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Li Shiji has played a lead role in
reviving the traditional Peking Opera after the "cultural revolution".
(Source: China Daily) Photo
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BEIJING, Aug. 10 -- Li Shiji, 76, has been
looking for a store in Beijing dealing in specialties from Southwest China's
Yunnan province. She finally finds one and on entering, asks for just one thing
- Xuanwei hams.
Not that hams are Li's favorite. But she feels there
is no better way to commemorate her revered and beloved friend Zhuo Lin, wife of
China's late leader Deng Xiaoping, who died on July 29. Her memorial service
takes place Monday at Beijing's Babaoshan Funeral.
Memories of their friendship, that goes back to 1980
and is not known widely, have been flooding back giving her sleepless nights.
But diabetes has so wrecked her eyesight that she is not able to see their old
photographs clearly, despite the use of a magnifying glass.
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The friendship between Zhuo Lin (left),
wife of China's late leader Deng Xiaoping, and Peking Opera artist Li
Shiji lasted for about three decades. Courtesy of Li Shiji(Source: China
Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
That's when she decided to look for Xuanwei ham, a
specialty from Zhuo's hometown made internationally famous by her entrepreneur
father Pu Zaiting.
"To me, Zhuo is a revered elder, a dear friend and a
strong supporter of my career and life," says Li, one of the best-known
disciples of Cheng Yanqiu, founder of the Cheng school of Peking Opera.
"It is a long story, but as I reflect on it, it
starts to dawn on me that we all owe much to Zhuo for her constant efforts to
revive traditional Chinese art and culture, not just Peking Opera," recalls Li,
wearing dark glasses to hide her red eyes after spending two sleepless nights.
Between 1980 and 1994, Zhuo would visit Li once a
week for discussions on Peking Opera and its revival after the "cultural
revolution" (1966-76).
"Whatever I have achieved in Peking Opera can't be
mentioned without [also mentioning] Zhuo's encouragement and support," says Li.
Li is regarded as a controversial reformer of Peking
Opera. Since the 1980s, she has been keen on re-introducing the Cheng school in
a way that is more appealing to the younger generation, and this has attracted
much criticism from conservatives. But despite this, many claim to have taken to
Peking Opera only because of her performances.
She shot to nationwide fame in 1979 when she became
the first to bring traditional Peking Opera repertoires back on stage soon after
the "cultural revolution", when all private and public performances of such
traditional repertoires were banned.
Li recalls the number of times Huang Zhen, then
Minister of Culture, summoned her to his office to encourage her to make the
"ice-breaking move".
"He would say, 'some old comrades' would like to see
you take a lead'," says Li.
It was not until a year later, when Zhuo showed up at
Li's place, that Li and her late husband - Tang Zaixin, a renowned Peking Opera
musician - realized that the minister was in fact referring to Deng and Zhuo
when he said "some old comrades".
"I didn't recognize her since I hadn't seen her
before in person," says Li, recalling Zhuo's first visit. "I was particularly
curious that she carried with her a worn cushion and a ragged blanket - which
had probably been used by several of her grandchildren - for the visit.
"It was only when she sat down, putting the cushion
behind her and covering her legs with the blanket that I realized that she had
come for a long conversation," says Li.
The visits became a weekly routine and lasted till
1994 when Deng came down with Parkinson's and Zhuo could not tear herself away.
Zhuo spent most of the time, during her visits,
listening to Li and her husband describe their difficulties and achievements in
reviving the Cheng school of Peking Opera.
Li and Tang would always record their performances
for Zhuo to take back home. And at the next visit, Zhuo would offer her comments
and suggestions "modestly". "She would never say 'you should', rather she would
always say "you might try'," says Li.
Despite strong opposition from the conservatives, Li
says her efforts to reform Peking Opera went smoothly, but this would have been
impossible without Deng and Zhuo's support.
"Personally I am very grateful (for Zhuo's support),
but I don't think she was helping me only out of personal interest," says Li.
In the early 1980s, keeping traditional Chinese art
and culture alive was imperative owing both to the influence of the "cultural
revolution" and the opening-up policy, explains Li.
"Deng and Zhuo hoped that if the revival of Peking
Opera, the flagship of Chinese traditional art and culture, was successful, that
would serve as an example for other forms of traditional art and culture," says
Li.
Through the years, Li says, Zhuo always maintained
such a low-key presence that it was not until years later that her neighbors
started to take notice.
"She was a doer, determined and optimistic in times
of ups and downs," says Li.
She recalls Zhuo recounting the darkest period of her
life when Deng and she were in exile in East China's Jiangxi province and they
had to also take care of their eldest son, disabled from a fall.
"She told the story like it was a normal part of
life," says Li.
Zhuo became a role model for Li, who experienced the
painful loss of her only son in 2001. Her husband Tang couldn't take this and
died four years later, leaving her alone to take care of two granddaughters, now
9 and 6.
"I didn't call her much [after the death of my son]
because I did not want her to worry," says Li.
"But deep in my heart, she has always been with me
through all these difficult years in my life."
(Source: China Daily)