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The Kunqu Theater
Hans H. Frankel
Kunqu is a form
of Chinese musical drama. But it is more than just drama: it is a
combination of play, opera, ballet, poetry recital, and musical recital. It
also draws on earlier forms of Chinese theatrical performances: mime, farce,
acrobatics, ballad recital, and medley, some of which go back to the third
century BC or even earlier. It is first and foremost a performing art:
people come to see and hear a performance. The plot is usually familiar to
the audience, or else made available through a prose summary. In the
performance of Kunqu three media work simultaneously and in harmony: words,
music and dance.
The name Kunqu refers,
strictly speaking, to the musical element of this art form, and is connected
with the fact that one of the principal types of regional music that went
into the making of Kunqu came from the district of Kunshan (near Suzhou, in
modern Jiangsu Province). This type of regional music goes back to the
fourteenth century. It was given shape in the sixteenth century by Wei
Liangfu and other, who combined it with three other forms of southern music
and with northern tunes from the drama of the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368). Wei
Liangfu and his collaborators standardized the rules of rhyme, tones,
pronunciation, and notation, making it possible for this regional form of
music to become a national standard. By the end of the sixteenth century,
Kunqu spread from the Suzhou region to the rest of China, and became the
most prestigious form of Chinese drama. It has survived until the present,
but from the late eighteenth century on it was crowded out by the less
sophisticated and less complex Beijing opera.
The language of Kunqu
is not the dialect of Kunshan or Suzhou, nor is it standard
Mandarin. It is an artificial stage language, a modified Mandarin with some
features of the local dialect.
The text and music are
of two kinds, easily distinguished. On the one hand there are arias that
are sung and accompanied by the orchestra. These are elaborate poems of
high literary quality. On the other hand there are prose passages
(monologues and dialogues), that are neither sung nor spoken but chanted in
a stylized fashion comparable to the recitative of Western opera. Sometimes
there is a combination of the two styles (unknown in Western opera): one of
the characters sings while another one chants at the same time.
Music is an essential
element of Kunqu, but it differs from Western opera in that there are
no individual composers in the Western sense, The author of the drama
chooses from an existing repertory, according to fixed conventions, because
the tunes exist not in isolation but in sequences, There is a delicate
relation between words and tunes: Chinese is a tonal language, every word
has a "melody," as it were, and the musical air is superimposed on the word
melody, without interfering with it.
The principal musical
instrument of the kunqu orchestra is the djzj, a horizontal
bamboo flute. The singer and all other instruments are subordinated to the
dizi, Other optional instruments in the Kunqu orchestra are
Sheng a bamboo wind organ or Pan's pipe). sanxian (a
three-stringed lute), erhu (a two-stringed-fiddle), luo
(cymbals), gu (drum), and ban (wooden clappers). Kunqu
music is based on the Qupai principle, that is to say, the poetic
passages of the play are written to fit a large number of fixed tunes, known
as qupai. Thus the author must conform to the pattern of the
particular qupai in regard to the number of lines, the number of
syllables per line, tonal sequence, and rhyme,
In addition to music
and words, there is the third element of dance movements and gestures,
rigidly stylized. The three elements work in harmony to convey the meaning
and the esthetic effect desired. Dancing in Chinese musical drama is
different from western ballet in that the whole body is engaged. There is an
intricate language of gestures and body movements. The meaning of
some movements is immediately understood even by the uninitiated, other
movements are stylized and conventional. The movements involve not only the
body but also the costume (especially the sleeves), and objects held in the
hand, such as a fan, the costumes are elaborate and conventional not
realistic. For example, in historical plays. The costumes are not varied
according to the period of the plot but rather to fit the role of the
character,
Stage equipment is kept
to a minimum. There is no curtain, and few props: sometimes a table and a
chair. The stage setting, like the costumes, is not meant to be realistic.
The actors appeal to the audience's imagination and conjure up a scene or a
setting (such as a door, a horse, a river, a boat) with words, gestures, and
music.
There are two kinds of
actors: professionals and amateurs. The professionals were held in low
esteem, down to modern times. The amateurs were highly educated members of
well-to-do families. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries there were
two kinds of theatrical troupes: (1) slave boys or girls owned by wealthy
families; they performed to entertain the families and their guests at
banquets, weddings, birthdays, and funerals. They could also be rented out
to other families. (2) Professional actors' troupes; they performed in
public squares or in front of temples. Some troupes always stayed in the
same town, others traveled. Actresses were often courtesans, carrying on two
professions simultaneously. The training of actors was always long and
arduous, starting at an early age. The pupils had to learn acting, singing,
dancing, and acrobatic skills. The actors wear no masks but do some
face-painting, to indicate the role and the character (for example,
whiteness indicates cunning). In old times, acting groups usually consisted
of all-male or all-female troupes, hence men acted both male and female
parts, and women acted both female and male parts.
As mentioned earlier,
Chinese theatre-goers go to see a performance rather than a play. Therefore
a theatrical program often consists not of a single play but of selected
scenes from different plays. In fact, some of the classical plays are so
long that a complete performance would take up many hours or even several
days.
Hans H. Frankel,
late Professor of Yale University |