Beijing
What's On
Many Chinese art forms date back centuries but
most struggled to survive following the Communist revolution
of 1949. Artists were organised into associations, which meant
that the Party controlled every aspect, both creative and administrative.
Travelling theatre, music and dance groups were created to take
the Party message to the masses together with teams of projectionists
showing reels of ideological films. Plays written before the
1950s, films with human interest and the Beijing Opera were suppressed
and their creators persecuted until the end of the Cultural Revolution
in the 1970s. Now many pre-Cultural Revolution art forms are
performed regularly, as well as modern versions, which celebrate
ancient and current culture, as well as ethnic differences.
As to be expected from a capital
city, Beijing is leading the countrys cultural revival,
and a crop of teahouses have recently reappeared in the capital
that show a variety of Beijing Opera, martial arts and acrobatics
and serve delicious selections of tea and cakes.
Western influences have been embraced
to transform traditional Chinese art forms into contemporary
pieces and the theatrical scene is changing fast. A recent development
has been a fashion for Chinese translations of Western plays,
such as (most recently) Whose Wife is it Anyway, or home-grown
dramatists experimenting with foreign styles, such as Absurdist
theatre, or emulating influential playwrights, such as Samuel
Beckett. In addition, Western music and dance is now performed,
and the city often receives visits from international acts. The
Beijing Concert Hall has a mix of Chinese and Western music,
whereas the Zhengyici Theatre has mainly Chinese productions.
Also worth seeing is traditional
Chinese acrobatics, which have existed in China for two thousand
years and cover anything from gymnastics and animal tricks to
magic and juggling. The style may be vaudeville, but performances
are spectacular, with truly awe-inspiring feats.
Tickets for some events can now
be purchased from Webtix (tel: (10) 6592 8449 or 6594 9460; website:
www.webtix.com.cn).
Music: The Beijing Concert
Hall, 1 Bei Xinhua Jie (tel: (10) 6605 5812), just off Xi Changan
Jie, is dedicated to classical music, with regular concerts by
Beijings resident orchestra, as well as visiting orchestras
from the rest of China and overseas. Beijing Opera is still very
popular and the best place to see it is Zhengyici Theatre, 220
Qian Men Xi He Yan Jie (tel: (10) 6303 3104), a short walk from
Heping Men subway station. Built in the 17th century, the theatre
was originally a Ming Dynasty temple before being converted by
some of the founding artists of the Beijing Opera company. Nightly
performances also take place at 1930 at the Liyuan Theatre in
the Jianguo Hotel, 175 Yongan Road.
Theatre: Spoken drama was
only introduced into Chinese theatres this century. The Peoples
Art Theatre in Beijing became its best-known home and, before
the Cultural Revolution, staged European plays that had a clear
social message. The last decade has seen a total turnabout, with
the Peoples Art Theatre, reassembled in 1979, establishing
its reputation with a performance of Arthur Millers Death
of a Salesman. They and other companies perform at the Beijing
Peoples Art Theatre, (in the Capital Theatre), 22 Wangfujing
Dajie (tel: (10) 6513 5801). Theatre will receive a big boost
in Beijing in 2003 when Chinas first National Theatre will
open at Xi Changan Jie, just west of the Great Hall of
the People.
Teahouses: Traditional theatre,
such as story-telling to musical accompaniment, magic shows and
acrobatics, takes place daily at the Lao She Chaguan, 2nd Floor,
Da Wancha Building, 3 Qian Men Xi Jie (tel: (10) 6303 6830),
and at the Tianqiao Happy Teahouse, 113 Tianqiao Nandajie (tel:
(10) 6303 9013).
Acrobatics: The most popular
venue is the Wan Sheng Theatre, Bei Wei Lu, just west of the
Tianqiao Happy Teahouse (tel: (10) 6303 7449). There are also
nightly shows at the Chaoyang Theatre, 36 Dong San Huan Bei Lu
(tel: (10) 6507 2421), and Universal Theater, 10 Dongzhimennan
Dajie (tel: (10) 6502 3984). Performances at all venues start
at 1915.
