Thursday, April 19, 2012

SHEN YUN AT LINCOLN CENTER

Have you heard of the China known as “The Celestial Empire?” Ancient myths and legends throughout history record that the Middle Kingdom was continually guided by celestial beings. Traditional Chinese culture attributes all aspects of its civilization to the heavens, including its script, medicine, attire, music, and classical Chinese dance.

It is this tradition of divinely inspired culture that Shen Yun Performing Arts will be presented at Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theatre April 18 to April 22. Shen Yun has toured the world for five seasons, sharing the beauty of this lost culture through classical Chinese dance.

Classical Chinese dance is one of the most comprehensive dance systems in the world. Dynasty after dynasty, it was passed down among the people, in imperial palaces and ancient plays. Thousands of years have refined it into a distinctive dance system embodying traditional aesthetics.

One of the strengths of classical Chinese dance is its expressivity. It can vividly depict a wide range of emotions and portray any cherished virtue— righteousness, loyalty, benevolence, and tolerance. It can be masculine and vigorous, soft and graceful, somber and stirring, playful and humorous.

Such range is achieved through bearing and form. Bearing describes the physical expression of one’s inner spirit. Spirit leads to movement, thus bearing leads to form.

Form refers to Chinese dance’s external appearance—hundreds of unique movements and postures. An accomplished performer makes them appear effortless, but they require a perfect coordination of the entire body that takes years of rigorous training. A dancer’s every cell—from toes to fingertips, from the angle of the head to the direction of the gaze—must be in perfect harmony.

Classical Chinese dance also has an extensive array of techniques—jumps, spins, flips, aerials and other very difficult tumbling moves. These supplement and enhance the dance’s expressive powers while adding vigorous physicality.

And yet, classical Chinese dance is still mostly unfamiliar to the West. But that is quickly changing. Shen Yun is the world’s premier Chinese music and dance company; promoting an authentic form of classical Chinese dance is part of its mission. Based in New York, Shen Yun is very different from companies coming out of China.

“With Shen Yun, we use classical Chinese dance in its purist form, we don’t mix in modern, contemporary, ballet, and other dance forms until you no longer know what you are watching,” says choreographer Vina Lee. “Authentic classical Chinese dance can really give the audience an uplifting experience of pure goodness and consummate beauty.”

And with 5,000 years of civilization to draw from, Shen Yun has plenty of source material. Through dance, Terracotta Warriors awaken from the dust, the Song Dynasty general Yue Fei comes to life, Monkey King and Pigsy escape another sticky situation, maidens grace a heavenly palace, drummers shake the yellow plateaus of the Middle Kingdom.

A renaissance of Chinese culture has begun and one of the world’s ultimate dance forms is blazing the path.

Okay, the above is what I wrote in the Queens Times and tonight I had the absolute pleasure of seeing the show. "Prepare to enter a magical world where the good and the righteous always prevail and where beauty and purity have never been lost".

I have to say that although I did appreciate the Chinese history and culture, what it really boiled down to it for me was the entertainment of it all beginning with the digital back drop...because it was just so impressive! I would see people on the digital screen and then they would approach. Just as the one or some would reach the raised platform, the actor(s) would jump up as if they came out from the screen. And then they did the same going back.

Screen dancers would approach from the side and then the dancers entered from the sides of the stage.



The dancers. It was a combination of mostly ballet and some martial arts when it came to the guys. The women were given much flower dancing. It was like watching bouquets of flowers being formed.

Each of the acts were introduced in English and Chinese They all ended in a photographic pose and all were stunningly colorful. The costumes were intricate with vivacious hues unto themselves.

At first I expected Shen Yun to have the performers simply dancing the night fantastic. Lo and behold, there were two singers, tenor Huan Xing and Soprano Haolan Geng.

Loved the orchestra. Both western and Chinese instruments and conducted by a woman!...Wen-Wen Chou. Loved the music!

It looks as though they have added another show here in NYC to extend the short run to Sunday, the 22nd. However, if you miss it in NYC, you may be able to catch it in another city in the U.S. For further information go to www.ShenYun2012.com/NYC

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