Archive for May 1st, 2010

Beijing Olympic – Auditions open for Chinese version of Les Miserables

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

British producer Cameron Mackintosh has started auditions across China for the Mandarin version of the hit musical Les Miserables.

Thirty roles in the musical will be played by actors and actresses chosen during six months of auditions. Five musical experts from London’s Westend, who have taken part in the production of different versions of Les Miserables, will come to Shanghai, Chengdu, Guangzhou and Beijing for the casting, along with Mackintosh himself.

The casting is open to the public, and anyone who was enthusiastic or experienced in musicals were welcomed to have a try, said a spokesman for the China Musical Theatre Company, the company founded by Mackintosh and local investors last month.

“However, it will strictly follow standards of musical production,” he said, adding that it’s different from TV talent shows, such as “Super Girls”, in which anyone can take part in.

Prospective performers can apply on www.caeg.cn. About 200 people will be selected for professional musical training with British experts and some will gain contracts to play in the Chinese version of Les Miserables, which is expected to open in November 2008.

It will be the first production of the Sino-British joint venture, which plans to produce Chinese versions of hits, such as Cats, The Phantom of the Opera, Mamma Mia!, Miss Saigon, My Fair Lady, the Lion King, in the next ten years, as well as to train local directors, writers, actors and theatrical technicians.

The Chinese version will be the 22nd language version of the Les Miserables, the longest running musical in the world, which has been staged in 261 cities in 39 countries.

(Source: ebeijing.gov.cn)

Cir – Lesson 675

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Unprecedented changes have taken place in education in Xinjiang since 1949, said a white paper issued by the Information Office of the State Council here Monday.

Before the founding of the People’s Republic China in 1949, Xinjiang had but one college, nine secondary schools and 1,355 primary schools, according to the paper titled “Development and Progress in Xinjiang.”

At that time, only 19.8 percent of school-age children attended primary school and the overall illiteracy rate was a shocking 90 percent.

Now Xinjiang has basically made the nine-year compulsory education universal and eliminated illiteracy in the young and middle-aged population. Adult and vocational education started from scratch, and has been developing steadily.

According to the paper, since 2006, with the introduction of a new mechanism that guarantees rural education funding, Xinjiang’s primary and secondary school students have enjoyed free compulsory education.

In 2008, the government granted living subsidies to all underprivileged students who live at school and exempted urban students from tuition fees during their compulsory education period.

Since 2007, the state has initiated an annual budget of 129 million yuan for the education of 51,000 very poor university students and 95,000 secondary and higher vocational school students in Xinjiang, 70 percent of whom come from ethnic minorities.

In 2008, the Xinjiang autonomous region government invested a total of 18.77 billion yuan in the region’ s education system, representing a year-on-year increase of 32.3 percent.

Statistics from that year show that Xinjiang had 4,159 primary schools with 2,012,000 students, and a 99.6 percent enrollment rate for school-age children.

There were 1,973 secondary schools with 1.72 million students, and 32 institutions of higher learning with 241,000 undergraduate and 10,300 graduate students in total.

(Source: xinhuanet.com)

China Travel – Hukou Waterfall

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

The Hukou Waterfall, the second largest waterfall in China, is located 165 kilometers to the west of Fenxi City, Shanxi Province, and 50 kilometers to the east of Yichuan, Shaanxi Province. The width of the waterfall changes with the season, usually 30 meters wide but increasing to 50 meters during flood season. It has a fall of over 20 meters. When the Yellow River surges towards the Hukou Mountain, blocked by mountains on both sides, its width is abruptly narrowed down to 20-30 meters. The water speeds up with increasing waterpower. Then it rushes down from the narrow mouth, forming a grand waterfall of 15 meters high and 20 meters wide, as if water is pouring down from a huge teapot. Hence it gets the name Hukou (kettle spout) Waterfall.

Standing on the bank of the Yellow River, people can see the roaring water rushing through mountains and then plunging into a deep pool, really resembling the boiling water in a teapot. The waves stir up masses of smoke and clouds, rising higher up into the sky, with the color changes from yellow to gray and then to blue. The local people call this marvelous scenery smoke rising from the water.

Beneath the waterfall is the Qilangwo Bridge connecting two provinces, Shanxi and Shaanxi. In the sunshine, the mist is refracted by the sunlight to create a rainbow spanning over the water like a colorful bridge.

(Source: chinaculture.org)