ARTS / DANCE
Dance drama ‘Crested Ibises’ celebrates 10th anniversary, ‘a good China story boosting cultural confidence’
Published: Aug 24, 2024 08:12 PM
The dancers of the “Crested Ibises” from Shanghai Dance Theatre interact with the audience after the performance on August 24, 2024 in Shanghai. Photo: Feng Yu/GT

The dancers of the “Crested Ibises” from Shanghai Dance Theatre interact with the audience after the performance on August 24, 2024 in Shanghai. Photo: Feng Yu/GT


"The performance is amazing, the dancers vividly recreated the movements of the crested ibis, while also interpreting the whole process of co-existence, conflicts and harmony again between human being and nature," a Shanghai resident told the Global Times on Saturday after watching the dance drama Crested Ibises (Zhu Huan in Chinese pinyin) in Shanghai.

This year marks the 10th anniversary of the debut of Crested Ibises produced by the Shanghai Dance Theatre (SDT). The drama was inspired by China's miracle in saving and protecting the crested ibis, which is also known as an auspicious "fairy bird" or "bird of good fortune" in Asian culture.

The crested ibis, with its iconic red crest and long black beak, is believed to have existed for 60 million years and commonly found in China, on the Korean Peninsula, Japan and Russia until the 1960s. Bird conservationists attribute pesticides, fertilizers, hunting, environmental and ecological reasons for bringing the birds to the brink of extinction.

The crested ibis was thought to be extinct in China until seven wild birds were spotted in Yangxian county in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province in 1981, a discovery that prompted captive breeding and enhanced protection of the species.

After more than 40 years of continuous conservation, it is estimated that there are over 11,000 crested ibises alive in 2024, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

The Shanghai Dance Theatre introduced the drama in 2014, and integrated Chinese folk dance and Western ballet. Traditional Chinese dance gestures are used in upper body movements, while ballet and Western dance elements feature in the footwork, which makes it a masterpiece receiving recognition both home and abroad, according to critics.

Since its premiere in 2014, the Crested Ibises has performed 348 shows at home and abroad, the STD told the Global Times on Saturday. According to media reports, it has consistently been the most frequently performed and highest-grossing dance drama of the SDT.

In the past 10 years, the drama has been performed in Japan, the US. Overseas audiences consistently give enthusiastic applause at the end of the show, providing strong encouragement to the dancers.

"We will not only continue to inherit the essence of this art on the domestic stage, but also tour again in Japan in February next year. We look forward to sharing the story of the crested ibis with more audiences and conveying the importance of 'environmental protection and harmonious coexistence,' so that the artistic beauty can spread across national borders and touch more hearts," Wang Yan, director of the Shanghai Dance Theatre, told the Global Times on Saturday.

"For what was lost in the past, let's appeal to cherish the future forever," SDT put it as the slogan in the promotional materials of the dance drama, reminding the public to learn from the lesson of the crested ibis and to protect both the environment and the ecosystem.

"It's really a good China story. I would say both the commercial and artistic successes of the dance drama was a paradigm of the Chinese modernization of cultural-ethical advancement, which has definitely boosted our cultural confidence," a journalist surnamed Chen who watched the performance 10 years ago told the Global Times on Saturday.