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Total Immersion for Total Theater: Taiwan's National Dramatic Arts Academy
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13538 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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4 / 1988 |
2,793 Words |
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J. Perceval J. Perceval writes on the arts from New York. |
A half-hour drive from the center of Taipei brings you to the suburb of Neihu, where, nestled beside lushly verdant hills facing a small lake, you find the campus of one of the world's most unusual schools: the National Fu Hsing Dramatic Arts Academy. Here, in modern buildings and spacious parklike grounds, some three hundred girls and boys train to carry on the centuries-old tradition of a unique art form: Chinese opera.
As with Western drama, the origins of Chinese theater can be traced back to religious ceremonies, which developed in prehistory. Although historical records are limited, it has been fairly well established nonetheless that as far back as the Chou dynasty (1122 B.C.) religious festivals were held where priests and soothsayers chanted and mimed as they presented stylized short plays for the faithful. On these occasions, dancers, acrobats, and jugglers performed as well.
Drama proper really began to develop during the Tang dynasty (A.D. 618-907), when the famous Emperor Ming Huang (A.D. 713-755) founded a school of dramatic art known as the Pear Garden to train actors and singers to perform at court. The greatest development in Chinese drama and opera came, however, with the Mongol invasions from the north and the Yuan dynasty in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. This northern infusion brought energy and a warlike vigor along with wild, shrill music performed on stringed instruments, which enhanced the more sophisticated existing tradition.
In 1790, on the eve of the modern age, the best of regional theater companies from all over China converged in Beijing to celebrate the eightieth birthday of the Emperor
... (1991 of 17025 Characters)
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