|
March 8, 2014 |
|
Along with Red Detachment of Women, the ballet is regarded as one of the classics of revolutionary China, and its music is familar to almost everyone who grew up during the 1960's. It is one of the Eight model plays. Plot (Based on the ballet version) It is the eve of the Chinese Spring Festival. The peasant girl, Xi'er, in the village, Yanggezhuang, Hebei Province, is waiting for her father to return home to celebrate the Spring Festival together. Her girl friends come to bring her paper cuttings to decorate the windows and a kilogram of wheat flour to make jiaozis. Yang Bailao, Xi'er's father, has been away to avoid the debt collector from the despotic landlord, Huang Shiren. Dusk finds him return home, with no gift other than a red ribbon to tie to the hair of Xi'er for the festivity of the holiday. The landlord wouldn't let them have a peaceful and happy Spring Festival, and the debt collector comes for the farm land rent which Yang has been unable to pay. They then kill Yang Bailao, and take away Xi'er by force. At the home of the landlord, Xi'er is forced to work day and night as a slave and is exhaused. Zhang Ershen (literally Second Aunt Zhang), an elderly servant of the landlord, is very sympathetic of Xi'er. Xi'er dozes off while trying to take a short break. The mother of the landlord comes on the scene and, with her hairpin, pierces Xi'er's face to wake her up. The landlord mother then orders Xi'er to prepare her a lotus seed soup. When the soup is served, the landlord mother is displeased with the taste. She pours the still-boiling soup on Xi'er's face. Outraged by the pain and anger, Xi'er picks up the whip that the landlord uses to punish her to beat the landlord mother up. The landlord mother falls and crawls on the floor attempting to flee while Xi'er continues to whip her with her utmost strength. Xi'er gets revenged, but she is subsequently locked up by the landlord. One day, the landlord leaves his overcoat in the living room and in the pocket of the overcoat is the key to the prison. Zhang Ershen is determined to help Xi'er. She takes the key and opens the door of the prison for Xi'er, and she flees. Shortly, the landlord finds Xi'er missing, and sends his accomplice, Mu Renzhi, and other men to chase her. Xi'er comes to a river that stops her. She takes off a shoe and leaves it at the river side, and then hides in the bush. Mu Renzhi and his men find the shoe and assume that Xi'er has drowned herself in the river, and they report to the landlord as such. Xi'er escapes to the mountains, and in the following years, she lives in a cave, gathers offerings for food from a nearby temple. She fights attacking wolves and other beasts. In time, her hair turns white from suffering. One night, the landlord, Huang Shiren, and a lackey of his come to the temple to worship and provide offerings. They are stopped by a thunderstorm. It just so happens that Xi'er is now in the temple too, and by the light of a lightning, the landlord sees her--with her long white hair and shabby clothes that have been weathered to nearly white. He thinks it is the reincarnation of a goddess who comes to punish him for his mistreatment of Xi'er and other despotisms and is so fightened and he is literally paralyzed. Xi'er recognizes that it is her blood enemy and decides to grab the opportunity to revenge her vendetta. She picks up the brass incense burner and hurls it agains the landlord. The landlord and his lackey flee. Meanwhile, her fiance, Wang Dachun, has joined the Eighth Route Army and fought the Japanese invaders. Now he returns with his army to overthrow the rule of the landlord. They disempower the landlord, give his farmland to the poor farmers. Zhang Ershen tells the story of Xi'er, and they decide to look for her in the mountains. Wang Dachun finally finds her in the cave with her Alopecia areata|hair turned white. They reunite and emote. Music Unlike other ballets, the music of The White Haired Girl is more like that of a musical, i.e., it blends a large number of vocal passages, both solos on the part of Xi'er and choruses into the music. Because of their mellifluous melodies, these songs became very popular. The following is a partial list of these songs:
opera-stub China-stub References
zh:????????? Category:Chinese-language operas|White Haired Girl Category:Nationalist operas|White Haired Girl Category:Operas by Yan Jinxuan|White Haired Girl Category:Ballets|White Haired Girl Category:Operas|White Haired Girl This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The White Haired Girl".
|
|
|||
All informatin on the site is © FamousChinese.com 2002-2005. Last revised: January 2, 2004 Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights. To post your business in our web site? please click here. To send any comments to us, please use the Feedback. To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: |