China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Lebanese performanc­e group explores story of the Silk Road

- By CHENNAN

Lebanon’s Caracalla Dance Theater is now exploring the story of the Silk Road— traveling through history and geography to revive an ancient path that has united people of different cultures.

Sailing Through Time tells the story of Taymour, a Baalbek native who— in the prime of life— sets out along the Silk Road in search of China.

The show premiered in July at the Bacchus Temple, in Baalbek, Lebanon.

It was the opening performanc­e of the 60th edition of the Baalbeck Internatio­nal Festival, an annual cultural event in Lebanon.

The production, comprising 195 artists from Lebanon, Spain, India, Ukraine and China, will tour Europe later this year. And Ivan Caracalla, head of Caracalla Dance Theater, plans to bring the production on a full tour of China next year.

Caracalla, who was in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, with his troupe to participat­e in the third Silk Road Internatio­nal Arts Festival from Sept 7-21, says: “The news today is full of stories of destructio­n, wars and many ugly things. We are losing our sense of humanity, our sense of values, our sense of morality. So, when we were thinking about a production for the Baalbeck Internatio­nal Festival, we Dancers wanted to do something to remind people that all of us share a common humanity.

“When we look back into our history, what’s the biggest thing we learn from it? It was the Silk Road, which provided the background for many adventures and stories that have informed human, cultural and commercial exchanges between civilizati­ons.

“The Silk Road brought together the world. It was not just about trade but about people meeting each other and people discoverin­g each other. This is what made the Silk Road thrive,” he says.

“This promoted the dialogue of civilizati­on, the dialogue of culture, the dialogue of people. It was a great way to break barriers.

“Since Xi’an was the departure point of the Silk Road, we wanted to stage a show in Xi’an next year to kick off the China tour.”

He also says the production has dancers from China’s Inner Mongolia Dance Theater, and their presence is the biggest tie-up that the Caracalla Dance Theater has had with China.

The Caracalla Dance Theater, founded by Caracalla’s father, Abdel-Halim Caracalla, in 1968, is one of the leading dance companies in theMiddle East.

The troupe, which has developed its own language of dance by bridging Eastern and Western styles throughits­workwithco­mpaniesand performers from around the world, has its own theater and dance school in Beirut.

Comprising around 60 core members, including Abdel-Halim Caracalla, the artistic director; and Ivan Caracalla’s sister, Alissar Caracalla, the choreograp­her; the Caracalla Dance Theater has produced 16 dance shows. They include Two Thousand and One Nights and Knights of the Moon, which toured such major cities as Paris, London and Washington DC.

Meanwhile, the group has been performing in China since 2005.

In 2010, it worked with Chinese actors from theHangzho­u Song and Dance Theater for the first time for its musical and dance production Zayed and the Dream, which toured the world in 2011.

Ivan says that besides inviting Chinese performers to join the theater’s production­s, he hopes to have exchange programs where students from the Caracalla Dance School can visit China and learn traditiona­l Chinese dance.

perform the new theatrical production SailingThr­oughTime by the Caracalla Dance Theater at the opening of the Baalbeck Internatio­nal Festival, in Baalbek, Lebanon, in July.

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REUTERS

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