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The Peony Pavilion

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The Peony Pavilion (Chinese: 牡丹亭; pinyin: mǔdāntíng) is a play written by Tang Xianzu in the Ming Dynasty and first performed in 1598 at the Pavilion of Prince Teng.[1] One of Tang's "Four Dreams", it has traditionally been performed as a Kunqu (昆曲/崑曲) opera, but Chuan (川) and Gan (赣/贛) opera versions also exist. It is by far the most popular play of the Ming Dynasty, and is the primary showcase of the guimendan (闺门旦/閨門旦) role type. All Kun theatre troupes include it in their repertoire. Recent adaptations have sought to inject new life into one of China's best-loved classical operas, though such efforts have met with opposition from the Kun opera traditionalists.

Plot

The performance tradition has focused on the love story between Du Liniang (杜丽娘/杜麗娘) and Liu Mengmei (柳梦梅/柳夢梅), but its original text (standard translation: Cyril Birch) also contains subplots pertaining to the falling Song Dynasty's defense against the aggression of the Jin Dynasty.

It is the last days of the Southern Song Dynasty. On a fine Spring day, her maid persuades Du Liniang, the sixteen year old daughter of an important official, Du Bao, to abandon her studies and take a walk in the garden, where she falls asleep. In Du Liniang's dream she encounters a young scholar, identified later in the play as Liu Mengmei, whom in real life she has never met. Liu's bold advances starts off a flaming romance between the two and it flourishes rapidly. Du Liniang's dream is interrupted by a flower petal falling on her (according to her soliloquy recounting the incident in a later act: Reflection on the lost dream. However, she was apparently awoken by her mother according to the script itself). Du Liniang, however, is since preoccupied with the intense oneiric affair and her lovesickness quickly consumes her. Unable to recover from her fixation, Du Liniang wastes away and dies.

The president of the underworld adjudicates that a marriage between Du Liniang and Liu Mengmei is predestined and Du Liniang ought to return to the earthly world. Du Liniang appears to Liu Mengmei in his dreams who now inhabits the same garden where Du Liniang had her fatal dream. Once recognising that Du Bao's deceased daughter is the lady who appears in his dreams, Liu agrees to exhume her upon her request and Du Liniang is brought back to life. Liu visits Du Bao and informs him of his daughter's newly resurrection. However, Liu is met with disbelief and imprisoned for being a grave robber and an impostor. The ending of the play follows the formula of many Chinese comedies. Liu Mengmei narrowly escapes death by torture thanks to the arrival of the results of the imperial examination in which Liu has topped the list. The emperor pardons all.

This is only a broad outline of the plot of an opera which typically runs for 20 hours.

Comments

Albeit conventional in some ways, notably its deus ex machina ending, The Peony Pavilion is distinguished particularly by the play's highly refined and subtle lyrics hailed as another height in Chinese literature. Aided by the then newly developed Kun music, the lyrical proses of the Peony Pavilion weave out a dainty fabric of nuances and metaphors which elegantly transgress the divide between nature's beauty and man's inner cosmos of emotions and desires. Through the lights and shadows of the its literary fabric transpire the play's ravishing sensitivity and intoxicating effeteness and, almost antithetically, a persistent tone of youthful optimism. Carried by the magic of the play's language, very quickly the audience finds itself in the midst of a celebration of sensitivity, a banquet of metaphors and a dance of the imagination. The compound of these elements results in a unique form of literary and artistic pleasure, setting the measure of all later Kun operas. Particularly evident are such features in three of the earlier acts, "A walk in the Garden" (游园/遊園), "An Interrupted Dream" (惊梦/驚夢)(the two acts were grouped as one in the original text) and "Reflection On the Lost Dream" (寻梦/尋夢), which are generally considered the apogee of Chinese kunqu for their literary achievements as pointed out here, as well as in musicality, choreography and the integration of all these components. On the other hand, the aforementioned qualities of the play's lyrics pose a daunting challenge to any attempt at their translation into Romantic languages.

Shortly after its completion, the original scores of the opera by Tang Xianzu (汤显祖), considered awkward and difficult for performers, were greatly revised by Shen Jing (沈璟), a major figure in the formation of Chinese kunqu, not without many disputes and resistance from Tang Xianzu himself.

Famous performances

Mei Lanfang (梅兰芳/梅蘭芳) (sometimes paired with Yu Zhenfei (俞振飞/俞振飛) as Liu Mengmei) was famous for his sensitive portrayal of Du Liniang.

The most famous actress of recent years is likely Zhang Jiqing's (张继青/張繼青) traditional approach out of Nanjing's Jiangsu Province Kun Opera.

In Shanghai, Jennifer Hua Wenyi (华文漪/華文漪) was very popular in the role, and has played the role abroad several times.

For a both particularly pleasant and graceful interpretation, one may refer to Zhang Zhihong (张志红)'s performances in the nineties.

In 1999, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts produced a 20 hour version of Tang Xianzu's Peony Pavilion directed Chen Shizheng and starring Qian Yi as Du Liniang and Wen Yu Hang. This 20 hour version was perhaps the first full length staging in 300 years and spurred a renewed interest in the full opera beyond a few celebrated episodes. Lincoln Center's version toured extensively, playing in New York, Paris, Milan, Singapore, Caen, Charleston, Aarhus, Berlin, Perth and Vienna. DVD highlights have been released in the United States and Taiwan.

