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Imagine you’re sitting in a dark, silent room.

Suddenly, to the tune of a thunderous bass note, a neon sign comes to life in the shape of a man with a blue beard and top hat. Sitting on a fluorescent throne, a red heart beats twice on his chest. He rises and walks ahead.

Now imagine that as he steps forward, six others appear with glowing sunglasses and baseball caps, music starts playing and in an instant, all seven are dancing.

In your mind’s eye, see the dancers vanish and reappear in synchrony with the beat of the music. Now there’s three, now there’s four; now the bearded man’s driving a car, now the music’s changed.

Now there’s a woman whipping around a mop of glowing blue hair. Now she’s gone.

If you can imagine that, feel the thunderous music and keep it up for 12 minutes, then you’ve seen Light Balance, Busch Garden’s new summer dance act.

Best known for its third-place finish on ‘America’s Got Talent’ last year, the Ukrainian dance troupe performs completely in the dark with handmade suits equipped with cold neon — a special kind of wire coated in luminescent material.

In their suits, the dancers resemble an 80s arcade game, like 3D characters from Tron dancing to the music of Michael Jackson and Bruno Mars.

The eight members performing at Busch Gardens over the summer bring an expanded version of the group’s act to Ireland’s Abbey Stone Theatre.

Jenn Thomas, the show production manager at Busch Gardens, helped bring Light Balance to the park this summer. She first watched them perform on TV last year and pursued them in particular for their precision, following and notoriety.

“The most important rule for our choreographers is to WOW the audience,” wrote Light Balance’s manager and producer Mykyta Sukhenko in an email. “People should be impressed all the time.”

For their first performance earlier in the summer, Thomas said doors opened 15 minutes earlier than usual. The line backed up well before the show, and the theater was mobbed.

During the show, the crowd clapped and sang along to the music. At one point, staff turned the speakers off to make an announcement, but the audience was so loud you still couldn’t hear it.

Thomas said the applause was thunderous.

Since then, the lines continue to stretch back. The audience still gives standing ovations after watching the group dance in a digital rainbow across the stage.

“They’re all so nice,” Thomas said. “It’s been a big love fest”

Light Balance’s act is a magnetic visual slight of hand. Each performance commands attention, and to this point, applause. It’s an act of the 21st century, a combination of technology, dance and music — a complete audio-visual overdose in under 15 minutes.

“We simply do our job on stage and always think how to perform the best,” Sukhenko said. “But it’s always exciting.”

The group relies on what the audience can’t see; it makes darkness mean something.

Light Balance typically leaves the stage right after they perform, but Bush Gardens added a curtain call to the end of their show. When the lights return, the group appears wearing normal clothes outlined with shiny wire. They clap back and take a bow before walking offstage.

For the first time, you can see their faces.