Beijing National Grand Theater (NCPA) 10 September 2024 - Suzhou Kunqu Opera Theatre of Jiangsu Province: The Peony Pavilion (Youth Edition) - Part 1 | GoComGo.com

Suzhou Kunqu Opera Theatre of Jiangsu Province: The Peony Pavilion (Youth Edition) - Part 1

Beijing National Grand Theater (NCPA), Theatre, Beijing, China
All photos (1)
Tuesday 10 September 2024
7:30 PM

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Important Info
Type: Opera Chinese
City: Beijing, China
Starts at: 19:30

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Overview


 

The youth version of "Peony Pavilion" is a classic brand of Suzhou Kunqu Opera Theater in Jiangsu Province. It is jointly created by cultural and opera elites. The famous writer Mr. Bai Xianyong serves as the chief producer and artistic director, and the famous Kunqu opera performing artists Wang Shiyu and Zhang Jiqing serve as artistic directors. The play has won many national awards such as the National Stage Art Masterpiece Project, and has participated in many influential art festivals and important national performances such as the Beijing Olympics, the Winter Olympics Cultural Performances, and the 60th Anniversary of the National Day Celebration Performance, forming a Kunqu cultural phenomenon.
The youth version of "Peony Pavilion" is based on Tang Xianzu's original work, completely inherits the original lyrics, and after careful sorting, it is a story with "dream love", "human ghost love" and "human love" as the core. Selected 27 folds, divided into three volumes: upper, middle and lower. The full performance lasts for 3 consecutive days, 3 hours a day, enough to make drama fans linger and indulge in the world of Kunqu beauty. As Mr. Pai Hsien-yung said, "Kunqu Opera has nothing but beauty. It is a comprehensive art of beauty, with beautiful rhetoric, beautiful dance, beautiful music, and beautiful human feelings."

The youth version of "Peony Pavilion" has been performed nearly 500 times at home and abroad since its premiere in 2004, and has been performed in dozens of cities at home and abroad. The major honors it has won are too numerous to mention. It has received a high rating of 9.1 points on Douban, and has reduced the average age of Kunqu Opera audiences by 30 years! It is praised by many as "a Kunqu Opera performance that cannot be missed in this lifetime."

Main creators:
Original author: Tang Xianzu of Ming Dynasty
General producer: Bai Xianyong
Artistic director: Bai Xianyong
Producer: Cai Shaohua
Artistic director: Wang Shiyu, Zhang Jiqing
General director: Wang Shiyu
General coordinator: Lin Lin
Coordinators: Yu Jiulin, Tang Rong, Zhou Xuefeng, Du Xinying
Script arrangement: Bai Xianyong, Hua Wei, Zhang Shuxiang, Xin Yiyun
Music director: Zhou Youliang
Singing arrangement and adaptation: Zhou Youliang
Music design: Zhou Youliang
Art director: Wang Tong
Director: Weng Guosheng
Assistant director: Zhang Tianle
Assistant director: Ma Peiling
Stage design: Wang Mengchao
Lighting design: Huang Zuyan
Chocolate design: Wu Sujun, Ma Peiling
Costume design: Wang Tong, Zeng Yongni
Singing and recitation guidance: Yao Jikun, Mao Weizhi
Stage supervision: Li Qiang
Calligraphy: Dong Yangzi
Painting: Xi Song
Photography: Xu Peihong
Advisors: Gu Zhaoshen, Zheng Peikai, Zhu Donglin, Zhou Qin
English subtitles: Li Linde
Transliteration of the play: Chen Yuxian

Starring: Shen Fengying, Yu Jiulin

History

The Peony Pavilion is a 1998 production by Peter Sellars, in a mix of Chinese and English translation, of the Ming Dynasty play The Peony Pavilion. Part One is an avant-garde staging of the traditional Kunqu form of Chinese opera's staging of the play, which is how the play is usually performed in China. Part Two is a specially-composed two-hour opera by Tan Dun, mixing Chinese and western forms and instruments.

Venue Info

Beijing National Grand Theater (NCPA) - Beijing
Location   2 W Chang'an Ave

The National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA) is an arts centre containing an opera house in Beijing, People's Republic of China. The Centre, an ellipsoid dome of titanium and glass surrounded by an artificial lake, seats 5,452 people in three halls and is almost 12,000 m² in size. It was designed by French architect Paul Andreu. Construction started in December 2001 and the inaugural concert was held in December 2007.

The exterior of the theater is a titanium-accented glass dome that is completely surrounded by a man-made lake. It is said to look like an egg floating on water, or a water drop. It was designed as an iconic feature, something that would be immediately recognizable.

The dome measures 212 meters in east–west direction, 144 meters in north–south direction, and is 46 meters high. The main entrance is at the north side. Guests arrive in the building after walking through a hallway that goes underneath the lake. The titanium shell is broken by a glass curtain in north–south direction that gradually widens from top to bottom.

The location, immediately to the west of Tiananmen Square and the Great Hall of the People, and near the Forbidden City, combined with the theatre's futuristic design, created considerable controversy. Paul Andreu countered that although there is indeed value in ancient traditional Chinese architecture, Beijing must also include modern architecture, as the capital of the country and an international city of great importance. His design, with large open space, water, trees, was specially designed to complement the red walls of ancient buildings and the Great Hall of the People, in order to melt into the surroundings as opposed to standing out against them.

Internally, there are three major performance halls:

The Opera Hall is used for operas, ballet, and dances and seats 2,416 people.
The Music Hall is used for concerts and recitals and seats 2,017 people.
The Theatre Hall is used for plays and the Beijing opera. It has 1,040 seats.
The NCPA also distributes filmed and recorded performances of its concerts, plays and operas through the in-house label NCPA Classics, established in 2016.

The initial planned cost of the theatre was 2.688 billion yuan. When the construction had completed, the total cost rose to more than CNY3.2 billion. The major cause of the cost increase was a delay for reevaluation and subsequent minor changes as a precaution after a Paris airport terminal building collapsed. The cost has been a major source of controversy because many believed that it is nearly impossible to recover the investment. When the cost is averaged out, each seat is worth about half a million CNY. The Chinese government answered that the theater is not a for profit venture.

The government sanctioned study completed in 2004 by the Research Academy of Economic & Social Development of the Dongbei University of Finance and Economics, of the upkeep costs of the building were publicized in domestic Chinese media:

The water and electricity bills and the cleaning cost for the external surface would be at least tens of millions CNY, and with another maintenance cost, the total could easily exceed one billion CNY. Therefore, at least 80 percent of the annual operational costs must be subsidized by the government for at least the first three years after the opening, and for the rest of its operational life, at least 60 percent of the annual operational cost must be subsidized by the government.

The director of the art committee of the National Centre for the Performing Arts and the standing committee member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, Mr Wu Zuqiang (吴祖强) and the publicist / deputy director of the National Centre for the Performing Arts Mr Deng (邓一江) have announced that 70 percent of the tickets would be sold at low price for ordinary citizens, while 10% of the tickets would be sold at relatively expensive prices for separate market segments, and the 60% of annual operating cost needed to be subsidized by the government would be divided between the central government and the Beijing municipal government.

Important Info
Type: Opera Chinese
City: Beijing, China
Starts at: 19:30
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