Global Times

LADY SINGS FAT FO RUR AL TRADITI R ON

Nese opera styles on verge Chi of al exti Loc nct ion

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When he dons his flowing robes and vivid makeup, Wu Yunhong is transforme­d from a laborer who toils on Chinese mountains under a beating sun into an evil general commanding an army of warriors.

Wu was raised in the Jinyuan Opera Company, co- founded by his grandfathe­r in 1984. He started performing when he was only 8 and is the third generation to carry on the tradition – but he may be the last.

With crowds aging and performers dying off, the Sichuan style of opera performed around the Southwest China city of Chongqing is threatened with extinction – even as officially sanctioned forms flourish in the Statecontr­olled arts environmen­t.

Some Chinese opera styles such as Peking and Canton have been elevated to “national treasure” status by the government, winning millions in funding, but others are left to wither on the stage.

“Sometimes the only young people at the performanc­es are my wife and children when they travel with us,” said Wu, 26.

He and his fellow players receive no official funding, and between shows the actors must still tend to their own fields, growing corn and rice in a mountainou­s area where temperatur­es can easily reach 42 C during the summer.

“We don’t get any support from the government, all of our fees come from the farmers who pool their money together for a performanc­e,” said troupe member Liu Guiying.

“We make a little extra money performing, but we can never get rich performing.”

‘ Poor farmer’

The Beijing style of opera, mostly known as Peking Opera in the Englishspe­aking world, was popularize­d under the Qing Dynasty ( 1644- 1911).

It had ample support from the court and spread because it was sung in a dialect widely understood across China, while regional varieties such as Cantonese, Shanghaies­e and Sichuanese opera stuck to their own dialects and songs.

After 1949, the central government remained keen on Peking Opera, decreeing every province should form its own Peking Opera troupe, even at the expense of local varieties.

A crippling blow came with the destructiv­e decade of the Cultural Revolution ( 1966- 76), when Mao Zedong’s wife Jiang Qing launched a campaign to cleanse the arts – all plays, films, operas, ballets and music considered “feudalisti­c and bourgeois” were banned.

Only eight “model plays” were allowed, chosen by the former actress declared a patron of culture, who took close control over the few troupes authorized to produce them.

It took until the 1980s before private theater companies began to form again in the Chinese mainland.

For a short time they flourished, but have since had to compete with new forms of entertainm­ent that came with China’s economic boom.

“Every society has a desire to preserve its own folk cultures, however in China you have to add very powerful political power,” said Ruru Li, a profes- sor of Chinese theater studies at the University of Leeds.

“First there was the Cultural Revolution and now there’s State investment, but it doesn’t include the majority of opera styles,” she told AFP.

Without official support niche styles are disappeari­ng at a steady drum beat.

“In the 1960s there were more than 300 varieties of Chinese opera, today there are about 200,” Li said. “In 10 years’ time, maybe there will only be 100 varieties left.”

Those who still perform them have had to contend with shrinking audiences and a lack of new fans, as many young people shun farming and leave China’s countrysid­e to look for betterpayi­ng jobs in the cities.

“I don’t want my son to grow up learning opera like I did, he needs to go to school, hopefully he can go to university,” said Wu.

“He needs to learn to be cultured, not in opera, but the culture of books, or else he will just be a poor farmer like me.”

 ??  ?? Chinese opera performers put on a Sichuan opera in Southwest China’s Chongqing.
Chinese opera performers put on a Sichuan opera in Southwest China’s Chongqing.

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