REVIEW · BERLIN
Cirque du Burlesque Berlin show ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Lieschen Mueller Bar · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Neon burlesque under Berlin TV Tower feels unreal. This show happens right on Alexanderplatz at Lieschen Mueller, with a constantly shifting cast mixing burlesque, comedy, acrobatics, and neon-style performances that fit Berlin’s nightlife mood.
I especially like the interactive, variety-heavy format. Performers move through the space, and the pace gives you chances to eat, chat, and grab a drink instead of being stuck in one long sit-and-watch block. One drawback to consider: some of the commentary may be in German, so if you’re English-only, you may miss bits of the host’s running jokes.
In This Review
- Key Points I’d Tell a Friend
- Why Cirque du Burlesque Hits Hard on Alexanderplatz
- Tickets, Timing, and What Your $21 Buys
- Lieschen Mueller: The Circus-Style Cocktail Bar Setup
- Inside the 7pm–Midnight Show: Variety, Pace, and Seat Reality
- What you can realistically expect to see
- Interactive energy (the good kind)
- The seat reality check
- Cocktails and Berlin Bites: How to Turn the Evening into Dinner & Show
- Cocktails: big menu, quick fun
- Food: Berlin-inspired, plus pastry
- Afterparty One Floor Up: The Best Way to Extend the Night
- Who This Is Best For (And Who Might Want Another Option)
- Price vs. Value: Is $21 a Fair Deal?
- How to Make It Go Smoothly: Arrival Tips That Actually Help
- Final Call: Should You Book Cirque du Burlesque at Lieschen Mueller?
- FAQ
- What time does the Cirque du Burlesque show run?
- Is the afterparty included in the ticket price?
- Are drinks and food included with the ticket?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is the venue accessible?
- Is it suitable for children and hearing-impaired visitors?
Key Points I’d Tell a Friend
- Alexanderplatz location means easy access and a built-in pre-show landmark (the TV tower).
- 7pm–midnight show time plus an afterparty means you’re not just buying a quick performance.
- Changing lineup keeps the acts feeling fresh, even if you’ve seen burlesque before.
- Cocktail bar culture at Lieschen Mueller centers the evening, not just the stage.
- Seat location matters in a smaller, packed room—some spots have a less-than-ideal sightline.
- Language can affect your experience, since parts of what’s said may not be in English.
Why Cirque du Burlesque Hits Hard on Alexanderplatz
Berlin is good at turning normal places into scenes. This one is set right at Alexanderplatz under the TV tower, in the Panoramastraße area near S-Bahn and U-Bahn connections. That matters, because it lets you treat the night like a plan, not a mission. You can go straight from dinner, or you can build a “Berlin Mitte evening” around it.
The show itself leans into Berlin’s club energy. You get a burlesque-and-variety mix that isn’t trying to be a museum act. Expect a blend of classic burlesque style with modern nightlife elements—things like pole dancing, neon-themed numbers, comedy bits, and acrobatics. It’s the kind of programming that feels made for a crowd that wants to laugh, gasp, and look around during the show.
I also like that it’s at Lieschen Mueller, not some far-flung venue you have to work hard to reach. The location makes it easier to arrive relaxed, grab a drink without stress, and still be on time for the first parts of the performance.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Berlin
Tickets, Timing, and What Your $21 Buys
Your ticket price is low enough that you can think of it as paying for the core entertainment, not just the stage show. The standard ticket includes:
- Reservation for the complete Cirque du Burlesque show from 7:00 pm to midnight
- Access to the afterparty one floor above
Food and drinks are not included, so you should plan your budget like this:
- Keep the ticket as the base cost.
- Add a realistic amount for cocktails and/or a meal if you want the full “dinner & show” feel.
This setup can be great value if you like nights where the venue does the work for you. Instead of paying for multiple pieces (show ticket, afterparty, transfers, and then dinner separately), you’re getting the performance run of the night plus a built-in continuation after it ends.
Lieschen Mueller: The Circus-Style Cocktail Bar Setup
The venue is part of the story. Lieschen Mueller is set up as a cocktail bar with circus vibes, where the social atmosphere is part of the performance. It’s not just rows of seats and a single focus point.
Here’s what stands out:
- A cocktail bar with over 150 cocktail creations
- Berlin-inspired cuisine (plus sweet treats)
- An in-house pastry shop you can use to anchor the evening
This matters because it changes how you experience the show. You don’t have to treat it as one strict block of time. The atmosphere supports small breaks, snack runs, and casual conversation between acts.
One practical note: the room can feel packed, and sightlines may vary. That’s not a reason to skip it. Just know that your seat location can change your view quality—especially if you end up farther from the stage center.
Inside the 7pm–Midnight Show: Variety, Pace, and Seat Reality
The core show runs from 7 pm until midnight, which is long enough to build an evening arc. The format also avoids the “one act, then a long wait” trap. You can expect performers to appear on stage repeatedly, and the flow gives you moments to reset.
What you can realistically expect to see
The acts are built around variety, not one single genre lane. Based on the show description and what people experience on the ground, you’re likely to see combinations of:
- Classic burlesque style
- Pole dancing
- Boylesque-style variety
- Neon shows and visually stylized numbers
- Comedy and stage-host energy
- Acrobatics that look risky in the best way
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Berlin
Interactive energy (the good kind)
One of the most praised parts is how the show feels social. Performers don’t stay glued to a single spot. They travel through the space, so even if you aren’t dead-center, the energy still reaches you.
