Martial Arts in Live Theater

STAGE (Scientists, Technologists and Artists Generating Exploration)

Scientific process inspires UChicago art/science lab, whose latest play entangles quantum concepts and kung fu


STAGE Lab members (from left) Collin Van Son, Sunanda Prabhu-Gaunkar, Ellen Wiese, Madeleine Kerr and Edison Hong take a class with kung fu Master Oscar Lam (right) as part of a workshop in Hong Kong.

Photo by Willy Tang

By Louise Lerner
Dec 12, 2019

Scholars and students use technology to create new stories for the theater

Scientists stage experiments all the time—but only a few stage plays. But at the University of Chicago, an innovative art/science lab embedded in its Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering has found inspiration in a unique place: the scientific process.

“We use research, brainstorming and improvisation to generate and investigate new ideas, with continuous analysis and feedback,” said Prof. Nancy Kawalek, the director, actor and writer who heads STAGE (Scientists, Technologists and Artists Generating Exploration).

But these are not science lectures disguised as plays, she said: “By creating emotionally engaging stories, we get the public interested in and excited about science.”

STAGE is based at the PME, the first school in the nation dedicated to defining molecular engineering—an emerging field that builds on advances in basic science to design technology from the molecular level up. In turn, Kawalek works with scholars, students, scientists and artists from across the University, as well as externally, to also use technology as an integral part of staging stories about science.

The STAGE lab group is comprised of scientists and artists who collaboratively develop new theater work through a unique process of improvisation and iteration. Each theater project centers on a scientific concept, which is integrated over months of rehearsals into a story that has an emotional parallel to the scientific topic. For example, the lab’s latest project melds quantum entanglement and kung fu.


A STAGE Lab brainstorming session on the use of technology to tell a story.
Photo courtesy STAGE Lab

The project was inspired when Kawalek became aware of a museum exhibit that used motion capture and other technology to map a young kung fu master’s moves onto a lifelike avatar of his long-deceased great-grandfather, the revered Master Lam Sai Wing.

“In this way, the singular style of kung fu originated by Lam Sai Wing, and in some sense the master himself, were brought back to life on film,” Kawalek said. “Though still in the very early stages, Entanglement is evolving into a play about science, technology, memory and heritage. Quantum entanglement takes us into the remarkable future of technology, while the intangible cultural heritage of kung fu offers inextricable links to the past.”

Kawalek was fascinated by the museum exhibit, especially after learning that the words “kung fu” carry, among other things, the connotation of energy and time. Additional links emerged through discussions with Tian Zhong, a PME assistant professor and STAGE collaborator, who has been doing research on a quantum phenomenon called time-energy entanglement.

Zhong said the exhibit is a powerful demonstration of the type of connections STAGE wants to draw. “The avatar represents a collapsing of time, spanning two generations through movement. This is exactly the essence of time-energy entanglement, so we thought this was a perfect way to inform an audience about the concepts of quantum physics,” he said.

This past summer, the STAGE group worked with The Hong Kong Jockey Club University of Chicago Academic Complex | The University of Chicago Francis and Rose Yuen Campus in Hong Kong, traveling to Hong Kong to research kung fu and quantum science. Students and faculty met with Master Oscar Lam, Lam Sai Wing’s great-grandson; Hing Chao, a leading advocate for the preservation of Chinese martial arts; and the museum exhibit’s artist, Prof. Jeffrey Shaw, a distinguished media artist at the City University of Hong Kong.

Throughout the Hong Kong workshop, research, kung fu lessons, and brainstorming and motion capture sessions provided compelling material for developing Entanglement, Kawalek said. For example, Zhong and the STAGE group had a fruitful discussion with Chao about the role of energy in martial arts. When Zhong raised questions about scientific concepts like conservation, Chao offered an impromptu demonstration of forces specific to different martial arts, such as the linear punches of boxing, versus the arcing shapes of many methods of attack in other types of Chinese martial arts.


A scene from the workshop production of a previous STAGE play, “The Art of Questionable Provenance.”
Photo by HMS Media

As the play develops, Zhong said, he hopes it will increase public awareness and knowledge about quantum science, especially among younger generations. “Some of the concepts in quantum physics are very counterintuitive, and it’s a struggle to relate them to our everyday experiences,” he said. “But I believe earlier and greater exposure to ‘bizarre’ concepts such as these will generate many more innovative ideas down the road.”

STAGE continues to investigate the ideas discovered during their Hong Kong research trip, and Kawalek said the lab hopes to present a workshop production in 2020.

As with all STAGE lab projects, Kawalek said, the goal of Entanglement is to excite the public about science and technology through theater that is relevant to our lives, which are influenced by technological and scientific advances at every turn.

“These connections between science and art—at some level, they’re about the same thing,” Zhong said. “Both start with asking intriguing questions. Then you use existing knowledge to inquire and explore, and the outcome is creation—new knowledge or new art. It’s just the toolsets that are different.”

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Martial Arts in Live Theater

The Healer

RAWdances multisensory The Healer is remade for the pandemic era
Rachel Howard January 26, 2021Updated: January 26, 2021, 7:38 pm


RAWdance co-director Katerina Wong (center).
Photo: Elena Zhukova
When RAWdance Co-Artistic Director Katerina Wongs dance The Healer was first set to premiere almost one year ago, it was to be an immersive sensory experience. Choreographed to honor Wongs aunt, a registered nurse who also practiced traditional Chinese medicine, The Healer was designed to have the audience walk into ODC Theater alongside the dancers, welcoming all with incense blown by paper fans, and inviting viewers to take deep qigong breaths in their shared space.

But a week before opening night, COVID-19 shut down San Francisco. Six months later, when RAWdance regrouped to see what the company might present online in 2021, The Healer which had been one of three world premieres scheduled on that scuttled 2020 program stood out as the dance to resurrect in this new moment.

Now The Healer is set to premiere via live stream on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 29-30, with very different logistics but with the same though newly intensified intent.

Patrons who ordered the Sensory Offerings package for The Healer will not just sit down in front of their screens, but will first open up teabags and ginger candies and paper fans sent ahead of time in the mail. Women chosen as mentors by Wong will start the online evening by showing their own rituals like removing their shoes and lighting candles. The performance will begin with breathing exercises, even if the participants cannot share the same air, and the 30-minute prerecorded dance will be followed by a live Q&A session with a healing practitioner, with different healing modalities featured at each showing.

Its about finding a way to live in this moment and stay in these difficult emotions, Wong said, speaking from her home in the Mission just after the insurrectionist mob attacked the nations Capitol, as she prepared for a day of rehearsing her dancers over Zoom. Its about letting these emotions flow through each of us so we can learn their lessons.


Katerina Wong (left) and Stacey Yuen in The Healer.
Photo: Hillary Goidell
She hastens to explain that The Healer has been developed from a beginner mind-set. Wong, whose father emigrated from south China to Montreal and then Brooklyn, was raised Jewish by her mother and did not learn about traditional Chinese medicine much as a child. Her beloved aunt Szuson Wong was so busy traveling the world to lecture about Chinese healing practices that Katerina rarely got to see her until her aunts last years, when her aunt was diagnosed with a rapidly spreading cancer. Szuson Wong elected to forgo many Western treatments and chose a holistic treatment center in Reno, where her niece visited frequently and saw how her stern and specific aunt navigated the tensions between approaches to health, making sure her herbal remedies were compatible with prescriptions.

It was only after her aunt died two years ago that Wong began seriously researching the principles of traditional Chinese medicine, discovering, she says, these concepts exist in all of us whether were aware of it or not.

The work shes created for four female dancers physically explores these concepts. For instance, Wong and her dancers worked with Chinese medicines system of pressure points and meridians to shift their partnering from habitual Western modes of contact at the waist and the hands, instead mindfully registering sensations at the wrists and ankles, or behind the knees or neck.

The project presented a welcome field of new exploration for the prolific Bay Area composer Daniel Berkman, who has practiced tai chi since high school. His commissioned score draws on the six healing breath sounds of qigong to ask, he said, How can we make breath into a percussive score?

An incorrigible experimenter with world instruments who often plays on a 21-stringed West African cousin of the lute called the kora, Berkman also delighted in discovering a Chinese version of a Japanese mouth organ called the sho to use in The Healer.

It makes a bigger and grander sound thats intense, he said.

He also reveled in the challenge of incorporating audio from a 2012 lecture Szuson Wong gave at a conference titled Wisdom From the Origins. The sound quality of the recording was iffy, he said, but the way she got everyone in the room so engaged was inspiring. So rather than disguise the sound quality, he worked with it raw as part of the breath texture of the piece.


Stacey Yuen (left), Juliann Witt, Katerina Wong and Michaela Cruze at a pre-COVID work-in-progress showing for The Healer.
Photo: Hillary Goidell
The audience may have to experience all this in their individual homes, but after nine months apart and a careful quarantine, the four dancers came together to rehearse and film at ODC Theater. RAWdance member Stacey Yuen, who began creating the very earliest version of The Healer with Wong in such different circumstances almost two years ago, was relishing the physical contact.

Wong creates such a space of openness and dialogue and community, Yuen said. Delving back in has been a healing process after all this time and turmoil.

The Healer: RAWdance. Available to stream 6 p.m. Friday, Jan. 29; 5 and 8 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 30. $15-$100. www.odc.dance/TheHealer

//youtu.be/aAMtkWTocgk

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Convergence – a journey of Chinese dance and martial arts

Feature: When Chinese martial arts, Western contemporary dance converge
Source: XinhuaEditor: huaxia2022-08-24 20:00:15

SYDNEY, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) – With lights fading out at the Neilson Studio of Sydney Dance Company, 18-year-old Australian contemporary dancer Xanthe, together with dozens of her peers, quietly walked on the center stage, ready to showcase the fruits of their Chinese martial arts training.

After spending five weeks absorbing Hung Kuen and White Crane elements from their Hong Kong teachers, the young performers, wearing navy blue tank tops and leggings, wowed the audience with fresh choreography melding Chinese martial arts and Western contemporary dance on Tuesday night.

For most of them, participating in the cultural exchange event associated with Hong Kong Dance Company’s online dance production “Convergence – a journey of Chinese dance and martial arts” was their first step to learning about China and its unique culture from afar.

“I was like, honestly, shocked. That is so different from what we do,” Xanthe told Xinhua after the performance, recalling the very moment when she embarked on her learning of martial arts.

“We had five Zoom lessons with Hong Kong Dance Company, while the first two were definitely very challenging,” she said. Having been practicing contemporary dance for about 12 years, Xanthe described the Chinese martial arts as “a new language to our bodies”.

She took the precision of punching as an example. “Your energy is not expended until that last second when you’re actually hitting the target. That’s very challenging,” Xanthe said, adding that it took her two to three weeks to digest and get comfortable with the body movements.

Regarding the learning of Chinese martial arts as “eye-opening”, Mia, another performer with 10-year dancing experience, told Xinhua that it has given her a different idea and exceeded her expectation of dance, which is “really funny and interesting”.

The mentality behind the White Crane practice impressed her the most, as the dancers have to hold a typical gesture to collect inner energy, she said.

Seeing the Hong Kong-Sydney dance collaboration from idea to fruition, Linda Gamblin, head of training at Sydney Dance Company, said that she is keen to help Australian dancers find an internal position of understanding their movements through this cultural exchange project.

“I find with some of our training in the West, we may be striving for perfection, and missing out on the understanding about the self,” said Gamblin, also a ballet dancer who once performed in many Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, in the 1980s.

According to the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in Sydney, the event is part of the celebration of the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to the motherland, aiming at bonding various cultures and dance forms and boosting international cultural exchange

Needs pix, amirite?

[QUOTE=GeneChing;1323522]Needs pix, amirite?[/QUOTE]

That’s okay. Probably effeminate looking when some dancers take just five weeks absorbing it. Now if it was martial artists taking 5 weeks to mashup some dance, then I’d really want to see it…

Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan 13 Tongues


[URL=“https://live.stanford.edu/calendar/october-2022/cloud-gate-dance-theatre-taiwan”]Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan
13 Tongues
One of Asia’s foremost contemporary dance companies, Cloud Gate was founded in 1973 by choreographer Lin Hwai-min. The company, named after the oldest known dance in China, combines martial arts, Qi Gong, modern dance, and classical ballet. Lin Hwai-min retired in 2019, handing the reins to choreographer Cheng Tsung-lung for his inaugural season as artistic director in 2020.

In 13 Tongues, Cheng Tsung-lung transforms his childhood memories of the streets of Bangka into a fantastical, dreamlike world, fusing ancient superstitions, religious rites, and modern Taipei culture. Beginning and ending with the sound of a single handbell, the music accompanying 13 Tongues ranges from Taiwanese folk songs to Taoist chants to electronica. On a stage awash with projections of colors, shapes, and images, dancers gather, interact, separate, and then come together again in a vibrant representation of the clamor of street life.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This tour is made possible in part by grants from the Ministry of Culture, Republic of China (Tai-wan).

VIDEO

//youtu.be/O2LUR5jE8vs

WHEN:
Thu, October 6, 2022 at 7:30pm PT
Buy Tickets Student Tickets
VENUE:
Memorial Auditorium
COST:
Tickets start at $32

I love the Memorial Auditorium but I’m booked that night already.

The Monkey King: A Kung Fu Musical

Photos: Inside Rehearsals for THE MONKEY KING: A KUNG FU MUSICAL at Queens Theatre
An original production created by theatre artists from Queens, which addresses lack of roles for Asian-American female leads and features 100% Asian cast.

by Chloe Rabinowitz Jan. 27, 2023
Queens Theatre will present “The Monkey King: A Kung Fu Musical” February 11-12, 2023 in the Claire Shulman Theater.

Get a first look inside rehearsals below!

The Monkey King: A Kung-Fu Musical will star Sarah Lam Chiu as Guan Yin, Kimbirdlee Fadner as The Monkey King, Ellis Gage as Jade Emperor, Brian Jose as Demon of Havoc, Charles Pang as Immortal Teacher, Gage Thomas as Dragon King, Bella Villanueva as Jogo and Annie Yamamoto as Ganjuwai.

Also appearing in photos are: Steven Eng (Director), Jonathan Fadner (Writer/Composer/Music Director), Max Erhlich (Choreographer), Kelly Ruth Cole (Stage Manager).

Don’t miss the adventure as the first-ever female Monkey King battles against Heaven and Earth’s most treacherous foes to save her tribe and achieve immortality. With a cast of memorable characters, a mix of classical and rock music, and kung-fu style choreography – this is an action adventure come to life, a heartfelt and inspiring story perfect for the entire family!

The Monkey King: A Kung Fu Musical is an original production created by theatre artists from Queens, which addresses lack of roles for Asian-American female leads and features 100% Asian cast.

Performances
Saturday, February 11, 2023 at 3:00 PM
Sunday, February 12, 2023 at 3:00 PM

Tickets:

$18 (plus fees*) or 4 for $60 (plus fees*) with code 4FOR60

Photos by Irina Island Images of rehearsals at Main Street Theatre & Dance Alliance.


Kimbirdlee Fadner

Photos: Inside Rehearsals for THE MONKEY KING: A KUNG FU MUSICAL at Queens Theatre
The company of The Monkey King: A Kung Fu Musical: Kelly Ruth Cole, Brian Jose, Steven Eng, Kimbirdlee Fadner, Jonathan Fadner, Bella Villanueva, Max Ehrlich, Sarah Lam Chiu, Ellis Gage, Annie Yamamoto, Gage Thomas, Charles Pang

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More pix behind the link…

Wing Chun by the Shenzhen Opera & Dance Theatre

Chinese kung fu dance drama wows international audience
By Deng Zhangyu | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2023-06-23 17:46


Wing Chun is produced by the Shenzhen Opera & Dance Theatre. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

A dance drama featuring traditional Chinese kung fu that was staged in Beijing on the night of June 21 was warmly applauded by the diplomats from 29 countries who were in the audience.

The show was part of a series of cultural activities organized by Shenzhen to demonstrates the development of the city in southern China.

The dance drama Wing Chun, produced by the Shenzhen Opera & Dance Theatre, features five types of Chinese martial arts, including the well-known wing chun and tai chi and baguazhang, or eight fixed palms. It tells the story of the Chinese kung fu master Ye Wen.

Models walk the runway at a fashion show of Shenzhen designs prior to the promotion event. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
The drama has toured China since its launch last year and has won great popularity and acclaim from audiences across the country. It has been especially popular with young audiences.

The diplomats showed they are still young at heart after they watched the performance in Beijing at Poly Theater on June 21.

“It was probably the perfect blend between traditional Chinese culture and a very inspiring, moving, personal story plus the technology which we can see displayed on stage,” says Duarte Pinto da Rocha, deputy chief of mission at the Portuguese Embassy in China.

Luxembourg’s ambassador to China Marc Hübsch and his wife Carole Hübsch-Tompers were also touched by the drama. The couple expected that one day it will be performed outside China to allow more audiences across the world to enjoy it.

“It is an incredible performance. The combination of contemporary dance moves and traditional cultural values, kung fu moves and so on. This is just something that I never saw before,” says Marc Hübsch.


Guests enjoy the fashion show. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]
The drama is part of a series of cultural activities jointly held by the Publicity Department of the Shenzhen Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China.

An event showcasing Shenzhen success stories and an activity inviting people to experience the traditional Dragon Boat Festival customs of the city were also held in Beijing.

Martial Arts in Live Theater
Wing Chun by the Shenzhen Opera & Dance Theatre

Monkey: A Kung Fu Puppet Parable

Monkey: A Kung Fu Puppet Parable
An Ancient Wizard of Oz Tale for Our Times

MONKEY: A Kung Fu Puppet Parable, is a family friendly transmedia opera combining Bunraku puppetry, computer generated images, and live opera. MONKEY is based on the Chinese quest saga, “Journey to the West,” rewritten to reflect contemporary issues from the multicultural mosaic of American life. Besides the two fundamental operatic elements of text and music, the three main characters - Monkey, Pig (Zhu), and Sandwoman (Sha) - are life sized Bunraku puppets. MONKEY delves into the world of computer generated technology through the use of CGI environs and avatars. Live singers on stage will be the voices of the puppets and avatars.

//youtu.be/sA3wkF9TAPc

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Martial Arts in Live Theater

Shenzhen Dance Drama “Wing Chun” Makes Its Overseas Debut in Singapore, Telling Chinese Stories to the World with Shenzhen Spirit APAC - English
NEWS PROVIDED BY Shenzhen Municipal People’s Government
28 Sep, 2023, 20:39 CST
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SHENZHEN, China, Sept. 28, 2023 /PRNewswire/ – On the evening of September 27th, the Chinese Embassy in Singapore held the National Day Reception at the Esplanade - Theatres on the Bay in Singapore to celebrate the 74th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. Diplomats and envoys from over 40 countries, including the United States, Canada, Venezuela, and the Netherlands, attended the reception and watched the overseas premiere of the Shenzhen-produced dance drama “Wing Chun”.

This is the first stop of Wing Chun’s overseas tour. When walking into the theater that night, the plaque of “Wing Chun Store” with a strong Cantonese style soon came into view. Xiang Yun Sha silk, the fabric to make the exquisite performance costumes, and the potato juice used for making Xiang Yun Sha silk have attracted many audiences to take photos.

Three months ago, on the eve of the Dragon Boat Festival, 29 envoys to China and some representatives of international organizations watched the performance of Wing Chun in Beijing. After that, they invited the crew of Wing Chun to go overseas to enable people from more countries to have a better understanding of Shenzhen and experience the charm of traditional Chinese culture, according to Shenzhen Municipal People’s Government.

Today, three months after the Beijing performance, Wing Chun officially headed abroad, choosing Singapore as its first stop.

Wing Chun, due to its prominent Chinese martial arts style, has become one of the Chinese symbols recognized by many foreign friends. After enjoying the performance on September 27th, Ms. Chan Heng Chee, Ambassador-at-Large with Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, highly praised Wing Chun: “It was wonderful! It’s balletic, it’s acrobatic, and it’s Kung Fu as well. It’s a great fusion of styles.”

As a phenomenal performance that has drawn a large audience and received highly favorable reviews in China, Wing Chun’s heading abroad this time also took Singapore by storm. “We know how popular this dance drama is in China. It perfectly combines China’s dual intangible cultural heritages of Wing Chun and Xiang Yun Sha silk, while also blending martial arts and dance seamlessly,” said Ms. Qin Wen, Cultural Counselor of the Chinese Embassy in Singapore.

The dance drama Wing Chun, based on traditional Chinese culture, embodies the wisdom of the Chinese nation through the use of “bridging” in boxing techniques. Audiences from Singapore can not only appreciate the diversity of Chinese dance art in the new era, but also feel the charm of Chinese martial arts, which shows China’s national spirit of promoting communication and exchange.

