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Chuanju Opera Wild Desire is adapted from
Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under the Elms. (Source: China Daily) Photo
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BEIJING, April 22 -- When Ephraim Cabot brings his
young bride Abbie to their remote New England farm, little does he see the
turmoil that her arrival will bring his family. Ephraim's youngest son at first
loathes the newcomer, but when hatred gives way to lust, the resulting conflict
threatens to rock the peaceful farm.
Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under the Elms may be
familiar to many theatergoers but how would it be if performed in China's
Chuanju Opera? In 1989, the playwright Xu Fen tried to adapt it into a Chuanju
Opera play entitled Wild Desire (Yuhai Kuangchao) and the Chengdu Chuanju Opera
Company premiered it that May.
As part of the ongoing Chuanju Opera Week, presented
by the Chengdu Chuanju Opera Company, the play will run at the Memorial Hall of
Peking University on Saturday.
Because of the sparseness of its style and its
avoidance of melodrama, Desire Under the Elms was acclaimed immediately as a
powerful tragedy and has continued to rank among the great American plays of the
20th century.
"Desire is definitely not an easy work to carry off
but we try deliver the original spirit and power of the drama as well as appeal
to Chuanju fans," says the playwright Xu.
The Chuanju Opera Week also includes the play Story
of the Red Plum Blossom (Hong Mei Ji), which will run at the Memorial Hall of
Peking University on Friday.
Story of the Red Plum Blossom is based on the legend
written by Zhou Chaojun in Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). It tells the story of Li
Huiniang, who is forced to be a concubine of the powerful minister Jia Sidao. Li
refuses and falls in love with a young man named Pei Yu. Jia kills Li and
captures Pei but the ghost of Li saves Pei and finally punishes Jia.
One of China's oldest local operas, Chuanju Opera is
popular in Southwest China's Sichuan province and some regions of Yunnan and
Guizhou provinces. During the early years of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), five
local operas - Kunqu, Gaoqiang, Huqin, Tanxi and Dengxi - were gradually merged
into what is now known as Chuanju Opera.
"Chuanju Opera's wide repertoire has a strong
literary quality, and is full of wit, humor and lively dialogue with a
pronounced local flavor. It also has built its own system of stylized
movements," says Chen Qiaoru, vice-president of the Chengdu Chuanju Opera
Company, who plays Abbie in Wild Desire.
"The two plays we bring to Beijing can fully display
the special characters of Chuanju Opera. Many unique stunts such as quick
changes of facial characteristics without makeup, and blowing fire are used in
the plays," she says.
(Source: China Daily)