Zhang Huoding enjoys great popularity among Chinese Peking Opera fans. [Photo provided to China Daily] |
"I am not an ambitious person. I have very few shows every year so I guess that's why audiences want to see me," says Zhang, who left China National Peking Opera Company in 2010 to become a professor at the National Academy of Chinese Theater Arts.
When asked about the upcoming shows, Zhang says many works of the Cheng school, one of the four major schools in Peking Opera, are tragic stories, and she likes the role of Bai Suzhen in particular, the lead character in The Legend of White Snake, which is a personified snake spirit married to Xu Xian, a human.
"I was attracted to the role of Bai. She is crazy about love," says Zhang, who performed the whole work for the first time in 2000 when she was with the China National Peking Opera Company. "The classic work contains a tragic love story, lots of martial arts ... so I believe that American audiences will like it."
Compared with many Peking Opera actors, who learned the traditional art when they were young, Zhang, who came from Baicheng city in Northeast China's Jilin province, studied Peking Opera at age 15.
A late start is considered a disadvantage for Peking Opera actors and actresses, who need to train their bodies and voices early in life.
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