China Daily

Arts fest announces 2024 extravagan­zas

- By ZHANG KUN

The China Shanghai Internatio­nal Arts Festival recently announced its plans for this year, including multiple shows by Germany’s Berliner Philharmon­iker and the Beijing People’s Art Theater.

It also named 10 winning production­s of the 2023 CSIAF Impact Index Awards and announced that this year’s 23rd installmen­t of the festival will take place from Oct 18 to Nov 17.

Internatio­nally acclaimed companies, such as Austria’s Wiener Philharmon­iker, the London Symphony Orchestra, Germany’s Munchner Philharmon­iker, Russia’s Bolshoi Theatre and Mariinsky Ballet, and Ballets de Monte-Carlo “have all received our invitation and are expected to perform in Shanghai in the autumn”, says CSIAF Center president Li Ming.

“Aside from the main festival that takes place every year in the autumn, we have been actively exploring new possibilit­ies to further enrich the artistic life in Shanghai throughout the whole year,” says the center’s deputy president Yang Jialu.

For example, the Berliner Philharmon­iker will arrive in Shanghai in June, she says. It will present four symphony concerts at Shanghai Grand Theatre, led by its chief conductor Kirill Petrenko and pianist Yuja Wang. The company will have an exclusive residentia­l program in Shanghai, which also consists of a series of chamber music performanc­es and educationa­l events. Tickets will be available by the end of February, Yang says.

One of the most esteemed theater companies in China, the Beijing People’s Art Theatre, will present five production­s during the upcoming festival, including its celebrated repertoire, The Tea House.

“Last year, we presented Old Fashioned Comedy at the festival. And the vivid performanc­es by our leading artists, Li Youbin and Shi Lanya, won praise from audiences in Shanghai,” says the company’s president, Qin Xinchun.

“The play by Russian author Aleksei Arbuzov premiered at our experiment­al theater in 2019, and the Shanghai tour marked its first show outside of Beijing.”

Since its founding in 1952, the Beijing People’s Art Theatre has made landmark tours in Shanghai in 1961, 1988, 2012 and 2014, she says.

Next year, the company will undertake its fifth large-scale tour in Shanghai, showing five production­s while hosting colorful educationa­l events and comprehens­ive collaborat­ions with colleagues in the city.

And the festival will host a special campaign during the Edinburgh Festival, focusing on the promotion of Chinese art and showcasing the Shanghai Culture Week during the Hong Kong Arts Festival.

The Shanghai event will also kick off new comprehens­ive projects with the Internatio­nal Society for the Performing Arts this year to build a new internatio­nal performanc­e-trading platform.

Moreover, it also announced 10 Impact Index Prize-winning production­s selected from the 72 shows featured at last year’s main festival, including Der Ring des Nibelungen by the Mariinsky Theatre, the Old Fashioned Comedy by the Beijing People’s Art Theatre and Brecht’s Ghosts by the Berliner Ensemble.

The last production features more than 100 puppets that director Suse Wachter designed to portray such figures as Franz Kafka, Luciano Pavarotti and Margaret Thatcher.

The performanc­es at Theatre Young in Shanghai during the 22nd arts festival won critical acclaim. This year, the festival will promote the performanc­e of the Berliner Ensemble in Shanghai for a second round show and help facilitate its tour to more Chinese cities, says Li.

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? From left: The Berliner Philharmon­iker. Pianist Yuja Wang will be featured in its Shanghai concerts later this year.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY From left: The Berliner Philharmon­iker. Pianist Yuja Wang will be featured in its Shanghai concerts later this year.

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