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[topic]SYDNEY—Audience members lauded Shen Yun Performing Arts New York Company performing at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre on Friday evening, May 4. At the end of the classical Chinese dance and music performance, tenor Hong Ming gave an encore and the entire cast took a bow.
Building designer and Cronulla Rotary Club president, Philip Hutt, was among the crowded theatre wowed by the loveliness exuding from the stage. He was enjoying the portrayal and revival of China’s five millennia cultural heritage, desecrated under communist rule.
“The costumes are fantastic! The ladies with the silk sleeves, Sleeves of Silk,, I thoroughly recommend watching them, fantastic! The dancing is by far the best I’ve seen,” he said.
Mr. Hutt was referring to what is known in classical Chinese dance as “water sleeves,” which is used for some of its loveliest expressions. Acting as extensions of a dancer’s arms, these sleeves linger in the air long after a movement is finished, the program book says.
And as much as he admired the beauty of the dancers, that’s how much he enjoyed the piece How the Monkey King Came to Be. This dance is choreographed to match hi-tech animated backdrop scenes that interact between screen and stage.
“Growing up as a young boy I used to watch Monkey Magic, and I think watching the Monkey King was very impressive,” he said.
Monkey King was born out of a rock. He has magical powers that allow him to travel freely between Heaven and Earth. As Monkey King wreaks havoc in heaven, he finds himself in the palm of the Buddha.
“Fantastic … The dance and the synchronicity of the dance is absolutely phenomenal,” he said.
Maria Moran shares her Shen Yun Performing Arts' experience after the performance. (Dan Granger/The Epoch Times)
Also enjoying the exhilarating performance was Maria Moran, a Cronulla Rotarian and business owner.
“It’s just beautiful and it’s so elegant. The costumes are fantastic and I love the little stories; every time one of the different segments are on there’s a little story,” she said.
She too especially enjoyed How the Monkey King Came to Be.
“I think, because I grew up with the story and I knew the story of the Monkey King so it was just lovely to see it come alive,” Ms. Moran said.
Reporting by NTD Television and Raiatea Tahana-Reese.
Shen Yun Performing Arts, based in New York, has three touring companies that perform simultaneously around the world, with a mission to revive traditional Chinese culture.
Shen Yun Performing Arts New York Company will perform at Sydney’s Capitol Theatre through May 6.
For more information visit ShenYunPerformingArts.org
The Epoch Times is a proud sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts.