Archive for April 2nd, 2010

Beijing Olympic – Crying till you laugh

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Taiwanese playwright-director Stan Lai’s most famous production, Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land, tells two intertwined stories. One is a modern tragedy about an old man reminiscing a long-lost love, while the second is a broad comedy about a cuckolded man who finds his way to Peach Blossom Land.

Premiering in 1986, Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land has toured worldwide and won both audience and critical acclaim.

This spring, Lai brings the play to Beijing with a new actress in the leading role of Yun Zhifan.

The first woman to play Yun some 20 years ago was Lai’s wife, the playwright-actress Ding Nai-Chu, for whom Lai actually created the role. The 1992 film version of Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land features the popular Taiwanese actress Brigitte Lin Ching-Hsia in the lead. Three years ago, the young rising Chinese actress Yuan Quan won the part of Yun.

Now it’s Sun Li’s turn. The 30-year-old ballerina and actress graduated from the Beijing Film Academy in 1999 and has appeared in many movies and TV shows. And it’s likely that Sun will be comfortable in her new role, since Huang Lei who stars as Jiang Binliu (Yun’s lover) in the play, is her partner in real life.

“My wife and I created the role of Yun in 1986. And I believe the real life couple will bring chemistry to the stage,” director Lai says. “Sun and Huang are both talented performers. Their rehearsals have been impressive.”

“They have done a lot of work at home. They look so natural, so smooth but with a passion for detail during rehearsals,” says Yuan Hong, the play’s producer.

Lai’s Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land is not only two plays within a play, where both are performed in part, but the two narratives are seemingly opposing genres – one comedy and the other, a tragedy. The comedy and tragedy play out separately onstage, interrupt each other and then proceed to compliment each other.

Lai cites two inspirations for the play. While earning his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley, Lai studied the Greek dramatic form known as Satyr, a comedic drama which would traditionally be performed following a set of three tragedies.

“People may consider tragedy and comedy as opposing concepts, but I started to see it differently,” Lai says.

By the end of the play, when lovers Yun and Jiang are reunited after four decades apart, “the laughter gives way to sobs and the audience is left to contemplate the burdens of memory, history, longing and love – and the power of theater itself,” read the New York Times review for its Beijing run in Nov 2006.

(Source: ebeijing.gov.cn)

Cir – Lesson 646

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

ISLAMABAD, Oct. 26 (Xinhua) — Educational institutions in Pakistan have partially reopened on Monday after being closed down last week over security concerns, local TV channels reported.

The schools in the provinces of Sindh, Punjab and federal capital Islamabad have reopened on Monday, the private channel GEONews reported.

The decision to reopen schools and universities was taken in a meeting, chaired by Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik, of vice chancellors of various universities on Saturday.

The students and parents have expressed satisfaction over reopening of the schools. However, educational institutions in southwest Pakistan’s Balochistan province remained closed for three more days after murder of the provincial education minister Sunday whereas North West Frontier Province institutions will be closed till Nov. 1.

The federal and provincial governments had ordered closure of all educational institutions after terrorists struck the International Islamic University Islamabad on Oct. 20.

Following the attacks, the government had directed security agencies and concerned departments to take steps to ensure foolproof security at educational institutions across the country.

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

China Travel – Panshan Mountain(2)

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Tiancheng Temple

It is also known as the Fushan Temple. It was first built in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and expanded and repaired in the Liao Dynasty (916-1125), the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) and the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). The main buildings include the Great Hall, the Side Hall, the Sanjian Hall, and the Jiangshan Yilan Pavilion, etc. The stele Record of Touring the Panshan Mountain prepared according to the order of Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty was erected in front of the eastern Side Hall of the Main Hall, and a gallery of over 40 meters long stands there too.

Yunzhao Temple

The temple is 800 more meters above sea level and located near the apex of Panshan Mountain, so it is the temple with the highest elevation in the mountain. Since it is situated near the summit of the mountain and the clouds always cover the temple, so it is also known as the Yunzhao Temple (Cloud-covered temple). The temple was first built during the Tang Dynasty, and is composed of the Great Hall, the Side Hall, the Sutra-Keeping Hall and the Temple Gate, etc. Three golden Buddha statutes with a height of 4 meters are enshrined in the Main Hall, and the Thousand Buddha Niches are located on the four walls of the Main Hall, etc. The eastern part of the Yunzhao Temple relies against the Guayue Peak (the highest peak of Panshan Mountain) on which the Dagoba of Dingguang Buddha is standing upright.

Wansong Temple

The Wansong Temple is the largest temple in Panshan Mountain. Since the famous senior general Li Jing of the early Tang Dynasty once lived here, it was known as the Li Jing Temple before the Qing Dynasty. The time when it was first built is unknown, but it was repaired during the Wanli reign of the Ming Dynasty. Since there were many ancient pines around the temple, Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty granted a tablet to call it as the Wansong Temple (ten-thousand-pine temple).

(Source: chinaculture.org)