By PETER LEONARD (AP) - 1 hour ago
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ikuDNRgZZT7naYDJdZZ7kd
EsDJjQD9B1KRBG0

BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan - A Canadian circus tycoon, an American astronaut
and a Russian cosmonaut blasted off in a spacecraft from the Kazakh
steppe Wednesday on a journey to the International Space Station.

Minutes after lifting off from the Baikonur launch facility, the Soyuz
capsule shed its rocket stages and entered orbit. On board were Cirque
du Soleil founder and space tourist Guy Laliberte along with crew
members Jeffrey Williams and Maxim Surayev.

Friends and family on the ground cheered and hugged one another when an
announcement that the ship was in orbit came over the loudspeaker. They
chanted "Guy! Guy!" and broke out singing Elton John's "Rocket Man."

Laliberte, an experienced stilt-walker and fire-breather dubbed the
first clown in space, had donned a bulbous red nose and blew kisses to
supporters before the launch. He has paid $35 million for the trip he
plans to use to publicize the world's growing shortage of clean water.

"I'm very happy for him. It's amazing," said Laliberte's partner, former
model Claudia Barilla, tears streaming down her face as she cradled her
young son in her arms. "Now we know he's up there."

She wore a yellow clown nose as she watched the launch. Laliberte
brought several clown noses for crew mates aboard the station and has
impishly warned he would tickle them while they slept.

Footage of the capsule showed crew members Williams and Surayev strapped
in, operating the controls and occasionally waving for the camera.

A mission control official communicating with the astronauts said they
were in excellent spirits, and a NASA TV announcer said they were
"safely in orbit."

"We were worried, because this has been a tough road - 12 years of hard
training," first-time space traveler Surayev's wife, Anya, said at
Baikonur. "But we are pleased, happy and proud that the liftoff went off
without a hitch."

The Soyuz TMA-16 craft is scheduled to arrive Friday at the
International Space Station, orbiting 220 miles (355 kilometers) above
Earth.

Laliberte - who rose from being a street performer and accordionist to
founding the circus arts and theater company Cirque du Soleil 25 years
ago - is to return to Earth after 12 days. The 50-year-old is worth an
estimated $2.5 billion and holds a 95 percent stake in the circus
company.

Laliberte's enthusiasm seemed to infect others ahead of the launch
preparations. As the crew members climbed up the ladder into the
capsule, Surayev began singing the pop song "Mammy Blue," and Laliberte
and Williams joined him.

Among the spectators was Quebec singer Garou, a friend of Laliberte.

"I feel a lot more mesmerized than I ever thought I would be," Garou
said after the launch. "Having your friend rising up that fast and that
impressively is beyond what I expected."

Surayev, 37, and Williams, 51, plan to stay in orbit for 169 days.
Williams is on his third space mission and recently became a
grandfather.

"I'm glad he's up there - that's what he wanted to do," said the
astronaut's wife, Anna-Marie. "Now all the training is behind us and he
will just go up and do the mission."

Surayev hung a plush toy lion in front of him at the control panel to
signal the beginning of weightlessness. He said his preteen daughters
had kept the toy under their pillows to "make sure that the lion smells
of home for the next six months."

The Soyuz team is scheduled to help continue construction of the space
station, where in-orbit work began in 1998. Recent missions have
expanded the station's capacity to allow six inhabitants, though Surayev
and Williams will be alone for about three weeks at year's end after the
station's current occupants leave.

Six shuttle flights remain to wrap up construction on the station - now
Earth's largest artificial satellite, weighing more than 710,000 pounds
(322,000 kilograms).

The station has cost more than $100 billion, paid by the United States,
Russia, Canada, Japan and the 18-nation European Space Agency.

Laliberte is the seventh paying space tourist to travel to the station
and may be one of its last private visitors for several years as NASA
retires its shuttle program and turns to the Russian space agency to
ferry U.S. astronauts to the lab.

Space Adventures, which organized the private visits, will nevertheless
aim to make sure more tourists get to visit the space station in the
coming years, company CEO Eric Anderson said, suggesting the number of
Russian Soyuz missions could be increased.

"I keep hearing that space tourism is ending and it never seems to be
true," Anderson told The Associated Press.
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