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| Modern Chinese Drama Celebrated | |
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Two
plays commemorate the 100th anniversary of modern Chinese drama -- Lao
She's Watching Chang'an from the West and Winter of Two
Cities, a new play about family miscommunication in Compared
with Teahouse, Watching Chang'an from the West is not
that well known among the many works by Lao She (1899-1966). However,
when the story was first adapted to stage about 50 years ago, its bold
sarcasm of society attracted more to the theater. This
year, the classic play has been re-adapted to commemorate the 100th
anniversary of modern Chinese drama. Starring famous actor Ge You (Best
Actor at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival), it is undoubtedly the most
talked-about drama production in the country these days. It will be
staged at the Majestic Theater through Sunday. Often
compared with The Inspector General by former Soviet Union
writer Nikolai Vasilevich Gogol, the original play by Lao She is adapted
from a true story in 1950s In
three years, he successfully gets a new identity, a substantial income,
honors and awards, and he finally becomes an important government
official. In Chang'an,
Ge makes his return to the stage after 20 years, though he is familiar
to moviegoers. Ge's major roles in a series of comedy films, such as Cellphone
and The Big Shot's Funeral, have made him well known throughout
He
drives a high-tech wheelchair, affects a stammer, and forges checks and
certificates. From time to time, he sings Chinese pop songs and
practices Indian dancing to entertain. It is reported that audiences
laughed uproariously. The
play has been a smash-hit wherever it has toured, including A
veteran actor though he is, Ge says he was actually quite nervous at
first because he hasn't performed on stage for so long. He says his head
"was stuffed with lines and he couldn't even fell asleep for
several nights." Drama,
however, is more fun than film for Ge. "When shooting for a film, I
can never foresee the final result because any segment might be cut at
the end. Drama is different. Nobody, including the director, can control
the actor on the stage. It gives the actor satisfaction." For
the small theater, Adapted
from local playwright Yu Rongjun's signature works, Last Winter
and Activated Carbon, the new play cleverly links two stories
on one stage. It gathers actors from both countries. Interestingly, the
Chinese actors will be speaking Chinese while the Japanese actors will
be speaking Japanese, and they speak past each other, not understanding. "I
was attracted by the play's family-centered theme," says Hakariya
Kazuhisa, the director from 2007-03-19 |
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