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Talchum

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Talchum
A mask dance in South Korea
Korean name
Hangul
탈춤
Revised Romanizationtalchum
McCune–Reischauert'alch'um

Talchum (탈춤 t'alch'um) is a Korean dance performed while wearing a mask, and often involves singing and dancing.

Although the term talchum is usually taken to mean all mask dance dramas by most Koreans, it is strictly speaking a regional term originally only applied to dances of Hwanghae Province in present-day North Korea. Dances from the Seoul or Gyeonggi province region are known as sandae noli, whereas dances from the southern coast are known as yayu (야유), which means "field play", or Obangsinjang, which means "dance of five gods". However, Talchum is nowadays accepted as a general term for mask dance drama.[1]

The dances also feature drama and story, as masked characters portray people, animals, and even supernatural beings. These folk dramas often reflected the frustrations felt by the lower classes towards the elite yangban.

History

Talchum originated in Korean villages as part of shamanic rituals. It then became a form of popular entertainment. It was even performed in the royal court—during the Goryeo period, the Office of Masked-Dance Drama (Sandae Togam) supervised such dances. The office however was abolished during the Joseon period.[2]

Themes and characteristics

Mask dance dramas share fundamental characteristics but vary considerably according to region and performer. Basic themes include exorcism rites, ritual dances, satire, parody of human weaknesses, social evils, and the elites. They appeal to the audiences by ridiculing apostate Buddhist monks, decadent upper-class men, and shamans. Another popular theme is the conflict between an old wife and a seductive concubine. With regional variations, the mask dance drama was generally performed on the First Full Moon, Buddha's Birthday (석가탄신일) on the Eighth of the Fourth Moon, the Dano Festival, and Chuseok. Variations may have been performed at festive state occasions or at rituals to bring about rain. Audience participation is also a feature of the dance.[3]

Procedure

Mask dance is largely divided into seven parts.

The first chief's (상좌, Sang-Jwa) dance is a ritualistic dance about the four gods (사신도, 四神圖), meaning 'to drive out demons'.[4]

The second section consists of eight monk dances, which are the first and second beopgonori. The evil monk dance shows itself decayed, introducing itself to the editorial and dance, respectively. The beopgonori tells a joke about a man and a woman taking off their clothes with a law school in their neck. Recently,[when?] beopgonori has disappeared.[4]

The third section is a Sadang dance (사당춤) performed by seven masters (거사, Geo-sa), and appears in a shrine decorated with splendor. When a widower is kicked out of the shrine for mocking, seven of them sing a playful song.[4]

The fourth section is a veteran dance (노장춤, No-Jang). The dance shows the satire of a Buddhist monk who was praised as a living Buddha by Somu (소무, So-moo),[5] a pub girl, or a concubine.

The fifth section is a lion sent by the Buddha to punish them for losing a lion dance. They try to eat their food and then they listen to the repentance and forgive and dance together.

The sixth chapter consists mainly of talking with the three yangban (well educated people) brothers, the stake and the yangban, with the yangban dance. Through the game of selecting a new residence, Sijojigi ('make a poem', 시조짓기), Paja Nori (make a poem with divided or combine Hanja, 파자놀이), and catching chuibbali ('a person who embezzled public funds', 취발이). Through the play, the Malttoki ('a crown', 말뚝이) use poetry and satire are used to scold the yangban.[4]

The seventh section meets Young-gam (영감, 'old man or a low-ranking official') and Mi-Yal-Hal-mi (미얄할미),[5] who had been separated during a tumultuous dance, and they were quarreled because of the concubine's house, which he brought to them, and Mi-Yal was beaten to death by the Young-gam. An old man named Namgang appears and calls a shaman to perform a Jin-Ogwi rite (진오귀굿). Showing the perils of working-class life and the tyranny of men over women due to polygamy, the last performance shows that the origin of mask dance is in the gut (굿, a ritual performance in Korea).[4]

Place of performance

A suitable place for performance is where a large audience can gather. The audience looks around the stage almost in a circle, but there is nothing on the stage, and only one side of the stage is a house called the Gaebok-cheong where performers change their masks and clothes. Although the stage is a flat floor that is as high as the stands, Bongsan Talchum[6] also makes the stands higher. The reason is for merchants to sell food instead of admission to audience in the attic.

Styles

Mask dance dramas have been transmitted from all parts of the country. There are about thirteen different types of mask dance drama in Korea ― Hwanghaedo province's Haeseo style, such as Bongsan Talchum, Gangnyeong Talchum, Eunyul Talchum; Gyeonggi-do province's Yangju Byeolsandae, Songpa Sandae Noli Mask Dances; Gyeongsangnam-do province's Suyeong Yayu, Dongnae Yayu, Gasan Ogwangdae, Tongyeong Ogwandae, Goseong Ogwangdae; Gyeongsangbukdo province's Hahoe byeolsingut talnori; Gangwon province's Gangneung Gwanno Gamyeon'guk mask dance; and the Namsadang (male itinerant entertaining troupe of the Northern Line) Deotboegichum mask dance. Among those, Bongsan Talchum and Hahoe byeolsingut talnori are best known today.

Imaginary creatures in Talchum

Yeongno (영노)

A monster that eats bad yangbans. In some plays, if this type of creature eats 100 yangbans, they can go up to heaven.[7]

Bibi (비비)

A kind of yeongno, they make a bi-bi sound. They have a monster's head on top of a human body.[8]

Jangjamari (장자마리)

Water spirits. They are very fat, play instruments, and have seaweed all over their bodies. They may also be associated with fertility.[7]

In Gangneung Gwanno Gamyeon'geuk,[definition needed] they are associated with fertility and the summer transplanting season, dancing, wearing clothes that bear the color of tilled earth, and decorated in rice seedlings as well as seaweed.[7]

Juji (주지)

Juji are strange beings. They look like birds with very small heads or can have heads like those of lions.[7] Two couples jump all around. The dances between the couples may symbolize fertility.[7] However, the dance between the two lions could also indicate scaring away evil spirits.[7]

References

  1. ^ National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage (25 December 2015). Tal and Talchum. Gil-Job-Ie Media. p. 67. ISBN 9788963257358.
  2. ^ Judy Van Zile (11 December 2001). Perspectives on Korean Dance. Wesleyan University Press. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-0819564948.
  3. ^ Eckersley, M. ed. 2009. Drama from the Rim: Asian Pacific Drama Book (2nd ed.). Drama Victoria. Melbourne. p46.
  4. ^ a b c d e 국립민속박물관. "봉산탈춤". 한국민속대백과사전 (in Korean). Seo Yeon Ho(서연호,徐淵昊). Retrieved 2019-04-06.
  5. ^ a b "Aesthetic Viewpoints of Female Roles in Bongsan Mask Dance". www.riss.kr. p. 32. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  6. ^ CBSaeji (2010-11-15), Bongsan Talchum 봉산탈춤, archived from the original on 2021-12-21, retrieved 2019-03-20
  7. ^ a b c d e f Saeji, CedarBough (September 2012). "The Bawdy, Brawling, Boisterous World of Korean Mask Dance Dramas: A Brief Essay to Accompany Photographs" (PDF). Berkeley.edu. Berkeley University. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  8. ^ "◎ Hahoe-Dong Mask Museum ◎". www.mask.kr. Retrieved 2016-04-23.

General references