Pain Behind Glory

来源 :Beijing Review | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:ssz1000
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  From the best seats in the house, audience members easily fall under the ballerina’s spell, enraptured by, or even envious of, the graceful performers and their carefree lives of dance. But behind the curtains and dreamscape sets hides the unknown pains and tribulations that can easily overcome even the most committed of dancers.
  For almost all ballet dancers, particularly the elite troupe at the National Ballet of China(NBC), the path to ballet excellence is paved with hurt toes and hard training.
  In a bright dance hall in the Xicheng District of Beijing, a dozen ballerinas finish their warm-up routine before beginning a daily rehearsal. Following the orders of Xu Gang, a renowned Chinese ballet master, they practice basic ballet skills, associated with the dramatic plot of the performance.
  


  In another corner, a girl rehearses the classic Swan Lake, in which the true love of a swan has moved numerous performers and audiences over the past century. With the plaintive tone of the violin accompanying her dance, the ballerina twirls about elegantly and gently, drops of sweat falling from her forehead and bandages covering her injured ankles.
  She is Zhu Yan, the principal dancer of the NBC.
  “In a ballet, a player often gets cast in a few roles. So some ballet dancers change costumes several times in the backstage area during performance,” said Zhu.
  Established in 1959, the NBC has grown into a world-class ballet troupe with a professional crew of 70 dancers, 10 teachers and masters, most of whom are well known internationally.
  For ballet dancers, the stage becomes their home, and the dance becomes their life, said Zhu. Many dancers spend between 10 and 15 years of their lives on stage.
  Most NBC ballerinas start their performing careers as teenagers. Retirement comes in their 30s, after their bodies and feet can no longer take the physical strain of practices and performances.
  Despite prior knowledge of the hardships, many Chinese parents support their children’s dreams of dance. Every year, young girls head to Beijing for better instruction, some as young as 8 or 9. After several rounds of examinations and contests, qualified recruits are selected from thousands of candidates. Then they begin a strict systematic education of ballet at a high school affiliated to the Beijing Dance Academy (BDA), the most honored dance college in China.
  “I never regret dancing,” Zhu said, “I feel so lucky that I became a member of the NBC and receive applause and acclaim in the spotlight.”
  Despite an honorable history and support from the government, the NBC now relies mostly on its own commercial performances. The government now offers 40 percent of the NBC’s budget, while the troupe has to raise the rest on their own. The pressure to raise funds is a daily reminder for everyone at the NBC.
  For this reason, the NBC arranges as many commercial performances as possible. The performances raise extra cash, but push the dancers to their limits.
  


  In 2011, the NBC troupe performed more than 150 ballets in China and internationally.
  “Sometimes we have to perform five or six ballets a week,” said Zhu.
  “Our dancers seldom get weekends off. They go to practice from sun up to sun down and then perform once the sun sets,” said NBC President Feng Ying. “The amount of exercise of a ballet dancer in one performance is almost the same with that of a volleyball player in a match.”
  In today’s fast-moving and tech-obsessed society, ballet is failing to attract large numbers of fans—those that do show up are usually older and few in number.
  The brain drain of ballet dancers is another big challenge for the NBC to tackle. “Due
   to unsatisfactory income, many excellent ballet dancers who were trained by us have quit and chosen to serve in foreign ballet troupes,”said Jiang Shan, Director of Operations and Planning of the NBC.
  “Nowadays, a super star can earn much more by singing a song than the whole performance of a ballet troupe,” said Jiang. “So we must continually improve our troupe to offer better conditions for our dancers.”
  In spite of some challenges, the young generation of ballet dancers is working hard for improvement of the stage art by creating new dramas with innovative ideas and Chinese features. For instance, on March 8, the Red Detachment of Women performed by the NBC at Tianqiao Theater of Beijing was praised among middle school students. With quick and strong rhythms, the newly unveiled ballet Pink Floyd has won unexpected popularity among young audiences.
其他文献
社会经济发展,使得城市园林景观的建设进程不断推进,同时,基于人们生活质量已经得到显著提升等原因,使得社会对于现如今园林景观设计以及建设的要求越来越高,由以往的可以提
When Kim Jong Un came to power in Pyongyang last year, Western countries were anxious about the future of North Korea under the new leadership. But they can now feel a bit more relaxed as analysts say
期刊
On the evening of February 9, a micro-blog post pleading for typeA blood platelets was posted on China’s twitter, Weibo.com, and within a day, the message was forwarded thousands of times.  Cheng Yunt
期刊
期刊
对CBI(内容依托教学法)高职英语教学理念进行概念阐述,对国内外CBI外语研究进行评述,评价了CBI应用于高职英语教学的价值,验证CBI教学方法在高职英语教学中的可行性和必要性.
When it comes to income, the average Chinese person has a lot to complain about. “I’ve been working for 25 years since graduating in 1987, but I’m only earning 1,200 yuan ($190) a month,” said an anon
期刊
Five years later, Lin Lin (a pseudonym) still vividly remembers how she felt the moment a nurse put an oxygen mask over her face in the emergency room: sheer loneliness and fear. Before she was admitt
期刊
我科自2003年1月~2004年6月收治68例中度阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停低通气综合征(OSAHS)患者,随机分为2组,分别实施改良悬雍腭咽成形术(UPPP组)及等离子低温消融术(CPS组),均取得较
河朔诗派诗派是明清更迭之际的诗人群体,他们饱经战乱之苦,体现出一定的隐逸倾向,诗歌创作主张向杜甫等盛唐诗人学习,抒发真性情.
British Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit to China has drawn wide public attention owing to his extra-large entourage of business executives, as well as his statement made prior to the visit that B
期刊