越剧 shanghai yueju haili heaton school of performance and cultural industries

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越越 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

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Page 1: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

越剧

Shanghai Yueju

Haili Heaton

School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Page 2: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Xiqu - Chinese opera• Definitions

Xi/Ju: play, joke, game, etc.; Qu: music

(Ci wei shi yu, qu wei ci yu)

• From play (xi) to drama (xiju)Shaman (Nuoxi), Shang dynasty1766 B.C.Jester (Huaji xi/Canjun xi), Zhou dynasty 1066 B.C.speaking and singing art (Jiangchang/Bianwen), 800 A.D.From play (xi) to drama (xiju): use of role categories

• Definition of Chinese opera (Xiqu)‘(Xiqu) is to perform stories through dancing and singing … date from Song Dynasty (960 A.D. – 1279 A.D.)’ (WANG Guowei: Song Yuan Opera Record (Song Yuan Xiqu Kao, 1908)

Page 3: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Shamanism play (Nuo xi)

Page 4: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

• Song, Yuan Varies Drama (Song Yuan Zaju)Song dynasty (960 –1279), Yuan Dynasty (1279 – 1368) Song: rise of trade/Yuan: scholars driven to popular entertainmentfrom Baixi to Zaju: Wedge after each act/only one role sings in each act/women commonly act male roleWest Chamber (Xi Xiang Ji) by WANG Shifu

• Ming Marvel Tale (Ming Chuanqi) Ming dynasty (1368 – 1644)singing not limited to one role a time/high literacy/Water refined tune(kunqu) developed to accompany Marvel tales – Kun operaPeony Pavilion (Mu Dan Tin) by TANG Xianzu

• Qing dynasty (1644 – 1911)decline of Kun opera and rise of regional theatre: over 300 operas by end Qing/mass entertainment/low social statuesBeijing opera, from regional to state patron opera/dan to shengThe Palace of Eternal Youth (Changsheng Dian) by Hong Sheng

Rise of Spoken drama (Huaju)

Beginning of Chinese opera, xiqu

Page 5: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Yuan Varies Drama

Page 6: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Ming Marvel Tale

Page 7: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Kunqu Peony Pavilion

Page 8: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Kunqu, The Palace of Eternal Youth

Page 9: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Qing regional opera

Page 10: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Mei Lanfang and Vsevold Meyerhold, 1935

Page 11: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Beijing opera face painting and acrobatic skills

Page 12: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Shanghai Yueju

• End of 19th century, Shenxian, Zhejiang province

• Original form: Changshu (singing story), derived from Xunjun diao (Buddhist story telling tune) + local folk tunes

• Names: Changshu - Xiaoge Ban (Little song troupe) – Didu ban (didu troupe) – Shaoxin Wenxi (Shaoxin civilian opera) – Yueju (Yue opera)

• stage of development1906, first performance 1906 – 1930s, male troupe in Shanghai1923 – 1949, female troupe in Shanghai1949 – 2004, centralized of Shanghai Yue opera – Shanghai Yue Theatre2004 – today, marketization of Shanghai Yue Theatre2006, centenary of Shanghai Yue opera

Page 13: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries
Page 14: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Yushan theatre, Shenxian, Zhejiang province

Page 15: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Famous male Yue opera performers in Shanghai, 1920

Page 16: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

From 1923, first all female Yue opera troupe enter Shanghai to August 1938, Shanghai Yue opera has grown to become the most popular performing art. The following list shows the number of theatres specializing in different opera/huaju:

12 - Beijing opera, 3 - Shanghai opera, 2 - Play (huaju), 1 - Kun opera, 1 - Big Drum (Dagu) 12 - female Yue opera

(GAO, 1991: 65).

1923 – 1938, female Yue opera in Shanghai

Page 17: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

• ‘It is a presentational style in which the conjoined elements of song, dance, mime, music, and dialogue are bound by set compositional and choreographic rules, to produce a total rhythmic flux realized through the self-sufficiency of the actor’s skill at all levels’

• ‘A typical play script is little more than a skeletal indicator … the actors with their instinctive command of form and content required no script to set a live performance in action … however, the most expressive acting in the light of Chinese critical acumen is the product of something more than sheer assimilation of technical forms by rote. …within the progression of the rhythmic permutations which provide the basic structure of any play, the actor’s total physical being is keyed to a pitch of instantaneous response at several levels, a transcendent deployment of his own dynamism, and it is to achieve this prized state that every actor is submitted to long and merciless training’

Scott, ed. by Mackerras, Chinese Theatre 1983

‘An actor’s theatre’

Page 18: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

1940’s Reform of Shanghai Yue opera

‘Kunqu and Huaju are the two nannies of Shanghai Yue opera, … it was them who brought Yueju up’ (caress YUAN Xuefen, founder and first director of Shanghai Yue Theatre

• REALISM

‘美轮美奂’ ‘ beautiful voice, beautiful image’ – pure entertainment/escapism?

make up, hair style, acting

• Director’s theatre

script, rehearsal,

Page 19: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries
Page 20: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Xianglin Aunty (Xianglin Sao, 1946)

Page 21: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries
Page 22: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Love of the Butterfly (Liangzhu) by Shanghai Yueju, 1954

Page 23: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Dream of the Red Mansion (Hong Lou Meng) by Shanghai Yue opera, 1958

Page 24: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

1955, Shanghai Yue Opera Theatre

1956 – 1965, national development of Shanghai Yue opera

1980s, second ‘Golden period of Shanghai Yue opera’

1990s, ‘Shanghai yue opera is the second most popular Chinese operas after Beijing opera’ (Survey of CCTV)

20th century: marketization of Shanghai Yue opera

Page 25: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Spread of Shanghai Yue opera by 1965

Page 26: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Dream of the Red Mansion, Shanghai Yue Theatre 1983

Page 27: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Five Daughters’s at the Father’s Birthday Banquet by Zhejiang Hundred Flowers Yue Opera Company, 1983

Page 28: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

The Library, by Zhejiang Hundred Flower Yue Company, 2002

Page 29: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Love of the Butterfly, by Shanghai Yue Theatre, 2004

Page 30: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

‘Alienation effects in Chinese Theatre’- Bertolt Brecht

Importance of symbols:

Masks or painted face: character

Head piece: a general

Patched cloth: poverty

Gesture: open a door, across a river

Articles of furniture is carried onto stage: a horse whip, an oar

Page 31: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Walking across a bridge

Page 32: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

Riding a horse

Page 33: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

‘Chinese artist never acts as if there were a fourth wall besides the three surrounding him. He expresses his awareness of being

watched. This immediately removes one of the European stage’s characteristic illusions … the actors openly choose those positions which will best show them off to the audience, just as if there were acrobats … he will occasionally look at the audience as if to say:

isn’t it just like that?’ (Brecht, 1964: 91)

The Chinese artist’s performance often strikes the Western actor as cold. … The coldness comes from the actor’s holding himself

remote from the charcter portrayed, … he is careful not to make its sensations into those of the spectator. Nobody gets raped by the individual he portrays; … the Western actor does all he can to

bring his spectator into the closest proximity to the events and the character he has to portray’ (93)

Page 34: 越剧 Shanghai Yueju Haili Heaton School of Performance and Cultural Industries

1906 – 2006

Centenary of Shanghai Yue opera