The seat reality check
If you’re planning this as a date night or you care about seeing every detail, aim to be mindful about seating. Some guests find certain tables/areas less ideal—like spots that put you farther from the stage or at an angle where you may not get the best view.
If you can’t choose seats in advance, I’d treat it like this: arrive with the mindset that you’re there for the overall spectacle and the atmosphere, not only for perfect camera-style angles.
Cocktails and Berlin Bites: How to Turn the Evening into Dinner & Show
Even though drinks and food aren’t included, Lieschen Mueller is designed for you to use them. That’s the point: the night isn’t separated into two different events. It’s one continuous experience.
Cocktails: big menu, quick fun
The bar has a huge lineup—150+ cocktails—which means you can spend the first part of the night browsing. People also talk about the pace of drinks service being fast once you’re ordering, which helps when you want the show to feel like a party instead of a wait.
Worth noting: cocktails can be pricey. The good part is that if you want the full effect—less “one drink and leave,” more “settle in”—this is one of the few places in Berlin where you can justify spending on drinks because the venue is the show’s social engine.
Food: Berlin-inspired, plus pastry
You can enjoy Berlin-inspired cuisine and sweet treats from the pastry shop. From a planning angle, I suggest thinking of food as support, not as your main meal. If you eat too heavy, you might feel it during the longer show block from 7 pm to midnight. A light meal plus a pastry can be a good compromise.
If you’re picky about taste or portion size, keep expectations realistic. This is nightlife food at a show venue—still enjoyable, but it’s not trying to be a fine-dining kitchen.
Afterparty One Floor Up: The Best Way to Extend the Night
Your ticket includes the afterparty one floor above, which is a smart move. Instead of hunting for another bar after the show, you can stay in the same energy zone.
This also helps you avoid the awkward part of ending a great evening: you don’t have to rush out just because the stage set changes. You can keep the conversation going, grab another drink, and roll into the afterparty while the night is still hot.
If you like Berlin nightlife that’s social and a bit theatrical, this is where it can feel most like a club moment.
Who This Is Best For (And Who Might Want Another Option)
This experience is ideal if you:
- Want a central Berlin night plan with easy transit access near Alexanderplatz
- Like shows that mix burlesque with acrobatics, neon visuals, and comedy
- Are excited by the cocktail-bar atmosphere and want a lively venue, not a quiet theater
- Prefer a night that feels flexible—acts come, then there’s time to chat and refuel
It’s not the right fit if you:
- Have epilepsy (the experience isn’t suitable)
- Are hearing-impaired (not suitable)
- Need a quieter, fully kid-friendly environment (also, it’s not suitable for children under 15 kg)
Price vs. Value: Is $21 a Fair Deal?
At $21 per person, the ticket price is the biggest value lever. You’re paying for a long show window (7 pm–midnight) plus an included afterparty. Even if you do nothing else, that’s a lot of entertainment time for one entry cost.
The variable is your bar spending. Since drinks and food aren’t included, the total cost can climb fast if you order multiple cocktails or pair meals with the show. I’d treat it like this:
- If you plan to buy at least a couple drinks or share food, the ticket is still a win because the show cost is so low.
- If you want to strictly budget, plan on drinking less and snack more, because cocktails are a major part of how the venue runs.
The other value factor is location. Being at Alexanderplatz saves you time and transit energy. In Berlin, time is money—especially on a night when you want everything to feel easy.
How to Make It Go Smoothly: Arrival Tips That Actually Help
A few practical things can improve your night right away.
First, give yourself extra minutes to find Panoramastraße 1A near the TV tower. Some people find it a little tricky at first. If you arrive right as the show is starting, you’ll feel the stress.
Second, go in with a plan for seating expectations. If you end up at a bar-adjacent table, it doesn’t ruin the show, but it can change your perspective. The performers are active around the space, so you’ll still be part of the scene—just accept that you might not see every moment with the perfect angle.
Third, if you’re not comfortable with German, don’t rely on the host banter for your main entertainment. The physical performance, the stage business, and the act variety do most of the heavy lifting. Still, you may feel like you’re missing small pieces of the patter.
Final Call: Should You Book Cirque du Burlesque at Lieschen Mueller?
I’d book this if you want a one-ticket Berlin nightlife plan that combines show, venue atmosphere, and an included afterparty. The location is a huge plus, the variety of acts fits Berlin taste, and the ticket price makes it easy to justify without feeling like you need to commit to a full fine-dining night.
I wouldn’t book it as your first choice if you’re highly sensitive to sightline quality, you need lots of English-language hosting, or you’re trying to keep total spending super low. In that case, you might still enjoy the spectacle, but you’ll need to manage expectations around seating and bar costs.
If you do book it, do this: arrive a bit early, plan a light meal or pastry instead of a heavy dinner, and treat the cocktail bar as part of the show. That’s when the whole evening feels like the point.
FAQ
What time does the Cirque du Burlesque show run?
The show runs from 7:00 pm to midnight, and your standard ticket covers the full show block plus the afterparty.
Is the afterparty included in the ticket price?
Yes. The standard ticket includes access to the afterparty one floor above.
Are drinks and food included with the ticket?
No. Drinks and food are not included, even though the venue has a large cocktail menu and offers cuisine and pastries.
Where is the meeting point?
You meet directly under the television tower at Alexanderplatz, at Lieschen Mueller.
Is the venue accessible?
Yes. The experience is wheelchair accessible.
Is it suitable for children and hearing-impaired visitors?
It is not suitable for people under 15 kg and it is not suitable for hearing-impaired people. It is also not suitable for people with epilepsy.

































