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Culture & Education
Beijing Opera
Guarding the National Flag
Meet the Flag's Designer
Historyr
The Love Token in Ancient China
History of the National Flag
Qu Yuan
Peking Opera Masks
Educational Reform --New Directions in the New Century
Birth of Tea
The Art of Tea
Chinese schools adopt new measures
The Lantern Festival
Maintain our cultural diversity
Tsinghua University and Tianjin University to Build Greenhouse Gas Research Centers
CHINESE SLANG SERIES (1) --Ren Wei Cai Si, Niao Wei Shi Wang
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China's First Nude Photo Show Calmly Welcomed in Guangzhou
spring festival special
How the Perfect Direction creates Prosperity
Beijing Temple Fairs Open
Ancient tomb unearthed in Hunan
The Peking Opera Troupe of Nanjing
Culture
Long-distance Education Looks Forward to a Rapid Development in China
Tianjin, Taiwan Students in Cultural Camp
Dunhuang Art Exhibition Opens
Folklore of the Dai Ethnic Group
Chopsticks (Kuaizi)
Umbrellas ChinaVista
Chinese Furniture
Chinese Poetry
Customs of the Hakkas
The China Experience The origin of Chinese Surnames
Jingpo Ethnic Group's Love and Marriage Folklore
Stories of The Chashan
Eating in Xi'an
Water Country in Southern China

Architecture - Storied Building
Dough Figurine
Niulang and Zhinu
Stegodon Fossils Found in Southwest China
World Heritage in China The Mausoleum of Qin Shihuang













































Beijing Opera


Performance Art That Has Enriched Itself with Merits of Other Forms of Art

Beijing Opera

opera1.jpg (10151 bytes)

Peking opera is a purely Chinese opera form which dates back to the year 1790. That year four local opera troupes of Anhui Province came to Beijing on a performance tour on the order of the imperial court. The tour was a hit and the troupes stayed. The artists absorbed the tunes of the Hubei local opera and drew on the best of Kun Qu, Qin Qiang and Bang Zi and other local operas.

Facial Makeups Represent Different Characters

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0226chou.jpg (2834 bytes)
Mei Lan Fang--a famous performer of dan in Beijing Opera an example of Chou (Xi Men Bao )

For the painted role, the different colors of the faces represent different characters and personality. Yellow and white represent cunning, red stands for uprightness and loyalty, black means valor and wisdom, blue and green indicate the vigorous and enterprising character of rebellious heroes and gold and silver represent mystic or super-natural power.

Unique Terminology:"Sheng, dan, jing, chou,"

"Sheng, dan, jing, chou," for instance, are just the terms for four different types of roles. "sheng" is the positive male role, "dan" is the positive female role, "jing" is a supporting male role with striking character and "chou" is the clown. Every type has its telltale facial makeup and decoration. But actually, "piao you" means Peking opera fans, "piao fang" means the place where fans meet to amuse themselves and "xia hai" means turning professional. When you come across with a small group of Peking opera fans singing in a street corner, that corner can be considered a "street piao fang." There is no lacking of social celebrities among Peking opera fans. Emperor Guang Xu of Qing Dynasty, for example, was not only a good amateur Peking opera singer, but was also a good drummer in the Peking opera orchestra (the drummer plays the role of the director of the orchestra). The Empress Dowager was an avid Peking opera fan, too. The huge three-storey theater in the Summer Palace is a proof of her love for Peking opera.



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