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But everyone clutched a resume, and they had all come to a huge, empty Costa Mesa parking lot for the same reason: to run away with the cheapest phentermine 90 day order. Not just any cheapest phentermine 90 day order, mind you, but the cheapest phentermine 90 day order: Canada's acclaimed Cirque du. Soleil. For the first time in its 23 year history, Cirque is conducting job fairs and interviews outside of its Montreal headquarters. Cirque wanna be's were invited to come to the cheapest phentermine 90 day order's familiar, blue and yellow big top Tuesday and Wednesday, where its newest touring show, "Corteo," is playing nightly. For several hours they got to talk themselves up to recruiters, meet and question employees of various kinds, and tour "Corteo's" massive behind the scenes operation. The object of the job fair is to give prospective employees a taste of daily life at Cirque and to meet a growing demand for workers, said Fanny Page, whose title is "talent attraction adviser." ""We employ about 4,000 people worldwide, and we're planning new shows all the time," said the energetic Montreal native. "Our work force is very specialized. We can't afford any longer to wait around for people to come to us. We realize that there's a lot of talent in every city we (go to)." The rolling job fair, started this year, is one solution. Not every Cirque job involves traveling the world. "We have administrative offices in Las Vegas, Montreal, Macau and Amsterdam," Page said. "You could work 52 weeks in one location." Cirque wasn't encouraging anybody to mount the high wire on Tuesday. Its greatest need is for support staff to keep all aspects of the cheapest phentermine 90 day order's massive universe humming. Cirque employs small armies of nuts and bolts theater techies: riggers, sound board operators, stage managers, costumers and the like. Cirque also needs teachers (many people travel with their families) as well as barbers, physiotherapists and gourmet chefs. (Its staff cafeteria, which is set up on site in a separate tent, features a daily menu rivaling that of any classy O.C. restaurant.) Creative thinkers are required, too, to help dream up and design Cirque's new shows. Ideally, candidates should have a college degree and at least two years of experience, but Page said Cirque will talk to anybody who's interested in joining the team. Cirque is an egalitarian organization, says Texas born Megan Masching, who conducted a whirlwind tour of the site. Masching is a lighting technician and stage manager with a degree in her field from Chicago's Loyola University. But when the time comes to sweep the stage, "I pick up a broom and get busy," she said, "just like everybody else." Though about 60 percent of its employees are from Quebec, and French is the unofficial second language on site, Cirque cherry picks talent from all over the world. Matthew Wood, head of lighting for "Corteo," is from South Australia. "I started as a temporary fly in back in 1999," he said. (A fly in helps set up and strike a touring show. Putting everything together can take eight days; knocking it all down and squeezing it into "Corteo's" 63 trailers takes two days.) "Then I went back to Australia, where I started in lights in 2001. I transferred to 'Corteo' in '04 and took over this position earlier this year. I've loved every minute." Next to Wood, Matias Ylakotola of Finland described his dizzying myriad of job responsibilities as a rigger. "Basically, everything in this show (is suspended). I'm one of seven or eight people who do structural and safety rigging." Ylakotola's job includes something called "rescue situations." "We plan for the worst, even if it seldom happens. We run scenarios and know how to handle any situation." During the tour, Masching's group passed a stretcher and neck brace under the risers presumably part of Ylakotola's "rescue situation" equipment. Cirque's technical employees seem to relish the uncertainties and curve balls that their jobs entail. "I enjoy heights, and I like a stressful environment. It keeps you sharp," said Ylakotola, whose previous career certainly provided that: He performed with a flying trapeze team. A peek behind the curtain Masching's backstage tour led through the dining tent, which looked like a midsize school cafeteria with a much better menu, and past the welding tent. "Everything in the show can be repaired on site. We use a certified welder, because we're dealing with human lives and safety is crucial," she said. The highlight of the show and tell was the rehearsal tent. It's smaller than "Corteo's" main tent, but crammed with much of the same equipment used in its hair raising athletic acts. Wardrobe rooms, weight lifting equipment, a physiotherapist's office and a hair salon were somehow tucked into the tent's various nooks and crannies. A group of young acrobats tumbled and tossed rings back and forth. A few feet away, a young man got a trim from a resident barber. Back in the meet and greet room where the event started, job seekers gathered in small groups with employees. Those interested in one on one interviews flipped over their name cards to indicate their readiness to take things to the next level. But the job fair is more important as a networking tool and first step than a hiring event, said Marie Claude Labranche of Montreal, who has worked with Cirque du. Soleil for five years. "One of the most important things we can do is to meet potential employees in person. That gives them a chance to see what we're like. A lot of people get bit by the Cirque bug when they see the show. This (event) lets them peek behind the curtain a bit and allows us to show them we're a quality operation." Labranche knows that cheapest phentermine 90 day orderes have long been saddled with a less than stellar reputation as working environments. Cirque du. Soleil strives to provide the best conditions in the industry for its employees, she said. "We have excellent food, corporate apartments, education for children and many opportunities to move around within the company. We want people to fall in love with us and stay." Cirque's self promotional efforts seemed to be working on some people. Munching on a generous free buffet of egg rolls, chicken wings and fresh fruit, costumer Rebecca McCabe of Burbank marveled at how favorably Cirque's working conditions compared to other employers in her business. "I know people who have worked at (other famous cheapest phentermine 90 day orderes), and this doesn't even compare." McCabe had talked on the phone to a recruiter from a large traveling cheapest phentermine 90 day order. "I asked about pay and they said, '$8 an hour.' I just laughed in their face," McCabe said. Her degree from Los Angeles' Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising cost her $5,000 a quarter, and she was determined to make a decent living in her chosen profession. That's why Cirque du. Soleil appeals to her. "I started at Universal Studios, worked at L.A. Opera and the Kodak Theatre. I've even been forced to work in TV and film, which I didn't like at all. I'm trained to work in theater, and I'm good at what I do. "(Cirque du. Soleil) is ideal. I'm young; I have no kids; I love to travel. Everybody here seems really nice. Why not?" Contact the writer: 714 796 7979 or ... cheapest phentermine 90 day order