After the two-hour performance, many audiences spontaneously stood up, applauded, and took photos. Several foreign envoys expressed that Wing Chun contains typical Chinese elements and is an excellent medium for understanding Chinese culture. They also showed their expectations for Wing Chun to perform in more countries.

Now, Wing Chun is setting sail and going abroad. This Shenzhen artistic masterpiece, rich in spiritual connotation, aesthetic charm, and humanistic value, is telling Chinese stories in the new era to the world.

SOURCE Shenzhen Municipal People’s Government

https://www.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?49689-Martial-Arts-in-Live-Theater
Shenzhen-produced dance drama “Wing Chun”

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Trailer: Cuckoo Edible Magic

Cuckoo Edible Magic

WORLD PREMIERE

Written by Reed Flores
Directed by Michelle Talgarow

DATES: February 13, 2025 to March 8, 2025
LOCATION: Magic Theatre, 2 Marina Boulevard, Landmark Building D, 3rd Floor, San Francisco, CA

When otaku-besties Ren and Mai step outside to discover an anime-blue sky, their first thought is, “****, this edible is strong.” But they quickly discover something more sinister afoot. A Sailor Moon-esque adventure through the Bay Area pits our nunchuk-armed heroes against one villain after the next - from a maniacal rice cooker to evil BART contortionists to demonic Tai-Chi-practicing elders. These unlikely heroes must save the Bay Area, but they can’t do it alone: they’ll need help from Mai’s tough-love parents, Ren’s over-involved sister, and maybe even a cute corner store employee.

The two friends’ quest is as wacky as it is poignant. CHamoru playwright Reed Flores explores themes of Bay Area AAPI life, Queer love, and complex family dynamics–both “born” and “chosen.” Developed through SFBATCO’s Creators Lab and New Roots Theatre Festival, this world premiere promises to evoke laughter, tears, and a craving for some ha gao.

2 hours, with intermission

Tickets $20-$55
Discounted tickets for Students, Educators & Veterans.

Pay-what-you can previews: February 13 & 14
Opening Night: February 15

//youtu.be/mt8QbhIFs_I

Review | Thrilling Bruce Lee dance show explores Hong Kong star’s life and career

‘Kung Fu Artistry: Bruce Lee’s No Way as Way’ by the Hong Kong Dance Company is a powerful mix of dance and martial arts

Reading Time:3 minutes

Ong Tze-shen gives a consummate portrayal of Bruce Lee in the Hong Kong Dance Company’s “Kung Fu Artistry”. Photo: Arliugraphy, courtesy of HKDC

Natasha Rogai

Published: 5:15pm, 3 Dec 2025

Kung Fu Artistry is a new work by the Hong Kong Dance Company (HKDC) that marks the 85th anniversary of the birth of the great Bruce Lee, one of Hong Kong’s best-loved and most celebrated sons.

Subtitled Bruce Lee’s No Way as Way, this dance drama explores his philosophy as well as his life and martial arts prowess.

Visually stunning and filled with evocative images and music, the production features thrilling martial arts choreography and a tremendous performance by Ong Tsz-shen as Lee.

With the premiere taking place as the terrible fires still burned at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, the mood was subdued and a minute of silence was held before the performance began.

As the city came together in grief and shock, this was a fitting moment to celebrate Lee, an iconic symbol of the Hong Kong spirit of resilience, determination and fortitude. In a touching introductory speech, his daughter Shannon recalled how much he loved Hong Kong and how important it was to him.

That love was reciprocated in Kung Fu Artistry. Yang Yuntao, its choreographer and HKDC’s artistic director, and dramaturge Simon Wang Haoran tell Lee’s story with palpable affection and reverence through a series of snapshots from key periods in his life.

Eight years of rigorous martial arts training sees the Hong Kong Dance Company’s dancers ideally placed to pay tribute to Lee’s life and work. Photo: Arliugraphy, courtesy of HKDC

Eight years of rigorous martial arts training sees the Hong Kong Dance Company’s dancers ideally placed to pay tribute to Lee’s life and work. Photo: Arliugraphy, courtesy of HKDC

Created in cooperation with the Bruce Lee Foundation, the production vividly evokes this legendary figure through extracts from his letters, as well as photos (including many family photos) and video.

The first scene gives a colourful portrait of Hong Kong life in the 1950s, with the young Lee trying out everything from Chinese opera (his father was an opera performer) to Western-style boxing and ballroom dance – he was, as his daughter reminded us, the chacha champion of Hong Kong. He goes on to discover kung fu and gets into street fights.

The story continues through Lee moving to the US, creating his renowned martial arts system, jeet kune do (“way of the intercepting fist”), and ultimately achieving international cinema stardom.

Yang’s accomplished choreography ranges from the lively, upbeat opening with its 1950s dance references to thrilling displays of martial arts and intense solos embodying tenets of Lee’s philosophy. In the midst of all the high-octane movement comes a poignantly tender moment where Lee’s wife Linda, finding him asleep in a chair, gently takes a book from his hand and switches off the light.

