日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies

Swan Song for a Ballet Star?
Cai Yilei was at the top of his game, the principal dancer with a national ballet in Europe, with awards and accolades under his leotard. Cai discovered that his star didn't shine so brightly in the eyes of a dance company back in Shanghai.

After winning the Prix de Lausanne Gold Medal in 1987, securing a place in the legendary Sadler's Wells Ballet, and going on to become the principal dancer with the Scottish National Ballet, Cai Yilei thought he could write his own ticket in Shanghai.

But, alas, his hometown ballet company felt differently.

His initial joy at landing a one-year contract with the Shanghai Ballet Company quickly turned to disappointment when he was confined to a supporting role in "The Butterfly Lovers," even when there was meatier fare, like the English version of the full-length "Swan Lake," available.

Rather than suffer in silence, the 34-year-old naturalized British citizen decided to turn crisis into opportunity. "It was a turning point, offering me the chance to take a break and think about what I wanted to do," he says.

The answers came quickly. Cai now runs a ballet club in the city. "It's more like community service work, in that it's not profit-driven," says Cai. "I'm doing this for the teaching experience, which counts more than money."

Cai is also racking up teaching experience at the Shanghai Dance School, where he teaches three times a week, and the Shanghai Opera Theater Dance Ensemble, where he teaches ballet fundamentals twice a week.

"We're thrilled to have him," says Cheng Weimin, the Shanghai Opera Theater Dance Ensemble president and former classmate of Cai's at the Shanghai Dance School. "He's an excellent dancer, and before he began teaching, we never had classes in the ballet fundamentals." Cai and Cheng are also planning a dance show, for which Cai will do some choreography. And Cai is applying for a position at the Cultural and Education Section of the British Consulate-General in Shanghai. "I'd love to do something on cultural exchange, and try to find some good ballets for local dance companies to perform."

Cai seems as if he has turned his life around, but he remains bitter. "Shanghai's well-developed veneer lured me back, but I hadn't expected such a disappointing cultural scene, not to mention the incredible narrow-mindedness of some people," he says.

After winning the Prix de Lausanne Gold Medal, Cai caught the eye of Royal Ballet School director Merle Park, who invited the then 17-year-old to study in Britain. Cai's career trajectory, first with the prestigious Sadler's Wells (now the Birmingham Royal Ballet) and later as principal dancer with the Scottish National Ballet, ended the year after his father died as he was dancing the role of Colas in "La Fille Mal Gardee."

Although his schedule prevented him from returning to China for the funeral of his father, a national basketball player during the 1960s, he returned the following year to care for his mother, Zhang Xunpeng, a famous Kunqu Opera singer. "I stayed in Shanghai for my family," says Cai. "The invitation to join the Shanghai Ballet Company was a bonus."

Problems with the Shanghai Ballet arose almost immediately, as Cai's Western sensibilities clashed with his Chinese peers. Cai was relegated to second principal role for the "Swan Lake" project. He was not given the principal role in any weighty classical works, he says, because "they said I was too fat, too short and above all, didn't have a partner. That last line of reasoning was absurd, since nobody has just one assigned partner abroad."

Ha Muti, president of the Shanghai Ballet, offered a different explanation. "Cai is good, but it seems hard for him to adapt to the style of a local company. Moreover, he had been seriously injured before coming to our company, though that only came to light after he joined. The injury did not enable him to dance as well as he had in Britain," he says.

Tired of the arguments, Cai had originally considered returning to Britain - but the desire to prove his mettle has kept him here. "I was able to survive - indeed, thrive - in a foreign country for so many years. There is absolutely no reason that I can't survive in my own country," he says, defiantly.

(eastday.com July 28, 2002)

Dancing to Dream or Death
Genius Ballerina Tan Yuanyuan Returns Home
Ballet Dancers to "Raise the Red Lantern" Again in Beijing
Shanghai Ballet Festival Opens With Swan Lake
Chinese Ballet to Impress Audience
Dancing Behind Limelight
Print This Page
|
Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
主站蜘蛛池模板: 海丰县| 同德县| 米易县| 西盟| 甘南县| 宾川县| 镇赉县| 澄迈县| 阜康市| 观塘区| 利津县| 南开区| 昆山市| 临沭县| 龙井市| 铅山县| 全椒县| 江油市| 榆中县| 孝感市| 遂溪县| 泰宁县| 桃园县| 香港| 定边县| 曲阜市| 凤山市| 伊宁县| 禄丰县| 温泉县| 通河县| 吉林省| 西安市| 高台县| 涞源县| 松潘县| 东海县| 清徐县| 永德县| 玛多县| 伽师县|