Sepcial Report: Spring Festival Special 2009
BEIJING, Jan. 22 -- Watching CCTV's annual
Spring Festival gala and one of the many festival films tailor-made for the
season is no longer the dominant way of spending your leisure time during the
week-long break. A great variety of entertainment is also on offer at theaters
around Beijing.
No matter what your age or taste, there is sure to be
something to whet your appetite.
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Israel Ballet will perform a modern ballet
triple-bill at the National Center for the Performing Arts on Jan. 31£¬
2009.(Photo: China Daily) Photo Gallery>>> |
Israel Ballet's Cinderella and Russian National
Ballet Theater's Swan Lake and The Nutcracker are good family fare. For
sophisticated ballet lovers, Israel Ballet will perform a modern ballet night on
Jan 31 at the National Center for the Performing Arts.
The same company's Cinderella adds a "beggar"
character in the dance. When Prince Charming picks his wife at the ball,
Cinderella's stepmother and sisters leave her at home alone, but she befriends a
beggar who turns out to be a fairy and sends her to the ball.
On Jan 31, Israel Ballet will perform a modern ballet
triple-bill including Written In the Sand, Ni-Na and XTA.
The choreography of XTA is based on a series of
repeat, drum-like rhythms. The movements sync with the rhythms but are separated
with cry-like voices.
Russian National Ballet Theater will perform Swan
Lake at Poly Theater on Jan 27 and The Nutcracker on Jan 28.
The Forbidden City Concert Hall has been staging
"2009 New Year Concerts" since the middle of January. Famous pieces of Peking
Opera, traditional crosstalk, folk songs and concerts are making for a colorful
start to the New Year. The Light Music New Year Concert features a quirky
playlist - the traditional Chinese song Jasmine follows music by Super Mario;
Memory from the musical Cats is after the theme to the movie Mission Impossible.
Chen Kaige's movie Forever Enthralled recalls the
popularity of Peking Opera. If you want to sample just the very best from the
genre, China National Peking Opera Company's New Year show on Jan 28 is a must.
The two-hour performance includes Yang Silang Visits His Mother, Madame White
Snake and Lubu and Diaochan, all of them highly educational guides to the
essence of Peking Opera.
Those in their 50s and 60s might also opt to visit
the Forbidden City Concert Hall on Jan 29, when the old Chinese songs I Love
You, China, When I Walk in Greater Hinggan Mountains and Ode to the Plums will
take you back to "the good old days".
Or you can see the Russian State Academy Beriozka
Dance Company's folk performance at Poly Theater from Jan 29 to Feb 1. The
60-year-old company is famous for the girls' round dance Beriozka, in which
girls in traditional Russian dresses dance to the music of an old folk song Vo
Pole Beriozonka Stoyala (There Was a Birch Tree in the Field). These songs and
dances are treasured by a whole generation.
One more show worth seeing is the water concert at
the Water Cube, formally known as the National Aquatic Center. Less a reminder
of super-swimmer Michael Phelps, it is more reminiscent of all those lavish,
pool-themed musicals from the heyday of Hollywood. You can almost fantasize
about Esther Williams rising up from gushing fountains.
The "dancing water" squirts are deftly and richly
choreographed and accompanied by a mostly classical Western score, half of which
is live and half recorded. It is a suitable finale to a grand tour of this
wonderful Olympic venue.
(Source: China Daily)