Film: Many cinemas in Beijing
are dedicated to feeding a seemingly insatiable appetite for
kung fu movies, although there is plenty of opportunity to catch
the serious and fairly controversial movies emerging from a new
wave of younger film-makers. Foreign films are mainly dubbed
and carefully censored by the authorities before they are put
on general release. A popular, central cinema is the Capital
Cinema, 46 Xi Changan Jie (tel: (10) 6605 5510). The Sun
Dong An Cinema City, 138 Wangfujing Dajie (tel: (10) 6528 1988),
shows major films from the USA.
Beijings appeal for film directors
as a sweeping, cinematic panaroma was most brilliantly demonstrated
by Bernardo Bertolucci in his famous 1987 epic, The Last Emperor.
Set in an old Beijing bathhouse, which is threatened by developers
who want to turn it into a shopping complex, Zhang Yangs
1999 film, Shower, epitomises the tension between tradition and
the dictates of commerce in contemporary Beijing. Farewell My
Concubine (1993) is a stunning epic spanning half a century of
modern Chinese history including the Cultural Revolution and
is about the relationship between two friends growing up in the
world of Beijing Opera. It was a triumph internationally for
the director Chen Kaige. An extremely funny film set in modern-day
Beijing is Sorry Baby (1999) directed by Feng Xiao Gang, about
a feud between a wealthy businessman and his driver.
Cultural events: The Chinese
New Year, which takes place either in late January or early February,
is the most important festival of the year. The build-up to the
festival is as frenzied as Christmas is in the West, with parties,
the exchanging of gifts, and streets and houses decorated with
lights. Most Chinese celebrate the start of the New Year with
their families. The Mid-Autumn Festival in September or early
October is celebrated by displaying lanterns in various shapes,
such as animals, and by eating moon cakes made of ground lotus,
sesame and egg.
Literary Notes
There is a good joke in the most
recent novel by the Chinese-American writer, Amy Tan The
Bonesetters Daughter (2001). A Chinese character in the
book gives the following dismissive appraisal to a Westerner
who is enthralled by Beijings Forbidden City: In
those day, so many thing forbidden, cant see. Now everyone
pay money see forbidden thing. You say this forbidden that forbidden,
charge extra. This epitomises much of the current Chinese
attitude towards Beijing where reverence towards the city because
of its history and tradition is put very much to the effort of
making money.
Numerous highly acclaimed contemporary
works of fiction that explore Chinas tumultuous history
and the impact of the Cultural Revolution have become international
bestsellers, notably Half of Man is Woman (1985), an autobiographical
account of life in a labour camp by Zhang Xiangliang. Heralded
as the Chinese Milan Kundera, Xianliang was born in Nanjing in
1936 and educated in Beijing. Other celebrated novels include
Wild Swans (1991) by Jung Chan and Amy Tans The Joy Luck
Club (1989).
Lu Xun (1881-1936) is celebrated
as the father of modern Chinese literature. His story, A Madmans
Diary (1918), is considered the first story written in modern,
colloquial Chinese namely in the language spoken by the
masses as opposed to the classic literary language. Lu Xun embraced
the early Communist movement and is still regarded as a hero
by the authorities. The small house he inhabited in Beijing from
1912 to 1926 can be seen next to a museum (open Tues-Sun 0900-1530)
dedicated to his life and work at a hutong just off Fucheng Men
Dajie, near Fucheng Men subway station.
However, for a contemporary Beijing-based
writer who marks a break from the serious tradition of political
and social responsibility favoured by the Communist Party, there
is Wang Shuo. Dubbed the Chinese Jack Kerouac for
his sharp mockery of almost every aspect of Chinese life, delivered
in a savvy Beijing slang, his novel Please Dont Call Me
Human (1989) is perhaps the best introduction to his work for
foreign readers. Written in the aftermath of the Tiananmen massacre,
the book wickedly lampoons the state security apparatus and its
need to bend the individual into serving the interests of the
nation.
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