Film, Video Kunqu: China's First Great Multi-art Theatrical Tradition
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About this Item
Title
- Kunqu: China's First Great Multi-art Theatrical Tradition
Summary
- Marjory Bong-Ray Liu presented "Total Theatre -- The Art of Kunqu, China's Earliest Classical Opera" as part of the Benjamin Botkin lecture series sponsored by the American Folklife Center. Chinese opera, especially Kunqu, is particularly noted for its graceful dance movements and gestures that are an integral part of the total art form, unlike many western operas where the aural aspect is predominant. Kunqu classical opera was perfected in the Ming dynasty (1368-1644 A.D.). It uses four main acting roles: sheng, a young male scholar-hero; dan, a female role; jing, a male warrior-statesman; and chou, a comic. Kunqu demonstrated sophistication in relating total speech to melody patterns, and it integrated the arts of dance, poetry, music, mime, symbolism and drama into a complete aesthetic experience that is still admired and enjoyed today.
Names
- Library of Congress
- American Folklife Center, sponsoring body
Created / Published
- Washington, D.C. : Library of Congress, 2008-09-04.
Headings
- - Biography, History
- - Culture, Performing Arts
- - Education
- - Culture, Folklife
- - Performing Arts, Music
Notes
- - Classification: Education.
- - Classification: Fine Arts.
- - Classification: Language and Literature.
- - Classification: Music and Books on Music.
- - Marjory Bong-Ray Liu.
- - Recorded on 2008-09-04.
- - Researchers.
- - Teachers.
Medium
- 1 online resource
Digital Id
Library of Congress Control Number
- 2021688026
Online Format
- video
- image
- online text