Ong Tze-shen (centre, in glasses) performs as the young Bruce Lee in a scene from the show. Photo: Ray Cheung

Ong Tze-shen (centre, in glasses) performs as the young Bruce Lee in a scene from the show. Photo: Ray Cheung

The strongest scenes are in the first half of the show. The second loses momentum: the depiction of Lee’s film career is oddly elliptic, briefly referencing his best-known films and costumes, while a mass routine of martial artists practising with nunchuks, a weapon much identified with Lee, is too repetitive, although well performed.

For the past eight years, HKDC’s dancers have undergone rigorous martial arts training, making the company ideally placed to pay tribute to Lee’s life and work. Their impressive skills have already been on display in previous productions incorporating martial arts elements and here they surpassed themselves.

This was a brilliant demonstration of kung fu from the entire ensemble, men and women alike, with a special word for Lee Chia-ming’s breathtaking solos.

The thread that binds the show together is Ong’s consummate portrayal of Lee, from feisty, cocky teenager to mature martial arts master and blasé film star. His dazzling speed, control and balance in the martial arts sections contrast with the effortless fluidity of movement in the “Like Water” solo, personifying Lee’s famous words: “Be shapeless, like water.”

The opening scene of “Kung Fu Artistry” gives a colourful portrait of Hong Kong life in the 1950s. Photo: Worldwide Dance Project

The opening scene of “Kung Fu Artistry” gives a colourful portrait of Hong Kong life in the 1950s. Photo: Worldwide Dance Project

Technically, the production is a tour de force. Man Lim-chung’s art direction gives a suitably cinematic feel, with Jan Wong’s elegantly minimalist sets enhanced by Henry Lam’s video design and spectacular lighting from Korea’s Ryou Back-hee.

Patrick Lui’s superb score combines jazz with Chinese music, with much of the music played live on stage by a band headed by Lui himself on piano, while Martin Lai’s skilful sound design lets us hear Lee’s voice through his own words.

“Kung Fu Artistry – Bruce Lee’s No Way as Way”, Hong Kong Dance Company, continues at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre Grand Theatre until December 7. Reviewed: November 27.

Someone should do a remix of his Cha cha footage to Jay Chou’s Mojito, one of the first Chinese language hits done to a cha cha.

A while back one of my Chinese girlfriends did a sylable to sylable karaoke translation to some of it:

If you are viewing Tiktok from a PC you may have to unmute the audio.

> ## YOUNG DRAGON: A BRUCE LEE STORY

FEBRUARY 19 – MARCH 22, 2026

By Keiko Green
Directed by Jess McLeod
A story based on Young Bruce Lee
New work commissioned by SCT

DETAILSADDITIONAL RESOURCESREVIEWSARTISTSMORE INFO

DETAILS

Before he was a legend, Bruce Lee was just a young man trying to figure it all out—right here in Seattle. This action-packed, soul-searching story follows the Young Dragon as he navigates a new country and finds his voice. Through movement, magic, and heart, we meet the human behind the icon—flawed, fierce, and full of possibility. Watch as Lee learns to clear his brain by mimicking the white noise of water and begins fusing martial arts with philosophy. From street fights in Hong Kong to teaching self-defense and chasing big dreams, Bruce’s journey reminds us that finding your way means first figuring out who you are. Come see how Seattle shaped him into a flexible, fluid, and flowing master—and how he reshaped the world.

For more information about this production, visit our Content Guidancepage.


All ticket buyers to Young Dragon: A Bruce Lee Story receive a 10% discount at the Wing Luke Museum. Present your electronic/physical ticket at admissions.

NEW PERFORMANCES ADDED! Select our new performances on March 21st and March 22nd for the best seats and prices.

Location
Eve Alvord Theatre

Age Recommendation
For Ages 8+

Running Time
Approx. 75 minutes, no intermission

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

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ACCESSIBILITY RESOURCES

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Sensory Guide for Young Dragon: A Bruce Lee Story – Coming Soon!
Access Guide

Watch our orientation and social story video to learn what to expect from your visit!

REVIEWS

Seattle Children’s Theatre Bruce Lee play fights on after Kennedy Center Canceling, Seattle Times, February 2025

> # Sword Macbeth Reimagines Shakespeare as Martial Arts Epic

Theater Company Mabangjin blends Shakespeare with Korean talchum and madangnori in 20th-anniversary play at Seoul’s National Theater

By Lee Tae-hoon

Published 2026.03.04. 00:43

'칼로막베스' 공연 사진. 가운데 왼쪽이 '막베스' 역의 김호산.(옐로밤 제공)

Swords, gazes, words, and muscles clash. In the opening of ‘Kal-Macbeth’—a reinterpretation of Shakespeare’s tragedy ‘Macbeth’ through the unique style of the Mabangjin Theater Group—protagonist Macbeth (Kim Ho-san, left of the two front figures) and the men fight like beasts, shouting battle cries on a jungle-like land of survival of the fittest. /Mabangjin Theater Group

A vast prison-like place called Serengeti Bay, designed to isolate incorrigible villains and let them kill each other. After hearing a blind sorcerer’s prophecy, “You will become a boss,” ‘Macbeth’ (Kim Ho-san) declares, “If fate is the boss, I must become the boss. I don’t want to be Macbeth. I am Macbeth, who slashes with a sword!” As people whisper, “Power should be taken like ‘Baijiu’ (Chinese white liquor),” and “The hangover will be brutal,” they overhear words of desire bursting from Macbeth’s mouth like veins on his sword-wielding arm. Even if Shakespeare returned to life and watched this play, he would repeatedly clench his fists in suspense, hold his breath, and then burst into uncontrollable laughter.

