Traditional Drama
China has a time honored tradition of dramatic arts which has evolved over 800 years and plays a very large part in Chinese culture. There are over 300 dramatic forms still thriving throughout the country. Traditional Chinese drama originated from the west, and saw its development in the earlier part of this century in Shanghai. Traditional Chinese drama aims to simulate reality and create art mainly through dialogue, physical movements and settings. Although these are considered western ideas, it holds a close and intrinsic relationship with traditional Chinese art in terms of artistic spirit embodied in traditional Chinese art and literature. Today, after nearly one hundred years of development, Chinese drama has grown up as a major dramatic art form with national influence.
Unfortunately, modern Chinese playwrights and performers have to fight hard to attract viewers away from pop music concerts, variety shows and television programs. Death of a Famous Opera Performer, (Mingyou Zhi Si, 1929) was written by Tian Han, one of the great playwrights in modern China. The Thunderstorm, (Leiyu, 1934), written by Cao Yu, is a full-length modern drama featuring the complicated relationships among the members and servants of a large well-off family and the family's disintegration as a result of the morbidity and corruption in old China. A example is given as one of the sons has an affair with a maid, who bears him two sons.
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