A new role for Peking Opera
Updated: 2013-12-13 09:03
By Chen Nan (China Daily)
|
||||||||
Wang Lu delivers a virtuoso portrayal of all the characters. |
Written180 years ago by German author George Buechner, the drama tells of a poor and lowly soldier's oppression by different authority figures in society. Woyzeck descends into madness and murders his girlfriend.
Wang Lu, an actor from China National Beijing Opera Company, delivers a virtuoso portrayal of all the characters, almost without words, drawing upon the rich vocabulary of gestures from Peking Opera.
"Woyzeck has been interpreted in various art forms and I have watched the opera and drama versions before," Wang Xiaoxin says. "It's been my long-standing dream to bring it to the stage in the form of Peking Opera."
After starting work on the script in 2009, she invited Wang Lu to join her. She has worked with the performer many times, including in Fisherman and the Fish.
As they developed the crossover show more deeply, Wang Xiaoxin realized that she needed to step away from it, so she invited German stage director Anna Peschke.
"Because I am too familiar with Peking Opera, I felt my imagination was limited," says Wang Xiaoxin.
"To break the convention, I invited a foreign director and I believe she will give a fresh and interesting result to the cross-cultural experiment."
As a director at the intersection of theater, performance and visual art, Peschke wants to show a contemporary version of Peking Opera, which is experimental, open and tragic.
- Post-baby Duchess
- Victoria Beckham S/S 2014 presented during NYFW
- 'Despicable' minions upset Depp's 'Lone Ranger' at box office
- 'Taken 2' grabs movie box office crown
- Rihanna's 'Diamonds' tops UK pop chart
- Fans get look at vintage Rolling Stones
- Celebrities attend Power of Women event
- Ang Lee breaks 'every rule' to make unlikely new Life of Pi film
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Logging out of an Internet addiction |
Prepare prisoners for life after release |
'Can we survive after surviving?' |
Cities hit hard by smog |
$50,000 in the US; $149,000 in China |
Against a sea of troubles |
Today's Top News
Wuhan gets tourism plug
Foreigners stay cool to insurance
DPRK's Jang Song-thaek sentenced to death
Chinese Fulbrights 'internationalize' campuses
Sinopec's front woman in the US
Slowdown seen in petroleum use
China,US consider the other side a rival
China's publishing of data welcomed
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |