself, because the vibe gets social quickly
  • Changing performers and acts: You’ll see a mix of burlesque, acrobatics, comedy, pole, and neon
  • A real afterparty: After the main show, you can keep the night going one floor up
  • Small-room energy: Expect packed seating and occasional view trade-offs

A Night Under the TV Tower: Where Cirque du Burlesque Happens

This show is staged at Lieschen Mueller Bar, right under the Berlin TV Tower on Alexanderplatz. That location matters more than you might think. You’re not commuting across town for a themed performance; you’re stepping into Berlin’s busiest district and letting the evening unfold there.

The address is Panoramastraße 1A, and you can reach the area easily by S-Bahn, U-Bahn, tram, and bus. If you’re arriving after a day of walking, this is a big plus. Your “where do we go now?” moment is basically solved the second you’re at the tower.

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Tickets, Timing, and What You Actually Get

Your standard ticket includes a reserved spot for the full show running 7:00 p.m. to midnight, plus an afterparty one floor above. Plan on treating this as an evening commitment, not a quick side event.

The ticket cost is listed as about $21 per person, and that’s the key part of the value equation: you’re paying mainly for the performance and the afterparty access. Drinks and food aren’t included, so the final total depends on how much you want to drink or snack during the night.

If you like structured nights with a defined end time, you’ll appreciate the clear window ending at midnight. If you prefer a slow start, you can still grab a drink and make use of the cocktail bar atmosphere before the acts begin.

The Bar Scene: 150+ Cocktails, Berlin Bites, and Pastry Breaks

This is a show that’s built around a bar, not a theater-only setup. At Lieschen Mueller, you’ll find a cocktail program with 150+ creative cocktails plus Berlin cuisine and an in-house pastry shop. That means you’re not stuck just waiting in your seat until the next act.

Two practical takeaways from that:

  1. You can break the night into “show moments” and “hangout moments.”
  2. Ordering is part of the fun, but you should treat it like a nightlife bill, not a bargain.

One review noted cocktails can be priced, but also felt worth it for the overall fun. Another called out that the baked goods were surprisingly good. Translation for you: if you’re going to spend on anything beyond water, consider a pastry-style snack in addition to (or instead of) extra cocktail rounds.

Your Show Menu: Burlesque, Pole, Boylesque, Neon, and Comedy

The core promise here is variety. The acts mix classic burlesque, pole dancing, boylesque, neon shows, comedy, and impressive artistry. Expect performers who bring a Berlin club sensibility into a circus-style stage format.

Changing lineup is part of the deal. That means the exact performers and the mix of acts can shift, but you can count on the overall theme staying consistent: glamour plus athletic performance, with jokes and crowd energy layered in.

A nice detail: the show has an interactive feel. Performers move around the space rather than staying locked into one spot. That helps, especially if you’re not in a front-and-center seat, because the action isn’t always trapped behind one viewpoint.

One more note on pacing: there can be breaks between acts. For some people, that’s part of the rhythm—chat, drink, snack, reset. If you hate waiting, you may find the interruptions a bit annoying, even though they give you time to enjoy the bar side of the experience.

Seating Reality Check: Packed Rooms and View Trade-Offs

Here’s the honest part. The venue can be smaller than expected, and seating can feel jam-packed. If your priority is having the cleanest stage view at all times, know that your view may depend on where you’re placed.

Some people get seated at bar-adjacent areas, including couples. That doesn’t necessarily ruin the night, but it can change how focused you feel during the big moments. There’s also the possibility of being placed where the center-stage view is less ideal, even if performers do their best to stay engaging.

My practical advice: if you care about sightlines, arrive early and get oriented. Then be ready to enjoy the show as a whole experience, not just a single perfect camera-angle.

The Afterparty One Floor Up: Keep the Energy Going

The ticket includes access to the afterparty one floor above after the main show window. This is a smart addition if you want more than just a performance.

It also changes the vibe of the night. Instead of rushing out right at midnight, you can stay in the same area and keep the social momentum going. If you’re traveling solo or meeting up with friends later, the afterparty makes it easier to keep things lively without planning a separate bar hop from scratch.

The Language Factor: What You Might Catch During the Night

This show includes content shown in the original language. In plain terms: don’t assume you’ll understand every spoken moment.

One review specifically flagged that commentary was in German, while singing leaned English. So if you’re English-only, you might still follow the emotional arc through music and performance, but some of the spoken bits may be harder to track.

If language clarity matters a lot to you, keep your expectations aligned. The big athletic and visual parts are the main event, and those tend to land even when words are partially missed.

Value for $21: When This Feels Like a Win

At around $21, you’re basically buying:

  • the show from 7:00 p.m. to midnight
  • a spot reserved for the performance
  • the afterparty access

That’s a strong baseline value for a central Berlin night that mixes staged performance with club-like energy. The main “cost creep” is drinks and food, since those aren’t included and cocktails can be pricey.

How to make this value work for you:

  • Decide your drink budget before you sit down.
  • Consider ordering a cocktail or two and adding a pastry or snack to keep the pacing fun.
  • If you’re on a tight budget, you can still enjoy the show without treating every drink as part of the ticket.

For couples, groups, and party nights, the price can feel especially fair because you’re not paying separate entry fees for each segment. It’s one event with multiple layers.

Who This Works Best For (and Who Might Want to Skip)

This is best for adults who want a playful, theatrical nightlife experience in Berlin-Mitte. It fits great for:

  • a first Berlin night where you want energy right away
  • groups who like variety acts
  • date nights where you want something different from the usual dinner-and-a-show

It’s also a fun option if you’re into performance styles that mix acrobatics, comedy, and neon visuals instead of a single genre.

But it’s not for everyone. The activity is listed as not suitable for people with epilepsy, and it’s also not suitable for hearing-impaired people. There’s also a weight limit: it’s not suitable for children under 33 lbs / 15 kg, so keep that in mind if you’re traveling with younger kids.

If you’re extremely sensitive to tight seating or you need constant, crystal-clear narration in English, plan accordingly.

Practical Tips to Get a Better Night

  1. Arrive early enough to find the room comfortably. Some people found the venue a bit hard to locate at first, so give yourself breathing room after you reach Alexanderplatz.
  2. Expect packed seating and adjust your mindset. Treat it like a lively club-adjacent performance space, not a spacious theater.
  3. Plan for breaks. If you notice pauses between acts, use them to grab water, order food, or simply reset your focus.
  4. Go in for the performance, not the script. Even if spoken parts shift languages, the physical comedy and stage visuals do most of the heavy lifting.
  5. Set your drink budget. Cocktail pours can be generous, and that can be great fun if you’re aiming for a social night, less great if you want to stay sharp.

Should You Book This Cirque du Burlesque Ticket?

I’d book it if you want a central, easy-to-reach Berlin night that combines show energy with nightlife atmosphere. The location at Alexanderplatz under the TV tower makes it low-friction, and the mix of burlesque, pole, boylesque, neon, comedy, and acrobatics gives you enough variety to keep the evening moving.

I’d think twice if you’re picky about seating views or if you need spoken narration in English throughout. Also, if you want a “ticket price only” night, remember that drinks and food are extra, and cocktails can add up fast.

If you want one memorable evening that feels like Berlin rather than a generic tour stop, this is a strong choice.

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