In general, however, the choreography, by Wang Peixian, expressed its energy through violence. Most notably, successive ensembles of men, dressed in flowing scholars’ gowns, or as attendants of the psychologist, or as a band of monks, converged on, pushed, trapped, and otherwise toyed with Green, Lady White Snake, and the scholar/husband. The principal role of monk was also aggressive throughout although in dance terms, Song Yu, principal dancer with Shanghai Grand Theatre’s opera ensemble, was admirable as he flung himself in martial arts-like aerial turns or posed in intimidating stances.
In contrast to “Lady White Snake,” Hong Kong Ballet’s “Butterfly Lovers” tells its story in a straightforward way. The heroine dresses as a male in order to attend school. She and a classmate fall in love, but she is summoned home to marry. He follows her, is beaten up, and dies of grief. She perishes at his grave, from which a pair of butterflies emerge.
Choreographer Hu Song Wei Ricky, assisted by Mai Jingwen, frames the story in a Juliet-like manner, for the heroine is first seen as a girlish tomboy when her strict parents come to her bedroom to admonish her. Then having learnt to love, she resists her now-implacable parents in the same bedroom setting and moves on to her death. Both casts of heroines (Zuan Chen, Ye Feifei) and their lovers (Ma Renji, Ruo Kato) danced with admirable fluency, especially in the first act when the period costumes must have been hampering. A nice touch is a pair of dream lovers who express the love the characters were beginning to suspect in themselves (Zhang Sening and Yang Ruiqi, Yonen Takano and Garry Corpus, also excellent).
comments