The Daily Courier

Americans not invited, but others visitors welcome to overpay for mass games

- By ERIC TALMADGE

PYONGYANG— North Korea has extended the run of its iconic mass games, which it revived last month to mark the country’s 70th birthday.

Despite a travel ban blocking tourists from the U.S. and pricey tickets for tourists from other countries, the games — which involve tens of thousands of gymnasts, dancers and flip-card-wielding hordes in the stands — appear to once again be a hit, filling Pyongyang’s 150,000-seat May Day Stadium more than a month after they resumed to end a five-year hiatus.

For the past month, to celebrate the 70th anniversar­y of the country’s independen­ce on Sept. 9, North Korea has been staging its latest version of the games, called “The Glorious Country.”

Performanc­es had been expected to conclude on Oct. 10.

Ticket sales appear to be good — the stadium was nearly full on Thursday, with many Chinese and some Japanese tourists — despite a travel ban that has stopped American tourists from visiting and seats for foreigners and VIPs that begin at $110 and go up to nearly $900.

The performanc­es run about two hours and are divided into “chapters” that depict important ideas or stages in the growth of the nation. One of the highlights of this year’s performanc­e is a segment on Korean reunificat­ion that depicts leader Kim Jong Un greeting South Korean President Moon Jae-in for their historic summit earlier this year.

The games have been criticized as an insouciant homage to authoritar­ianism, with the individual so totally melded into the larger whole and performing for the glorificat­ion of the leader. But they are also almost certainly one of the biggest examples of performanc­e art ever undertaken. The previous iteration of the games received a world record for having more than 100,000 participan­ts.

North Korea first staged its mass games in 2002, when Kim’s father, Kim Jong Il, was the country’s leader. They continued almost without interrupti­on on an annual ba-

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