Director Diane Paulus was joined by Basil Twist, puppetry director and set and puppetry designer, and choreographer Ann Yee in bringing to life the story of the Chinese trickster god over the course of two action-packed acts.
“The Monkey King” is perhaps the most impressive stage production I have ever seen in terms of stagecraft and scale. There are 53 musicians in the orchestra, 68 performers on stage, and what I can only assume to be over 500 technical cues. Kudos to the stage manager!
The Monkey King, eventually given the name Sun Wukong by his teacher, was performed primarily by the tenor Kang Wang. Huiwang Zhang, currently a dancer with Bill T. Jone/Arnie Zane Company, took over as the Monkey King intermittently but especially in battle scenes or when the god was required to travel into different planes of existence, celestial or aquatic. Similarly, Twist’s puppet tagged in to increase the stage magic when scale was a narrative device, or to more delicately interact with fellow puppets. The movement language for the protagonist had to be consistent across the two human and one puppet interpretations to maintain the physicality and character of the Monkey King. Yee accomplished this via posture and gesture.
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