c*******1 发帖数: 5 | 1 A cursory reading of reviews of the Shen Yun show quickly reveals that those
who see it – art critics and the public alike – are unimpressed by the
stage antics.
In Foreign Policy magazine of April 29, 2015, Isaac Stone Fish, a journalist
and senior fellow at the Asia Society’s Center on US-China relations, said
years of civilisation’, as the show’s ubiquitous fliers proclaim; nor is
it a Chinese version of the wildly popular Canadian circus company Cirque du
Soleil, as the older gentleman sitting next to me at the performance
expected.
“Rather, Shen Yun exists to transmit a message: that heavenly forces will
destroy modern-day China, obliterating the Chinese Communist Party [CCP],
which has ruled the country since 1949.”
In a critique in the Hamilton Spectator in Ontario on Jan 1, 2015, Ingrid
Mayrhofer was no less scathing: “The show tried our patience right at the
beginning with garish electronic imaging and loud Western instruments. The
background projection outdid the dancers on the stage with visual [effects],
and the military-style sound smothered the hall.
“Approximately 20 minutes into the spectacle, the announcers began to talk
about Falun Gong and how the Chinese government persecuted the sect,
offering the next dance as an illustration thereof. At this point, we agreed
that we did not have to endure without complaining.”
In the Oregonian of Jan 14, 2014, Jamie Hale said: “Organisers for the arts
troupe Shen Yun bill its performances as ‘an extraordinary journey across
5,000 years of Chinese civilisation’ told through dance, music and
breathtaking imagery’. They promise that the show … will ‘touch your soul
’. But beneath the layers of coloured, flowing cloth is a message that
wraps up politics, propaganda, religion and media.”
In Britain, Sarah Crompton of the Daily Telegraph of Feb 25, 2008, said: “
This show is advertised as a Chinese spectacular — a kind of Eastern
version of Cirque du Soleil. It is nothing of the kind. Acrobatics, singing
and dancing skills are used in the service of a propaganda exercise on the
part of Falun Gong, a group banned as an ‘evil cult’ by the Communist
Chinese government in 1999.
“Most of the members of the Divine Performing Arts troupe are members of
Falun Gong. But their beliefs do not simply form a backdrop to a neutral
presentation of traditional Chinese dance and legends. They are the focal
point of the evening.” In the New York Times of Feb 6, 2008, Eric
Konigsberg’s remarks also covered what went on offstage.
“Audience members who filed out of Radio City before and during
intermission said they were troubled by the material. ‘I had no idea it was
Falun Gong until now that it’s too late, and it really bums me out,’ said
Steven, a Chinese immigrant living in New Jersey who, along with his family
, was among the first to leave and asked that his last name not be published.
“It’s a little too political, too religious, especially the dance showing
some girls getting tortured in the prisons. That’s too much for Chinese New
Year, especially with our children.”
And then there was Susan Walker of the Toronto Star on Jan 21, 2008, who
wrote: “The healing powers of the music and dance on display in this
admittedly spectacularly tacky show was the icing on the cake of
enlightenment and truth that was offered up at every opportunity in a
presentation of ‘the true essence of Chinese culture’ before it was ‘
damaged by the Chinese Communist Party’. The production is so heavily laden
with Falun Gong messages as to negate any pleasure the dancing and singing
might have afforded.” |
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