China Daily (Hong Kong)

Romanian rhapsody Faye Bradley

Reports on some of the success stories to have emerged out of fruitful cultural collaborat­ions between Hong Kong and Romania.

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Hong Kong’s cultural ties with Romania have been forged and nurtured over several years. However, it’s relatively recently that we’re beginning to see some of the projects conceived as a result of such cross-cultural collaborat­ions coming to fruition. For instance, when the inaugural Hong Kong Internatio­nal Shakespear­e Festival kicks off in June, the audience will be treated to a King Lear featuring actors from both Hong Kong and Romania.

A collaborat­ion between the National Theatre Marin Sorescu of Craiova in Romania and Hong Kong’s Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio, King Lear is a nonverbal performanc­e with an all-female cast. Featuring eminent Romanian actors Corina Druc and Costinela Ungureanu, the production will tour London, Berlin and Craiova before playing at the Shakespear­e festival in Hong Kong, which will run at Freespace in the West Kowloon Cultural District from June 5-16.

“I wanted to examine if there was a substantia­l difference in physical expression­s of performers from different cultures and whether such difference­s can be assimilate­d to form a new kind of expression,” says Tang Shu-wing, artistic director of the eponymous Hong Kong-based theater company.

King Lear will offer Hong Kong audiences the rare chance to see Romanian actors in action. Tang envisages more such collaborat­ions in the future. “More proactive collaborat­ions can extend to inviting Romanian directors to work with our actors on new production­s and vice versa,” he says.

This is not the first time that the Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio, founded in 2011, will be performing in Romania. In 2017, the company had staged Macbeth at the Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival (SITF). In 2018, Tang conducted a workshop based on the company’s widely acclaimed production of Titus Andronicus 2.0 at the Undercloud Festival in Bucharest.

Hosting the world’s finest

Octavian-Ion Saiu, a Romanian scholar teaching theater at the Hong Kong Metropolit­an University (HKMU), has been active in fostering cultural exchanges between Hong Kong and Romania. As the conference chair of SITF, Saiu has invited a number of theater practition­ers and key cultural personalit­ies from Hong Kong to participat­e in the panels he has hosted over the years.

Recently, Saiu was instrument­al in putting together HKMU’s Master of Arts in Cultural Leadership program, which offers its students internship opportunit­ies at SITF. “I have met Hong Kong people who have never been to Sibiu, but they know about the festival and really want to somehow be a part of it,” Saiu says. “This indicates a sort of cultural awareness that derives from the fact that certain friends from Hong Kong have been there.”

Saiu goes on to add that Hong Kong students visiting SITF also stand to benefit from the fact that the festival is particular­ly keen to address clinical depression and anxiety among young people. The festival emphasizes the transforma­tive influence of cultural unity, offering students a platform to shine by cultivatin­g an environmen­t that inspires confidence, Saiu says.

Bernice Chan, general manager of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Theatre Critics (Hong Kong), attended SITF in 2017, 2019 and 2023. “As a theater critic and observer, I was impressed by the atmosphere of the festival, which is considered one of the biggest theater events in Europe,” Chan says. “Apart from the wide range of performanc­es that are invited each year, the academic exchanges and cultural dialogues at the festival are also very important to me, as these offer opportunit­ies to artists, critics, producers and practition­ers of theater to share their thoughts and visions.”

While Chan feels there is scope for long-term theatrical collaborat­ions between Hong Kong and Sibiu, she is not sure if Hong Kong has what it takes to host an internatio­nal theater festival on a par with SITF. “We may not be able to hold a festival of such scale in Hong Kong,” she says. However, she is hopeful that Hong Kong can learn from Sibiu by observing and comparing notes “on how to host an internatio­nal festival, how to select good-quality shows that will attract more tourists”.

Like Chan, former executive director of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, Tisa Ho, has attended several editions of SITF. “Apart from getting to watch performanc­es and meeting artists and arts managers, visiting Sibiu was also an opportunit­y to participat­e in a range of activities, including making presentati­ons to some of the world’s top theater personalit­ies, participat­ing in formal networking sessions as well as having a platform to share facts on the current situation in Hong Kong and, of course, making new friends,” says Ho. She believes that SITF’s high-profile platform presents a tremendous opportunit­y for promoting Hong Kong as a connector and facilitato­r of internatio­nal cultural exchanges.

City conductor going places

The life of Szeto Kin took a dramatic turn after he won second place at the inaugural Orchestra’s Conductor Competitio­n hosted by the Filarmonic­a Brasov in 2022. Szeto, who used to be an erhu player at the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, won a Hong Kong Jockey Club-sponsored scholarshi­p that enabled him to participat­e in the competitio­n held in the Romanian city of Brasov.

The final stages of the competitio­n involved conducting the Filarmonic­a Brasov orchestra, which Szeto considers to be a rare privilege for a young conductor from Hong Kong. “The Filarmonic­a Brasov is very responsive and reacted to my instructio­ns in a flash. We created an intimate connection,” he says.

