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Documentary gives classic work a modern interpretation

By FANG AIQING and SUN MENG | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-03-28 08:01
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Beauty and timelessness, these are what model-actress and director Chang Chunxiao wants to convey through her ongoing Kunqu Opera-themed short documentary project.

The People in the Time Tunnel documents fashion photographer Feng Hai's role as artistic styling consultant on Romantic Dream in Garden, a new interpretation of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Kunqu Opera masterpiece, The Peony Pavilion, produced by the Northern Kunqu Opera Theatre in Beijing.

Chang's documentary captures the way Feng refers to image archives of the Ming Dynasty and reconstructs the appearance of the characters — designing makeup details and the way performers wear their ornaments, for example — how he shot the posters for the adaptation, and his understanding of the traditional Chinese opera form in general.

On Monday, Chang screened a trailer of her documentary shot on iPhones. She also discussed behind-the-scenes stories with Apple CEO Tim Cook. The event took place at Beijing's more than 300-year-old Zhengyici Kunqu Theatrical House, where Romantic Dream in Garden made its debut in December.

Apple CEO Tim Cook (second right) with model-actress and director Chang Chunxiao (second left) and performers from the Northern Kunqu Opera Theatre at Beijing's Zhengyici Kunqu Theatrical House on Monday. CHINA DAILY

Written by playwright Tang Xianzu around 400 years ago, The Peony Pavilion is a love story that extends beyond life and death, as well as the heroine Du Liniang's search for love and freedom in feudal society. The Beijing theater's adaptation was also preformed at the National Centre for the Performing Arts in February.

Upon learning about the traditional opera form and watching a classic excerpt from The Peony Pavilion performed by actresses from the Northern Kunqu Opera Theatre, Cook said in an interview with China Daily that technology helps expand the audience for traditional culture.

"Our history and culture is very important to understanding the present moment and where we're heading in the future," he says.

"Only a few of us can fit in the theater and enjoy it, but with the video we're able to capture that for the world. It enables us to connect with our history in a much deeper way and with many more people."

Chang learned Kunqu Opera as a child. Growing up around historical Liulichang Cultural Street in Beijing, which has been home to bookstalls and shops selling ink and writing brushes, calligraphy and antiques since the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), she says her early years were filled with the fragrance of ink and the sound of Kunqu Opera taught to her by the elderly, and this heavily influenced her film.

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