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Playwrights/directors Li Liuyi (right)
from China and Oriza Hirata from Japan want to depict the real
relationship between Chinese and Japanese people in their collaborated
work Lost Village.(Source: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING,
March 27 -- A small village in Sichuan has been famous for hundreds of years for
making and selling fake antiques. During the construction of a Japanese-made
factory in the village, a real ancient monument attracts scholars, traders,
archaeologists and Japanese builders of the factory to the village. They gather
in a teahouse and everyone has his own reasons for being there. What historic
influence will the discovery bring? Everybody has a view; everybody has a
fantasy.
What is buried at the site is unknown history. It
holds much hope and appears to change the future. It is the powerful theme of an
interesting new production.
"I hope our play can depict the real relationship
between Chinese and Japanese people," said Japanese playwright/director Oriza
Hirata.
"Both Chinese and Japanese peoples have complicated
feelings towards each other. Not all Chinese like Japan, and not all Chinese are
anti-Japan. It's the same for the Japanese. I believe a nation will only be
healthy when there is different thinking among the people."
Dubbed as a "historical allegory", Lost Village
(Xiazhou Cun) is done by two playwrights/directors, Li Liuyi from China and
Oriza and co-performed by the National Theatre Company of China and the New
National Theater of Japan. The play presents an artistic exploration of the two
nations' relations. After six performances at the Hong Kong Arts Festival last
week, the play will now be performed at the China Children's Art Theater in
Beijing next week, and at the New National Theater in Tokyo in May.
"The history of the Chinese and the Japanese may make
you instantly
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Dubbed as a "historical allegory", Lost
Village is performed by seven Chinese and six Japanese actors and
actresses, spoken partly in Chinese and partly in Japanese.Photos courtesy
of Hong Kong Arts Festival.(Source: China Daily) Photo
Gallery>>> |
think of the
conflicts between the two nations and the Japanese invasion, but as artists we
felt that we should pursue the question: 'what does history mean to us, as
people of the 21st century'?" said 45-year-old Hirata.
Hirata and Li spent a year developing their ideas
into a script. They met in December 2005 to discuss the structure and plot of
the play for the first time, and then exchanged ideas through e-mails for half a
year.
Hirata wrote the first version. Li rewrote it into a
second version and then Hirata came up with the third version, which was again
revised in the process of rehearsals. It was a perfect collaboration with Hirata
focused more on the script and Li on direction. The result is a play performed
by seven Chinese and six Japanese actors and actresses, spoken partly in Chinese
and partly in Japanese.
"Language is not a problem for us in rehearsals,"
said Guo Jinglin, who played the role of antique dealer Sanye. "After all, we
are players. We could communicate through not only verbal but also physical
language, like eye expressions and gestures."
For Hirata, using other languages in his work is not
something unusual. His play Citizens of Seoul adopted Korean language, while
part of another of his works Song of Goodbye were in French. "Theater is about
communication, and it is especially so when there is more than one language
involved," said Hirata.
On the stage, water runs continuously from a bamboo
pipe recreating the atmosphere of Southwest China's Sichuan Province, where the
story is set and where Li is originally from. However, the acting, lighting and
composer Guo Wenjing's music transfers the play from reality into a virtual
world.
As the characters flock to the village, their motives
for being there unfold. Antique dealer Sanye's life goal is to make as much
money as possible and achieve prominent social status. The dumped manager of the
teahouse, Lihua, is looking forward to her husband's return and a peaceful life.
Weizi wants to become a policeman, as keeping public order and being in
authority are his dream. The amateur archaeologist has no desires. His fantasy
about the historic monument is beyond material; an alternative civilization in
this great universe. For Mr and Mrs Sakurada from Japan, they hope they will
find their daughter here, as well as long-forgotten affection
Apart from discussing China-Japan relations, Hirata
also develops his "contemporary colloquial theater theory", a theory he started
more than 20 years ago that had a great influence on Japanese theater.
"For Japanese as well as Chinese, modern drama is an
import from the West, and since the language is different, we have to localize
the language to make modern dramas closer to our lives," he said. "We should
study our traditional theater, but not copy them."
For Li, China-Japan relations were not the only issue
he wanted to discuss in Lost Village.
Several years ago, Li visited Jinsha, a site in
Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province where many cultural relics of over 3,000
years ago were unearthed. When Li looked at a sculpture of a half-man,
half-beast, he realized that people from more than 3,000 years ago were probably
more imaginative than today's.
"I have always been interested in the relationship
between history and current day reality," said Li. "Looking at the splendid
civilization of our ancestors created thousands of years ago and our situation
now, I feel something is being lost."
In the program notes, Li writes "when our reality
becomes history, stage becomes our shared experiences. This seems to me to be a
fact of life part of experience and unalterable. And yet we don't know what will
happen next. We can only wait and let life take its course, and then either
respond or not."
(Source: China Daily)