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A woman in blue flies over an upside down man doing the splits mid air, held up by a series of performers on the ground. In the background an audience looks on inside the dark circus tent.
A white-masked woman in a red dress, holding an umbrella and a white-masked man man in blue jeans an a white top holding onto a rope perform a mid-air acrobatic performance in front of a audience in a circus in Siem Reap.
Or you can easily book your ticket here with instant confirmation and take the mobile or printed reservation with you. It’s recommended to arrive at least 30 minutes before the show starts. 

Phare Circus, Siem Reap and Social Enterprise in Cambodia

Images © of (in order of use) Stefan Vontobel, Diallo Jamal, Meg, Ranuth Yun and Timothy Gibson. With permission from Phare Circus. Images are not allowed during the performance. 
The Phare Circus is an incredible hour of traditional and modern theatre, music, dance, acrobatics, athleticism, juggling and contortion all beautifully choreographed and performed in stories about Cambodian lives and society. Not to mention the famous smiles and slapstick humour that the Cambodian people are known for. There are two shows, of a different theme or ‘tale’, alternating approximately every eight days.

Where does the money go?

Visit the Phare Circus in Siem Reap – Supporting Social Enterprise in Cambodia
Combining entertainment and education is another step in the right direction for visitors to Cambodia to understand the complexities here, at the same time as sharing in the laughter, happiness and entertainment of a fabulously coordinated show.

A group of circus performers, standing on a red mat and dressed in black throw two people in the air during an acrobatic performance at the circus in Siem Reap, Cambodia.
Following their own experience with an art teacher who helped them in the refugee camp, they wanted to give back and open an art school in Battambang that would provide free education. Today, the Siem Reap circus project serves as a facility to help vulnerable children, young adults and their families with outreach programmes and build the careers of Cambodian Artists. It further helps to revive the Cambodian art scenes, make worldwide arts connections with Cambodia and contribute to the wider artistic, educational and social programs of the PPS Association.

The Phare Circus Production

Five performers sit on the ground covered in rice grains looking up at a man balancing another high above his head. The background is dark with golden lighting.
The circus is just an extension and visual representation of this, with the moral of the particular story or folklore tale and its subsequent historical, cultural and social issues intertwined with music, dance and circus acrobatics in a one-hour spectacle.
Siem Reap likes to surprise visitors with its growth. Whether that’s new adventure activities, travel initiatives and excursions that show an alternative side to the town aside from the incredible Angkor Wat temple complex and the infamous Pub Street, alongside the growth of amazing grassroots charity and community projects which aid this still troubled country.
Three men hoist another into the air using a metal bowl during a circus performance in Cambodia. Two other men can be seen in the background, another holding a large silver bowl.

The Unique Telling of Cambodian Stories 

Through 30 Sep 17 : Adult (age 12+) : US / Children (age 5-11) : US / Infants (age 4 and younger) no charge with no allocated seat
General Open Seating (Section C)
All tickets can be purchased online.
Four men perform a dance with woven rice trays in the Siem Reap Circus. The lighting in dark and musicians can be seen in the background.
At the time of my visit, I saw the tale of “Phsong Preng” (The Adventure) which told the story of a young boy who flees home, where he is abused by his mother, in search of a better life – domestic violence being an ongoing issue in Cambodia. In his adventures, he meets some unusual friends, who all travel to Phnom Penh together – an exciting endeavour that sadly ends with the boy being beaten and robbed by a gang of thugs. Saved by a chance meeting with a new group of friends, who take him in and help build his confidence, he finally decides to return home – stronger, assertive and more resilient.

Things to Know About the Siem Reap Circus

Where to Find the Circus:

More than just a circus, this music, theatre and dance entertainment venture is one of them. Launched in 2013, it’s become gone on to become one of Cambodia’s biggest and most successful social enterprise models for community development. 
With the funds collated from this artistic enterprise, more than 1,200 pupils attend the daily public school and 500 are in attendance at the vocational arts training school. All the Phare artists you see on the circus stage are graduates of Phare Ponleu Selpak.
A Cambodian woman dressed in emerald green holds a wooden rice plate and decoratively throws a long line of rice into the air during a circus performance. Behind her are two men in yellow shirts holding bowls, and there is rice strewn all over the floor.

Reservations and Ticketing: 

  • ticketing@pharecircus.org
  • +855 (0) 15 499 480 & +855 (0) 92 225 320

Preferred Open Seating (Section B)

High Season:

Ticket prices:

This means when you visit the circus in town, you are doing more than paying to be entertained. Your money is benefiting a growing arts scene in Cambodia and supporting a long-term, sustainable business model. In purchasing a ticket, the funds are benefiting talented people who wouldn’t otherwise have had the opportunity, income or access to training access in which to develop and showcase their skills. In turn, it gives the community access to meaningful employment, creating financial stability and self-sufficiency. 

  • Through 30 Sep 17:Adult (age 12+) : US$35 / Children (age 5-11) : $18 / Infants (age 4 and younger) no charge with no allocated seat
  • From 01 Oct 17 : Adult (age 12+) : US$38 / Children (age 5 – 11) : $18 /  Infants (age 4 and younger) no charge with no allocated seat
  • Reserved Seating in the front three rows of the middle section, refillable Phare sports water bottle from Phare Boutique with chilled water. (Gift not included with free / infant tickets)

You would never think a circus in Siem Reap exists, but it has become one of the city’s biggest attractions, and one with a positive social impact. 
I know from my Khmer (Cambodian) friends that tales and sayings are a big part of the culture – it’s how you learn to address issues, accept things and find the strength to carry on. Knowing Khmer friends who wanted nothing more than to flee the violence and generational trauma sometimes experienced at home as a child – these issues being more ingrained in Cambodian society than they are in my own – it certainly resonated with me.

  • From 01 Oct 17 : Adult (age 12+) : US$28 / Children (age 5 – 11) : US$15 / Infants (age 4 and younger) no charge with no allocated seat
  • Open seating in the rear three rows of the middle section

Advance reservations are strongly recommended during the high season: November through April. The performances sell-out most nights during this period. Don’t miss out.

  • Adult (age 12+) : US$18 / Children (age 5 – 11) : US$10 / Infants (age 4 and younger) no charge with no allocated seat
  • Open seating in the two side sections. Some views are partially obstructed by support poles.

For further details of the Phare Cambodian Circus, visit the website here.
Look out for the huge red tent on Comaille Road behind the Angkor National Museum – for now, it is a permanent fixture and a sign of bigger things to come for these very talented performers, and for a project bringing the arts to life in a country whose arts and entertainment scene is not normally known outside of it’s ancient and traditional Apsara dancing. 
Preferred Reserved Seating (Section A)
Phare, the Cambodian Circus, is an offshoot project of Phare Ponleu Selpak (Association), which translates into “Brightness of the Arts” in English. PPS Association is a Cambodian non-profit, non-governmental association founded in 1994 by nine young Cambodian ex-refugee artists in the area of Anchanh Village, Ochar Commune, Battambang Province, after the fall of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. 

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