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March 8, 2014 |
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Taiwanese opera was later exported to the Min Nan-speaking areas. In the early 1980s Taiwanese opera was brought to the television audience, with I?ⁿ Lē-hoa (楊麗花) as its popular face. The artistic elements remained largely traditional, however. Modern and experimental forms show some propensity for syncretism. Western instruments such as the saxophone and guitar have been used in some performances. Loose Western adaptations have included Nikolai Gogol's The Inspector General http://www.holoopera.com.tw/a/a1_1.php?cid=54. Perhaps due to the influence of the Taiwanese localization movement, stories set in Taiwan, as well as Taiwanese aborigine|aboriginal characters and stories, have been developed in recent years. Taiwanese forms of the Hakka tea-picking opera show some influence. Fans of the opera attribute its continuing relevance to a willingness of performers to adapt to modern times in terms of style and artistic diversity.
Category:Taiwanese culture minnan:Koa-?-h? This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Taiwanese opera".
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