In fact, my Churchill Fellowship of 2004 informed part of my work in Chinese opera. Now, 20 years on, I am delighted to say I continue to put my learning to good use.
I am a seasoned amateur Jingju (Peking Opera) and Kunqu opera performer, teacher and promoter. I kept up with the art form for many years in Hong Kong, alongside my career in school teaching and later in arts administration. Since settling in the UK in 1997, I have continued to immerse myself.
In 2022, I had a chance meeting with a friend, José Navarro, a British-Peruvian master puppeteer, trained in Western classical and contemporary mime. José bought one of the elaborately embroidered costumes I have from China, the 'Carp Armour'. When he tried the costume on, I saw in his agility that he could perhaps morph into a carp!
This sparked a lightbulb moment and, encouraged by the chance of funding from the Wandsworth Arts Fringe (WAF) 2023 ‘Call for Artists’, I hit on the idea of adapting the popular Chinese legend of the auspicious carp into Chinese opera movements and music, which hitherto had not been done.
So began José and my shared cross-cultural partnership into uncharted territories. It took about a year for it to mature into our performance for the WAF Festival in June 2023.
José works internationally in puppetry but is completely new to Jingju. We both welcomed the rare chance of a new departure in a different direction. For me, it is a new undertaking to put aside the familiar movements of the Dan, female role, and to choreograph for what I see as the combined male roles of the ‘military young man’ Wu Xiaosheng and the Painted-Face role of the Jing/Hualian.
We titled the project ‘Carp Leaps over the Dragon Gate’ after the legend of the carp striving to swim upstream to jump over the Dragon Gate and become a dragon himself, free to roam the heavens and the seas. It promotes the Chinese ethos of hard work leading to self-improvement.