The play *‘Sword Macbeth’*, currently running at the National Theater’s Haneul Theater on Namsan Mountain in Seoul, showcases the pinnacle of Theater Company Mabangjin and director Go Seon-woong’s original style. *Macbeth* is one of Shakespeare’s four great tragedies, about a man who kills his king to become king himself and faces a harsh fate. *‘Sword Macbeth’*, based on *Macbeth*, transforms into a stylish martial arts action epic about ‘males’ driven by uncontrollable desires for conquest and domination, clashing swords and bodies as if possessed.

The energy from Mabangjin actors’ powerful voices resonating without microphones in the dome-shaped, three-sided open-stage Haneul Theater and their rigorously trained action choreography is astonishing. Macbeth and the men pull the audience into the narrative of *Macbeth*—a tale of prophecy, betrayal, assassination, and death, where all are ultimately engulfed in the hellfire of fate. At the start of each sequence, from ‘Background Explanation’ and ‘Blind Sorcerer’ to ‘Chaotic Battle’ and ‘Emptiness,’ actors declare the 24 act titles like proclamations. Audiences can race through this complex story without getting lost or missing messages, using these as flags.

Since its premiere in 2010, this production has marked 16 years. The rhythmic balance of joy and sorrow, and the humor that elicits both laughter and tears, have become Go Seon-woong and Theater Company Mabangjin’s trademark. Audiences laugh at the slapstick action of the assassins and Macbeth, then plunge helplessly into the tension of a fateful duel at the sound of a whistle-like effect.

The Western structure of Shakespearean drama is seamlessly blended with Korea’s traditional performance styles like talchum (mask dance) and madangnori (open-air theater), creating no sense of discomfort. Scenes where an actor, supposed to deliver an aside heard only by the audience, is caught and stabbed, or where an actor playing multiple roles says, “I’m not that person, I’m someone else,” are particularly striking. It’s also a joy to witness a facet of Go Seon-woong’s unique artistic evolution, which reached its zenith with *Orphan Jo’s Revenge*.

Kim Jun-su, an actor from the National Changgeuk Company of Korea, performs as Lady Macbeth in 'Kal-Macbeth', showcasing remarkably balanced acting that defies belief it is his theater debut. /Mabangjin Theater Group

Kim Jun-su, an actor from the National Changgeuk Company of Korea, performs as Lady Macbeth in ‘Kal-Macbeth’, showcasing remarkably balanced acting that defies belief it is his theater debut. /Mabangjin Theater Group

Kim Joon-su, who began his solo career as an actor after leaving the National Changgeuk Company last year, proves that his past popularity as a ‘changgeuk idol’ was no fluke by portraying ‘Macbeth’s Wife (Lady Macbeth).’ When he tells the hesitant Macbeth, “My tongue, fearless as it is, will lay a stepping stone to your fate,” the audience shudders at the madness. Then, when he kisses his husband’s short hair and screams, “It’s prickly!” the audience erupts in laughter. Kim Joon-su skillfully balances Go Seon-woong’s signature tragicomic duality with maturity beyond belief for a first theater stage.

The first work in Theater Company Mabangjin’s 20th-anniversary series. Performances run until the 15th, all seats 55,000 Korean won.

> # Long Yun Kung Fu Troupe presents Kung Fu Water Sleeves show

Source:CCTV.com 29-04-26 05:07 Updated BJT

Founded by kung fu superstar Jackie Chan, the JC Stunt Team·Long Yun Kung Fu Troupe presented Kung Fu Water Sleeves. The performance blends Peking Opera and dance elements into traditional martial arts show, achieving a perfect balance of power and grace.

Editor: Li Xiang

# Guest Blog: ‘It Has Been An Honour And An Enormous Responsibility’: Samantha Lane on Adapting TOTO THE NINJA CAT AND THE GREAT SNAKE ESCAPE For The Stage

The stage show of Dermot O’Leary’s much loved children’s book is coming to The Little Angel Theatre this month

By: Guest AuthorMay. 13, 2026

Guest Blog: 'It Has Been An Honour And An Enormous Responsibility': Samantha Lane on Adapting TOTO THE NINJA CAT AND THE GREAT SNAKE ESCAPE For The Stage

Adapting Toto the Ninja Cat and The Great Snake Escape for the stage has been both an honour and an enormous responsibility. Not only is the story clearly very close to Dermot O’Leary’s heart (the cats are inspired by his own) but the books are deeply loved by thousands of young readers. When children arrive at the theatre already carrying a story in their imagination, you have to treat that trust very carefully. The challenge is finding a way to stay true to the essence of the book while also allowing the creative team to make something genuinely theatrical and new.

I first discovered the books through a conversation with our Executive Director, whose daughter was a huge Toto fan. At the same time, I was speaking with the Mercury Theatre about creating a children’s show together. They were particularly interested in developing something with roots in Essex, and when I realised Dermot had grown up in Colchester, it suddenly felt like the perfect fit.

Guest Blog: 'It Has Been An Honour And An Enormous Responsibility': Samantha Lane on Adapting TOTO THE NINJA CAT AND THE GREAT SNAKE ESCAPE For The Stage Image

The thing I immediately loved about the books is that, yes, they are about a ninja cat, which is already an brilliant starting point for a show, but underneath the adventure there is so much heart. Toto’s blindness is never presented as something that limits her. It is simply part of who she is. She is brave, funny, resourceful and heroic. For young audiences, that feels incredibly powerful.

What also struck me was the emotional nuance within the story. Characters who initially appear frightening or villainous are often simply misunderstood. Brian the cobra is motivated by love. Jae Jae the tiger desperately wants affection. Even Catface’s deceptiveness comes from insecurity and rejection. It means the story is ultimately about empathy, acceptance and resisting the urge to judge others too quickly. That depth is what elevates it beyond a simple adventure story.

The adaptation process itself was fascinating because this is not a picture book. Usually, when adapting children’s literature for the stage, my co-adaptor Barb Jungr and I are expanding something relatively short. With Toto, we had the opposite problem: condensing a richly detailed early-reader novel into a 50-minute theatrical experience. We started by identifying the essential plot points and asking ourselves the difficult question about what absolutely had to remain and what could easily go. Children want to recognise the story they love, so protecting key moments and characters was vital. At the same time, theatre demands momentum, visual storytelling and clarity.

Guest Blog: 'It Has Been An Honour And An Enormous Responsibility': Samantha Lane on Adapting TOTO THE NINJA CAT AND THE GREAT SNAKE ESCAPE For The Stage Image

One of our biggest changes was introducing a framing device set in a zoo, with Derek and Norma the zookeepers acting as narrators. These characters only appear briefly in the original novel, but bringing them to the forefront helped us move fluidly between multiple locations without losing the audience. We also greatly expanded Robert the parakeet’s role, turning him into a bridge between Toto’s world and the zoo. And perhaps most importantly: we turned it into a musical. Barb not only co-adapted the book but also wrote the lyrics and composed the music, which added another storytelling layer entirely. Songs allow children to enter the emotional world of the characters in a way dialogue alone sometimes cannot.

What many people do not realise about making theatre with puppets is how much of the final storytelling is discovered inside the rehearsal room. We entered rehearsals with a strong script, but because we had three puppeteers playing eight characters, the logistics constantly shaped the writing. Sometimes scenes needed extra dialogue simply to allow somebody enough time to switch puppets. Sometimes an entirely new comic moment emerged from a practical necessity.

Guest Blog: 'It Has Been An Honour And An Enormous Responsibility': Samantha Lane on Adapting TOTO THE NINJA CAT AND THE GREAT SNAKE ESCAPE For The Stage Image

That flexibility is essential. I always begin rehearsals with the improvisation game “Yes, and…” because making theatre like this requires openness. Performers need to arrive willing to offer ideas, solve problems collaboratively and accept that nothing is fully fixed until very late in the process. I often compare the rehearsal process to creating a painting. First, we sketch the outline, then we layer in shade and tone, and only later do we begin adding colour and texture. With children’s theatre, especially puppetry, that final collage often continues evolving once the audience arrives and well into previews. Young audiences are brilliantly honest, and they teach you very quickly where the energy truly lives.

The spirit of collaboration has been at the heart of this production. Alongside Barb, we’ve worked with an extraordinary cast and creative team, including designer Oliver Hymans and lighting designer Sherry Coehen. Together, we’ve tried to honour what readers already love about Toto while creating something that feels alive, surprising and theatrical in its own right. But we sincerely hope somewhere in the middle of all the puppets, music, human characters and the narrating parakeet, audiences will still find the same beating heart that made them fall in love with Toto in the first place

Toto the Ninja Cat and The Great Snake Escape opens at Little Angel Theatre from 16 May – 19 July, the production will then tour extensively**.**

Dougherty Arts Center

  • Kung Fu Cowgirl Presents Light

May 28, 2026 - June 6, 2026

Kung Fu Cowgirl presents Light

7:30 PM - 8:30 PM

Dougherty Arts Center

Imagery of a person riding a bike, a guardian and child, and someone wearing a wedding dress. Along with the text 'Kung Fu Cowgirl Light A Solo Play'

Kung Fu Cowgirl presents Light

Thursday, May 28 – Saturday, May 30, 2026 at 7:30pm
Thursday, June 4 – Saturday, June 6, 2026 at 7:30pm

Tickets for Kung Fu Cowgirl

Light is a one-woman play that blends deeply personal storytelling, music, and the visual poetry of traditional Chinese shadow puppetry. This innovative solo play tells the story of a daughter’s journey to understand her father through memory, distance, loss, and love. It is deeply personal, yet powerfully universal. A touching theatrical experience about family, memory, and the love that stays with us. After moving audiences in Beijing, Harbin, New York, and Austin, Light (光) returns to the Dougherty Arts Center as an intimate solo performance written, directed, and performed by Snow (Xue Zheng).

Kung Fu Cowgirl is part of the Artist Access Program, through the City of Austin’s Arts, Culture, Music, and Entertainment Department and the Zilker Hillside Theater.

The City of Austin is committed to compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Reasonable modifications and equal access to communications will be provided upon request. For assistance please contact (512) 974-3256 or Relay Texas 7-1-1.

“Turandot” (2026) directed by Jackie Chan