Adaptations

Recent adaptations of The Peony Pavilion and allusions in popular music have revived interest in Kunqu, an art form that had been in danger of disappearing into obscurity. In 2001, UNESCO proclaimed Kunqu as a "Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity," yet the secrets of that heritage were kept by only a few aging masters in even fewer schools and institutions. Bai Xianyong's adaptation of The Peony Pavilion that premiered in 2004 helped rejuvenate this tradition. Bai, a Chinese scholar at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and his colleagues - scholars and performers, some brought back from retirement - spend five months editing Tang's script. Working out of the Jiangsu Suzhou Kunqu Theater, the group condensed and adapted the original fifty-five scenes to twenty-seven scenes, and twenty hours of performance time to nine. Bai, who had chosen The Peony Pavilion because of its universal message of love, hoped that his rendition would attract youth to Kunqu. In fact, in its tour of China's top universities, the show was marketed as the Youth Edition of Peony Pavilion. [2] (The production also toured in Taipei, Hong Kong, Macau, seven cities in mainland China, and the Zellerbach Theater in Berkeley, California.) According to Bai, the goal of this youth-oriented production was to "give new life to the art form, cultivate a new generation of Kunqu aficionados, and offer respect to playwright Tang and all the master artists that came before." [3] His production of The Peony Pavilion was his way of doing so. Bai Xianyong / Hsien-yung Pai (白先勇) has also used The Peony Pavilion as inspiration for a short story and a television script.

Recently in 1998, The Peony Pavilion was the inspiration for a contemporary opera composed by Tan Dun, and directed by Peter Sellars. A CD recording of this opera was released entitled "Bitter Love". Contemporary and experimental versions such as this one and Lincoln Center's 1999 production have played primarily abroad, often winning critical success but sometimes offending Chinese traditionalists.

In 2001, a Hong Kong movie known as Yóuyuán Jīngmèng (遊園驚夢), starring Rie Miyazawa (宮澤理惠/宮泽理惠) and Joey Wong (王祖賢/王祖贤), was called Peony Pavilion in English. Though only indirectly related in terms of plot, it used the music extensively. A Taiwanese movie Wǒ de měilì yǔ āichōu 我的美麗與哀愁 directed by Chen Guofu, with cinematography by Christopher Doyle and starring Luo Ruoying shared the same English title.

In June 2008 the Suzhou Kunqu Opera company performed The Peony Pavilion at Sadler's Wells, London, the UK premiere. It was presented in 3 parts on consecutive evenings, each lasting 3 hours, though still much shorter than the original 20 hours.

In 2007 Lisa See's novel Peony in Love was published by Random House. The story's protagonist, Peony, falls in love with a young stranger, and her life loosely parallels that of Liniang's.

References in popular music

Leehom Wang, the popular Taiwanese-American music artist, referenced The Peony Pavilion in his song "Beside the Plum Blossoms" (在梅邊) on his album Heroes of Earth, which drew heavily from Beijing Opera and Kunqu inspiration. [4] Lee-Hom sang and rapped over traditional Kunqu melodies blended with hip-hop beats. The music video features the artist, in modern cloths, superimposed on animated scenes. The animation depicts thematic and stylistic elements of the Peony Pavilion as well as hip-hop imagery: a break dancer does tricks atop a pavilion and pink peonies turn into speakers. A performer dressed in Kunqu costume plays the role of Liu in the music video, often singing with the Kunqu technique next to Lee-Hom. The artist quotes lines from The Peony Pavilion and entreats his lover, "Let me love you…in the classical style." [5] The lyrics reveal a longing to the return to the way love was portrayed in the drama. In this way, Lee-Hom draws visual and thematic inspiration from The Peony Pavilion in his song, signaling its relevance in contemporary popular culture.

The Chinese indie band, Carrchy , also use The Peony Pavilion as inspiration for their lyrics. The two young members of Carrchy, lyricist Keli and producer Fly, share an affinity for ancient Chinese opera and drama, an interest that appears prominently in their work. Borrowing some of the original text, Carrchy alludes to The Peony Pavilion in their song "Romantic Dream in the Garden" (游园惊梦). [6] The band uses Tang's lyrics and story to create the dual sensations of a lush and sensual spring and sorrow upon awakening from the dream. These Ming Dynasty era -inspired lyrics play over thoroughly modern music.

Citations

  1. ^ Wang, 17, 240.
  2. ^ "Youth Edition of Peony Pavilion." ChinaCulture.org. 11 Feb. 2009. Ministry of Culture. 11 Feb. 2009 http://www1.chinaculture.org/library/library_government.html
  3. ^ "Background to Peony Pavilion." Peony Pavilion- Young Lovers Edition. University of California Los Angeles. 11 Feb. 2009 http://www.international.ucla.edu/china/mudanting/
  4. ^ "AsiaFinest Alexander Lee-Hom Wang." AsiaFinest.com. 11 Feb. 2009 http://www.asiafinest.com/
  5. ^ Wang Leehom. "Beside the Plum Tree." By Leehom Wang. MP3. 2005.
  6. ^ "Band Carrchy." CRIENGLISH.com. 29 Dec. 2007. 11 Feb. 2009 http://english.cri.cn/webcast/

References

  • Wang, Qiaolin (Chinese: 王巧林; pinyin: Wáng Qiǎolín) et al. 1996. Jiangnan Famous Site: The Pavilion of Prince Teng (simplified Chinese: 江南名胜 滕王阁; traditional Chinese: 江南名勝 滕王閣; pinyin: Jiāngnán Míngshèng Téngwáng Gé). Baihuazhou Literary Press (Chinese: 百花洲文艺出版社; pinyin: Báihuāzhōu Wényì Chūbǎnshè). 247 pages. ISBN 7-80579-797-8

External links

Xu, Jodi. Breathing New Life into 600-Year-Old Opera InsideTime.com 25 Oct. 2007.

Zeitlin, Judith T. "My Year of Peonies" Asian Theatre Journal 1.1 (2002): 124-33. Project MUSE.