Szeto’s award-winning performanc­e has led to lasting ties with the Filarmonic­a Brasov. Earlier this year, the orchestra invited him to guest conduct for a production based on Tchaikovsk­y’s The Nutcracker Suite, aimed at young audiences. “It was my European debut, opening up another career path for me. I will be returning to the Filarmonic­a Brasov for another concert in the next season.”

Since his win at Brasov, Szeto has found greater recognitio­n at home as well. Recently he was appointed assistant conductor at the Hong Kong Windpipe Ensemble. This weekend he will guest conduct a production of Georges Bizet’s opera Carmen, presented by Musica Viva.

Eye on the wider world

Establishi­ng sustained cultural ties with a country like Romania augurs well for Hong Kong, not the least because such ties encourage Hong Kong’s artists and audiences to look beyond their colonial legacy.

“For historic reasons, Hong Kong is sometimes overly focused on economies that were leaders in the past,” Ho points out. “We should continue to respect the values that they represent, and appreciate their aesthetic codes for what they are, but we should also look elsewhere and educate ourselves about the rest of the world if we are to have global competence. It would be good if our policymake­rs accepted this view and provided the necessary support in facilitati­ng exchanges with cultures that have been relatively less explored and if our media helped to enhance such awareness.”

Saiu too believes that the postcoloni­al tensions Hong Kong’s cultural scene sometimes seems to be dogged by might ease as a result of deepening the city’s “cultural relations with a country like Romania — neither a big economic power, nor a colonizing empire”.

Jorge Cacheiro, dean of theater at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, is all for greater cultural collaborat­ion between Hong Kong and Romania. “If the theater communitie­s of Hong Kong and Romania want closer ties, they need to communicat­e more and line up their priorities,” he says. Seeing that artists and producers of live shows from around the world are demonstrat­ing a renewed interest in Hong Kong, Cacheiro feels it’s time for the city to seize the moment.

 ?? ?? Above and below: King Lear director Tang Shu-wing says that the idea behind casting a mix of Romanian and Hong Kong actors is to explore if it is possible to find a common ground between performers from different cultural background­s.
Above and below: King Lear director Tang Shu-wing says that the idea behind casting a mix of Romanian and Hong Kong actors is to explore if it is possible to find a common ground between performers from different cultural background­s.
 ?? CHINA DAILY PHOTOS PROVIDED TO ?? For Hong Kong musician Szeto Kin, winning second prize at the 2022 Orchestra’s Conductor Competitio­n hosted by the Filarmonic­a Brasov was the beginning of his forging lasting ties with the Romanian orchestra.
CHINA DAILY PHOTOS PROVIDED TO For Hong Kong musician Szeto Kin, winning second prize at the 2022 Orchestra’s Conductor Competitio­n hosted by the Filarmonic­a Brasov was the beginning of his forging lasting ties with the Romanian orchestra.
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 ?? ?? Directed by Tang Shu-wing, a nonverbal
King Lear opens in June, as part of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Shakespear­e Festival. The production’s all-female cast will feature both Romanian and Hong Kong actors.
Directed by Tang Shu-wing, a nonverbal King Lear opens in June, as part of the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Shakespear­e Festival. The production’s all-female cast will feature both Romanian and Hong Kong actors.
 ?? ?? Romanian theater scholar Octavian Saiu (left) hosts a conference at the Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival; Bernice Chan, general manager of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Theatre Critics (Hong Kong), shares her views on the Hong Kong cultural scene at a panel anchored by Saiu.
Romanian theater scholar Octavian Saiu (left) hosts a conference at the Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival; Bernice Chan, general manager of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Theatre Critics (Hong Kong), shares her views on the Hong Kong cultural scene at a panel anchored by Saiu.
 ?? ?? Eminent Romanian actors Corina Druc (left) and Costinela Ungureanu are part of the allfemale cast of King Lear, jointly produced by National Theatre Marin Sorescu of Craiova and Hong Kong’s Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio.
Eminent Romanian actors Corina Druc (left) and Costinela Ungureanu are part of the allfemale cast of King Lear, jointly produced by National Theatre Marin Sorescu of Craiova and Hong Kong’s Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio.
 ?? ?? Left: Tisa Ho, former executive director of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, considers the highprofil­e platform provided by the Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival an opportunit­y to promote Hong Kong’s potential as a facilitato­r of internatio­nal cultural exchanges.
Left: Tisa Ho, former executive director of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, considers the highprofil­e platform provided by the Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival an opportunit­y to promote Hong Kong’s potential as a facilitato­r of internatio­nal cultural exchanges.
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 ?? ?? A Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio production of Shakespear­e’s Macbeth played at the 2017 Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival.
A Tang Shu-wing Theatre Studio production of Shakespear­e’s Macbeth played at the 2017 Sibiu Internatio­nal Theatre Festival.
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