Archive for March 29th, 2010

Beijing Olympic – What’s new on stage

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Taiwan pop star Jolin Tsai is a popular performer. Her albums Dancing Diva, Dancing Forever and others have stirred audiences with their rhythmic moves, easy-to-follow lyrics and fast songs. Her latest song, The Prologue, marks her debut as a composer.

7:30 pm, April 4, 5

Workers’ Gymnasium, Gongti Beilu, Chaoyang District

6501-6655

The Huangmei Opera Huizhou Women is coming to the capital. A local opera in Anhui province, Huangmei Opera is derived from local dancing and singing. Huizhou Women looks into the married lives of young people today.

7:30 pm, March 30-April 1

The Great Theater of China Nationalities, 49 Fuxingmennei Dajie, Xicheng District

6602-2530

Have you ever tried to watch a show that lasts 10 hours, or spend four nights at the same show? Now Shanghai Kunju Opera Troupe will give you this opportunity. It’s latest production The Palace of Eternal Youth will be presented in Beijing at the Poly Theater, with one full-length Kunqu Opera (pictured right) play over four days.

Written by Hong Sheng (1645-1704) in 1688, the Palace of Eternal Youth, based on the love story between Emperor Li Longji and his concubine Yang Yuhuan in the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907), is a masterpiece of Kunqu Opera. However, the play, which consists of five acts and 50 scenes, has rarely been staged in its entirety. Shanghai Kunqu Opera Troupe has spent three years on the new production, which omits only a few parts.

The show will feature renowned artist Cai Zhengren as Emperor Li and rising actress Shen Yili as Yang.

7:30pm, April 31 – May 3

No 14 Dongzhimen Nandajie Street, Dongcheng District

6506 5343, 6506 5345

The Chinese Acrobatics Group, established in 1950, has toured more than 80 countries, won numerous international awards and has helped foster friendships between China and other nations. Its performance includes traditional acrobatics, a circus show, magic, old Beijing folk plays and more. The show blends music, dance, local opera and martial arts.

7:30 pm, daily

Tiandi Theater, Dongsi Shitiao, 100 m north of Poly Theater, Chaoyang District

6416-9893

(Source: ebeijing.gov.cn)

Cir – Lesson 642

Monday, March 29th, 2010

TORONTO, Oct. 27 (Xinhua) — Some 35,000 kids, about 16 percent of the eligible junior and senior kindergarten students in Ontario’s educational system will be offered full-day learning next September, announced Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty on Tuesday.

“By giving our kids an early start in school, we’re setting them on the road to success and building a stronger Ontario for us all,” Mcguinty said.

According to the plan announced Tuesday, four- and five-year-olds will learn under the guidance of a teacher and an early childhood educator. Parents may also enroll their child for extended hours for a reasonable fee, before and after regular school hours. This will make it easier for parents to get to and from work and will ensure their children have an integrated learning program for the whole day.

The plan will make Ontario the only place in North America that will offer full-day learning for all four- and five-year-olds.

But the goal is to have the program fully implemented in all schools by 2015-2016 that will put it behind British Columbia, which plans to introduce full-day kindergarten for all five-year-olds by 2011.

McGuinty had previously warned that it could take more than three years to implement the plan.

Ontario has set aside 500 million Canadian dollars (about 476 million U.S. dollars) over two years to phase in optional, all-day kindergarten, despite a deficit that’s expected to reach 24.7 billion Canadian dollars (about 23.5 billion dollars) this fiscal year.

Similarly, British Columbia plans to spend 151 million Canadian dollars (143.8 billion dollars) to start up its all-day kindergarten for five-year-olds next year.

New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Quebec offer all-day kindergarten for five-year-olds. Ontario has part-day kindergarten for four-year-olds, but school is not mandatory until Grade one.

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

China Travel – Maiji Mountain

Monday, March 29th, 2010

The Maiji Grottoes, as one of the four large grotto groups in China, are located in Maiji Mountain (mountain in the form of wheat stack), 45 kilometers southeast of Tianshui City, Gansu Province. The scenic spots of Maiji Mountain are located at the eastern segment of the northern branch of western Qinling Mountains, with a total area of 215 square kilometers, including the four grand scenic spots (Maiji Mountain, Xianren Cliff, Stone Gate and Quxi River) and the Jieting Ancient Town. Among them, the Maiji Grottoes are the most famous.

The landscape around Maiji Mountain is very beautiful, with green cypresses and pines, wild flowers and flourishing grass on the chain of mountains. After climbing up the mountaintop, you can see the shield-like peaks and the thousands of mountains and gullies when you look as far as you can. The pines look like the sea and the cloud and mist are slowly flying over the peaks. This scene is known as the Maiji Misty Rain, ranking first among the eight scenic spots in the Tianshui Region.

The natural scenery of Maiji Mountain is the most beautiful among the famous resorts of grottoes in China. The Maiji Grottoes were first constructed in 384 and thereafter gradually became one of the large-scale grotto groups in China and the famous artistic spots in the world through continuous chiseling and reconstruction during more than ten dynasties. There are extant 194 grottoes, including more than 7,200 clay and stone statues and frescoes with an area of 1,300 square meters, which are retained from the 4th o 19th century.

One of the remarkable characteristics of Maiji Mountain lies in that the locations of the grottoes are very breath-taking, as most of them are chiseled on cliffs and people can only access the grottoes through the overhanging plank roads among the grottoes.

The art of the Maiji Grottoes, as reputed as the Grand Exhibition Hall of Statues, is famous in the world for its fine clay sculpture art. If the Dunhuang is a great hall of frescos, Maiji Mountain is a great hall of statues. Among the statutes here, the big ones can be up to more than 15 meters in height and the small ones are only 20 more centimeters in height. These statutes show the statue characters of various ages for more than 1,000 years and systematically reflect the development and evolution process of Chinese clay sculpture art. The clay sculptures here can be approximately divided into the following four types: (i) high-relief pieces extruding from the wall space, (ii) round carvings fully separated from the wall space, (iii) molding statutes pasted on the wall and (iv) wall carvings. Among them, thousands of human-size round carvings are full of life sentiment and are regarded as treasures accordingly.

The statutes of Maiji Mountain have two obvious characteristics: strong national consciousness and tendency of secularization. Except for the early works, almost all the statutes from the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534) are in the postures bowing their heads with amiable faces. Though the statutes are the deities of the heaven, they look like the worldly persons and become the incarnations of persons’ good wishes. In terms of the forms and dressings, these statutes gradually get rid of the impacts of exotic arts, showing the characteristics of the Han nationality.

Many grottoes of Maiji Mountain were built as Cliff Pavilions. The Qifo Pavilion (seven-Buddha pavilion) on steep precipice 15 meters above the Grand Clay Buddha statue on the eastern cliff is the typical cliff pavilion style of the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD). It was first cut in the mid 6th century and is more than 50 meters above the ground. Though most statutes of the Maiji Grottoes are made of clay, a considerable number of the grottoes are the stone carvings and frescoes. The resort of the Maiji Grottoes is ranked as the cultural relics site under the national protection, and the overhanging plank road of 1,300 meters long is newly constructed and repaired, so tourists can easily visit all the grottoes.

(Source: chinaculture.org)