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Chinese Opera

中国戏曲
Year
2025
Views
4

Synopsis

Chinese opera is a traditional dramatic form of the Chinese nation, integrating singing, recitation, acting, and acrobatics, and combining music, dance, performance, and fine arts. Various genres such as Peking opera, Kunqu opera, and Yue opera showcase China's rich and diverse regional cultures.

Overview

Chinese opera is the general term for traditional Chinese dramatic art, with a history spanning over a thousand years. Opera primarily uses singing, recitation, acting, and acrobatics as its main performance techniques, integrating various art forms such as music, dance, performance, and fine arts.

There is a great variety of Chinese opera genres, with approximately over 360 genres nationwide. Among them, Peking Opera, Kunqu Opera, Yu Opera (Henan Opera), Yue Opera (Shaoxing Opera), Pingju Opera, and Huangmei Opera are the most representative genres.

Major Genres

Genre Place of Origin Characteristics
Peking Opera Beijing National treasure, rich vocal styles, facial makeup art
Kunqu Opera Kunshan, Jiangsu Ancestor of all operas, inscribed as UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2001
Yu Opera (Henan Opera) Henan Largest local opera in northern China, bold and unconstrained singing style
Yue Opera (Shaoxing Opera) Zhejiang Most popular in southern China, graceful and delicate
Pingju Opera Hebei Developed from folk storytelling and singing
Huangmei Opera Anhui Beautiful and lyrical, derived from folk tunes

Peking Opera Role Types

Role Type Description
Sheng Male roles, including Laosheng (old male), Xiaosheng (young male), Wusheng (martial male)
Dan Female roles, including Qingyi (virtuous female), Huadan (vivacious female), Laodan (old female)
Jing Painted face roles, representing characters with strong, forceful personalities
Chou Comic roles, divided into Wenchou (civilian comic) and Wuchou (martial comic)

Artistic Features

Element Description
Singing Vocal music is the core of opera
Recitation Spoken dialogue, character monologues or dialogues
Acting Performance movements, highly stylized
Acrobatics Martial arts movements, dance-like

Cultural Value

Kunqu Opera was inscribed by UNESCO in 2001 as a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity, representing international recognition for Chinese opera.

Item Information
History Over a thousand years
Number of Genres Approximately 360
UNESCO Intangible Heritage Kunqu Opera (2001)
Representative Figures Mei Lanfang, Cheng Yanqiu, etc.

References

  1. Baidu Baike: Chinese Opera
  2. Wikipedia: Chinese Opera
  3. UNESCO: Kunqu Opera

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