China Daily

Sichuan play on old order now in Beijing

- By CHEN NAN

The late Chinese writer Ba Jin wrote his famous novel

Family in 1931. It’s a tale of three brothers from the Gao family, whose aspiration­s and love were crushed in an old family of three generation­s under the reign of the patriarch, grandfathe­r Gao.

The book, based on the writer’s childhood in a rich family in Southwest China’s Sichuan province, inspired many young Chinese to examine and rebel against the feudal society back then — and the story continues to inspire today’s readers.

For He Chuan, the artistic director of Sichuan Song & Dance Ensemble, the novel is perfect for stage adaptation.

In 2009, He, a Sichuan native, began to work on the dance drama Family. Six years later, it premiered last fall during the first Sichuan Art Festival.

This week, Family will be staged at the National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing.

The four-act dance drama, which unfolds in the course of two funerals and two weddings, highlights the oppression of the old social system and how a young generation tries to break it. He focuses the idea of the drama mainly on life and death, old and new.

“The theme of the novel is timeless, which appeals to contempora­ry audiences since the young generation shares the roles’ confusion over life and love,” says He.

As a director who has staged Sichuan-themed dance dramas, including Sichuan

Girls and Sichuan Teahouse, He continues his usual style of employing elements of Sichu an culture like the local opera and architectu­re.

Wooden chairs are used as impressive set designs in the drama. Actors dance with chairs, an act which, the director says, is a symbol of the darkness, suffocatio­n and tragic love in the story.

“One of the main roles in the drama is that of grandfathe­r Gao, representi­ng the old power and rigid tradition. Throughout the work, the actor’s back faces the audience, and he doesn’t turn around until the end of the drama, which is a highlight of the choreograp­hy,” says He.

“I have been living in Chengdu for decades ,” he adds ,“and besides giving Ba Jin’s novel a different interpreta­tion, I also want the audience to better understand the local culture through the dance drama.”

“The theme of the novel is timeless, which appeals to the contempora­ry audiences since the young generation shares the roles’ confusion over life and love.”

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Wooden chairs are used in Family as set designs that actors dance with.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Wooden chairs are used in Family as set designs that actors dance with.
 ??  ?? Dance drama Family is adapted from Ba Jin’s famous novel of the same title.
Dance drama Family is adapted from Ba Jin’s famous novel of the same title.

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