On July 7, Master Ruan Guo-Xuan, one of
the prominent percussionists in Chinese Music, will present his Annual Guo-Xuan
Cantonese Opera and Singing Event at the Richmond Hill Centre for the Performing
Arts. A young rising actor, Huang
Chun-Qiang, who had performed last year here in Toronto for the Guo-Xuan Show,
will come back as an honourary guest to perform two acts and sing a song with
local amateur actors and singers. Huang
had graduated from the Guangdong Opera Theatre School and had been frequently
invited to perform in Hong Kong, the United States and Canada.
There will be six songs and two acts
performed for that evening. Each song
or act comes with a story and it often involves history; hence it is necessary
to explain the background of each song and act.
Below is the Programme listed for the
Guo-Xuan Annual Cantonese Opera and Singing Event:
1. Flying Drums – Music by Master Ruan
Guo-Xuan and his Chinese Orchestra
2. The
Purple Hairpin Story – Bidding Farewell
The Purple Hairpin Story is a famous Chinese opera written in the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1662). The story began
with a scholar named Li Yik, who happened to pick up a purple hairpin which
belonged to a beautiful girl called Fok Siu-Yuk. They fell in love the moment they met and got married
thereafter. However, Li had previously
met General Loh's daughter who was also in love with Li. Failed to get Li to marry her, Miss Loh
asked her father to separate Li and Fok.
General Loh then forced Li to leave Fok by assigning him to a position
as a military advisor and sent him far away to the border. This song describes the two lovers, Li and
Fok, saying goodbye to each other, not knowing when they could meet again. Fok vowed she would always remember the one
who had picked up her purple hairpin, as in the title of this song.
3. Joining Forces Against Tsao
During the period of the Three Kingdoms (222-264), Wei, Shu, and Wu were
always trying to find ways to oust each other.
Eventually, Wu and Shu had decided to join forces against Wei to get rid
of Wei's emperor, Tsao. From the Wu
Kingdom, a young man serving the court called Chou Yu, wanted to set fire to
Tsao's military ships which were in thousands, but could never come up with a
feasible plan because they needed the easterly wind. However, at that time of the year, it was only blowing
northwesterly wind which would only burn their own ships. Unable to move forward with his plan, he got
sick worrying about it. Meanwhile, ChuGe
Liang, the advisor for the Shu Kingdom, came to visit Yu and offered a way to
cure his sickness. Liang's solution was
that, he said he had the power to get the easterly wind to burn all of Tsao's
ships. Then Yu was cured without any
medicine!
4. Love Story Between Lok Har and Gu Mou -
Prequel
This song was written as a prequel to another love song between the same
two lovers. The male, Gu Mou had to go
to the capital to take the Grand Examination which was only held every few
years, in the hope to be selected as the next Champion and be given a high
honourary position in the royal palace.
However, his love, Lok Har was sick but still wished him to go so that
he could come back with honours to marry her.
So now they're saying goodbye to each other in this song.
5. Last
Ruler Li and His Lost Kingdom
Ruler Li
was the last ruler of Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms (907-960), a period
before the Sung Dynasty (960-1279).
After Ruler Li's kingdom was conquered by the Emperor of the Sung
Dynasty, he changed his name to Li Yu and focused on writing poetry. Both he and his beloved new wife, Lady Chou,
the younger sister of his queen who died earlier, were being kept as prisoners
of the Sung Emperor. One day, the Sung
Emperor sent in a glass of poisonous wine for them. This song recounts the situation of that sad last moment between
the two.
6. Unyielding to Foreign Conquest
Wen
Tian-Chiang was the last prime minister of the Southern Sung Dynasty
(1127-1279). When Kublai Khan invaded the Southern Sung Dynasty, Wen tried to
negotiate peace but to no avail. Later,
he was captured by the enemy, the Mongols, who later formed the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1367). While he was in the enemy prison, he was
forced to write a letter to the Sung generals asking them to surrender. However, Wen just wrote a poem declaring
that he would rather die than to surrender.
This song narrates that time when his wife came to visit him in prison
and they both expressed that they would not be afraid to die to show their
loyalty to the Sung Kingdom.
7. One-Act Operetta - Hitting the Princess
During the Tang Dynasty (618-906), General Kuo Tzui had successfully crushed the Anshi Rebellion. In order to reward him, the Emperor tried to marry his daughter off to one of Kuo's sons. Now the young couple, both grew up in classy and powerful families, were somewhat spoiled! When the General's birthday came up, the young husband told the princess to go and send her greetings in person to her father-in-law. But the princess, thinking she was royalty, did not bother to show her face at the birthday party. The husband was so mad at his wife’s no-show especially when he was being ridiculed by his brothers and relatives. So when he came home, he scolded her first and when she said it wasn’t any big deal, he hit the princess on her face. The princess, not expecting this kind of action could come from her loving husband, was infuriated. She cried as she stormed out their home, heading to the palace to tell her father, the Emperor. Before she left, she warned her husband that he could not get away with his action!
During the Tang Dynasty (618-906), General Kuo Tzui had successfully crushed the Anshi Rebellion. In order to reward him, the Emperor tried to marry his daughter off to one of Kuo's sons. Now the young couple, both grew up in classy and powerful families, were somewhat spoiled! When the General's birthday came up, the young husband told the princess to go and send her greetings in person to her father-in-law. But the princess, thinking she was royalty, did not bother to show her face at the birthday party. The husband was so mad at his wife’s no-show especially when he was being ridiculed by his brothers and relatives. So when he came home, he scolded her first and when she said it wasn’t any big deal, he hit the princess on her face. The princess, not expecting this kind of action could come from her loving husband, was infuriated. She cried as she stormed out their home, heading to the palace to tell her father, the Emperor. Before she left, she warned her husband that he could not get away with his action!
8. Two Poems Written On the Wall In Shen's
Garden
The famous poet, Lu Yiu, from the Southern Sung
Dynasty (1127-1279), was in love with his cousin Tang Wen and married her while
they were quite young. Unfortunately,
Tang could not give him any children and his mother forced him to divorce
Tang. Lu was heartbroken but had to
obey his mother and married another woman.
Later Tang also remarried. More
than ten years had passed, and one day Lu accidentally ran into Tang and her
husband in Shen's Garden. Sadly, he
wrote a very doleful poem on the wall in Shen's Garden, expressing his
unfailing love for her, claiming their divorce was a mistake. Following the same rhyming order, Tang
retorted by writing another bitter poem on the same wall, describing how hard life
was for her after the divorce and that she cried her tears at night without
letting anyone know.
9. One-Act Operetta - The Fall of Lu'an City
During the Northern Sung Dynasty (960-1126), the Jurchen tribe grew very powerful in the north and formed a kingdom called Chin (1115-1234). Lu Deng, a general who was guarding the city of Lu'an knew that the Jurchen General was leading 500,000 soldiers to invade Lu'an while he only got 5,000 soldiers. He had sent for help but help never came. He vowed to guard his city and told his wife to take their son and leave. But his wife wanted to stay by his side, so she sent her son away with the nanny. Lu then returned from battle, badly wounded. To his surprise, his wife did not leave! Now he knew he could no longer guard the city but he was more worried that his wife would be mistreated by the enemies. To ease his fears, his wife took her life. He died at the end.One-Act Operatta - Hitting The Princess
Postscript: All
Chinese names and dynasties translated here are mostly based on John K.
Fairbank and Edwin Reischauer – East Asia, The Great Tradition