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Peking
Opera and Local Operas ... ...

The China National Peking Opera Troupe performed Hua Mulan at
a hall in a New York fashions industry college, on Feb 18, 1999.
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China boasts more than 300 forms of traditional opera, of which
Peking Opera is the most popular. It took shape in the early 19th
century in Beijing, hence the name.
Peking Opera is a unique art combining drama, singing, music,dancing
and martial arts into one. There are more than 1,000 works in the
repertoire, developed over 200 years. In the 50 years since the
founding of New China the state and people have paid great attention
to Peking Opera. A lot of new works have been staged, with themes
ranging from historical stories, modern revolutionary war and socialist
construction to everyday life. At the same time, a group of outstanding
Peking Opera actors and actresses have emerged, including Mei Lanfang,
Cheng Yanqiu, Ma Lianliang, Zhou Xinfang, and Du Jinfang. To develop
the quintessence of Chinese culture many artists and opera fans
have done a lot of work to promote this genre, even attracting foreign
audiences.
At the Crossroads has been performed in many countries. Three martial
heroes meet in an inn. They quarrel, and attempt to secretly kill
each other in the dark. The skillful acrobatics called for in this
opera are both thrilling and humorous. Combat routines in the Peking
Opera repertoire such as this one combines Chinese martial arts
and the dramatic art and the actors and actresses must undergo strict
physical and skill training from childhood before they can live
up to the roles they play in such routines. Outstanding among them
was the late Mr. Gai Jiao Tien, who performed these militant acts
still with ease even at the age of 70.
Mei Lanfang, who always played female roles, introduced Peking
Opera to Japan, the United States and the USSR as early as in the
1920s and 1930s.
The Peking Opera Institute, founded in 1950, has trained a lot
of excellent Peking Opera actors and actresses who have inherited
the artistic achievements of previous generations and developed
new characteristics of their own. At the same time, the other local
operas have made reforms continuously, on the basis of keeping their
basic traditions. Some of the local operas have become very popular
in recent years, such as Yueju (Shaoxing Opera from Zhejiang), Huangmeixi
(from Anhui), Chuanju (Sichuan Opera), Yuju (Henan Opera), and Yueju
(Guangdong Opera). Tibetan opera has a religious tinge and is imbued
with Tibetan ethnic folklore. It is bold and unconstrained and is
becoming more and more popular both at home and abroad.
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