The White-Haired Girl
The White-Haired Girl is a Chinese contemporary classical opera by Yan Jinxuan to a Chinese libretto by He Jingzhi and Ding Yi. It was later adapted to a ballet, a Peking opera, and films. The ballet adaptation was regarded as a revolutionary opera and promoted by the Chinese Communist Party as a model revolutionary work.
The plot centers on a young peasant woman who flees persecution by an evil landlord and lives in a dark cave until CCP forces brings her back to the sunlit world. The central theme of the story, in the words of the opera, is that "the Old Society changed people into ghosts, while the New Society changes ghosts into people."
The opera is drew inspiration from stories circulating in the border region of Shanxi, Chahar and Hebei, describing the misery suffered by local peasantry, particularly a folk story called The White-Haired Fairy Maiden.
Along with Red Detachment of Women, the ballet is regarded as one of the classics in the People's Republic of China, and its music is familiar to almost everyone who grew up during the 1960s. It is one of the Eight Model Operas approved by Jiang Qing during the Cultural Revolution.
History and development
In the 1942 Yan'an Talks, Mao Zedong stated that literature and art should better serve the revolutionary causes and to assist the Chinese Communist Party to "overthrow our national enemy and accomplish our task of national liberation". In Mao's view, revolutionary literature and art should serve the masses by telling their stories in languages they can understand and relate to. For example, writers and artists were encouraged to positively approach the budding literature and art of the masses, including wall newspapers, folk songs and folk tales. The White-Haired Girl became a classic example of the approach described in the Yan'an Talks and of the revolutionary style more broadly.In May 1944, the Northwest Battleground Service Corps returned to Yan'an after five years in the northern China front lines with the folk story of the White-Haired Fairy Maiden. Reconstructions of the White-Haired Fairy Maiden suggest three variations or possible origins, with the common story elements of village landlords abusing their power over a young peasant woman and the traditional biases favoring boys over girls. The story gained the attention of cultural workers in Yan'an who wanted to adapt it.
Artists of the Lu Xun Academy of Arts in Yan'an turned the story of the White-Haired Fairy Maiden into the opera of The White-Haired Girl. It drew inspiration from legends circulating in the border region of Shanxi, Chahar and Hebei, describing the misery suffered by local peasantry, particularly the misery of the female members.
The opera was first performed in April 1945 in Yan'an as a tribute to the Seventh National Congress of the CCP. It was one of the first large scale theatrical productions created in Yan'an. The White-Haired Girl was immediately regarded as a success and promoted as a "must-show" production in other CCP-governed areas. Lu Xun Academy of Arts continued to refine the piece thereafter, with a focus on the theme of national salvation. From the 1940s to the 1970s, The White-Haired Girl had multiple stage and film versions.
The Japanese Matsuyama Ballet company performed the opera in 1955. The Matsuyama ballet version was based on the 1950 film. The company toured its version in Beijing in 1955.
In 1964, the Shanghai Ballet Academy adapted The White-Haired Girl into a ballet-opera. This version developed from the political trend of creating new-style Peking operas. It drew on a variety of artistic traditions, including Western ballet, traditional Chinese dance and folk dance, martial arts, and Chinese musical drama.
By the early 1990s, theatrical productions of The White-Haired Girl had played to over one million audience members in total.
In 2015, the Ministry of Culture of the People's Republic of China followed Xi Jinping's Speech at the Forum on Literature and Art, and launched a revival tour of The White-Haired Girl. Under Peng Liyuan's artistic direction, the performance began in Yan'an. The tour incorporated 3D visual effects and ended in Beijing in mid-December 2015. The China National Opera has periodically featured the revival thereafter, including in 2021 for the 100th Anniversary of the CCP.
Film and television
Film versions of The White-Haired Girl used ghost story and horror movie aesthetics to move their audiences.A film version released in 1950 coincided with the Land Reform Movement. In the context of Mao-era cinema, the film was part of a genre of redemptive melodramas which encouraged the audiences to "speak bitterness". The 1950 film version won an international film award in Czechoslovakia.
The White-Haired Girl was re-released in the mid-1960s alongside new films intended support the Socialist Education Movement as "emphasis films".
In 1970, Shanghai Television made a television version of the ballet in black-and-white.
As one of the revolutionary model operas during the Cultural Revolution, The White-Haired Girl was revised into a color film in 1972. Both the 1970 television version and the 1972 film were directed by Sang Hu with cinematography by Shen Xilin. The 1970 television version and 1972 film also had the same cast.
Plot
The plot centers on a young peasant woman who flees persecution by an evil landlord and lives in a dark cave until the CCP's military brings her back to the sunlit world.Initial opera version
In 1935, landlord Huang Shiren covets Xi'er, a 17-year old peasant girl. Landlord Huang forces Xi'er's father to sell Xi'er to him in order to pay debts. Ridden with guilt for selling his daughter to the landlord, Yang kills himself on the eve of the New Year.Xi'er must part with her fiancé from a peasant family and go to the landlord's house. There, she is abused by the landlord's Buddhist mother on a daily basis. Huang ultimately rapes Xi'er, resulting in her pregnancy. Huang and his mother make plans to sell the pregnant Xi'er and Xi'er flees to the mountains where she gives birth.
Xi'er lives in the wilderness for three years. Her clothing becomes ragged and her hair and skin turn white. Looking like a ghost, she is observed by villagers stealing food offerings from a temple altar and assumed to be a White-Haired Fairy Maiden.
Xi'er is ultimately rescued by Dachun, who left the village to join the CCP's military and has returned. Landlord Huang is subjected to struggle sessions and his land and property is redistributed to the poor. Xi'er, Dachun, and the villages live happily afterwards.
Differences among adaptations
The famous line sung by the chorus that "The Old Society turned people into ghosts, and the New Society turns ghosts back into people" was added in late 1945.The White-Haired Girl had various changes in its adaptations from the 1950s through the 1970s.
Earlier theatrical productions show landlord Huang's arrest at the conclusion of the performance. As the political climate changed over time, both audience reaction and ultimately a CCP directive resulted in a revision to the story for landlord Huang to be executed. The 1972 film also includes three gunshots to demonstrate that Huang is executed after his trial.
Pre-1953 versions use the imagery of the ghost and sun to allude to the old society and the new society of China. By 1972, the introduction of lines such as "Long Live the Communist Party! Long, Long Live Chairman Mao!" and "Beloved Chairman Mao, People's Great Savior!" emphasized explicitly the role of the Party and Mao Zedong.
During the Cultural Revolution, the ballet was revised to remove the elements of romantic love between Xi'er and Dachun, instead focusing on their mutual class feeling. These revisions included removing Dachun's expression of love for Xi'er from the final scene.
In the 1972 ballet, Xi'er fights heroically against Landlord Huang's attempt to rape her. She successfully fends off his rape attempt and escapes.
Analysis
As academic Lintao Qi notes, The White-Haired Girl's ideological function was to exemplify the CCP's narrative of class struggle and redemption through socialism, aligning cultural production with national political goals. In Chinese culture, white is traditionally associated with ghosts and Its use in depicting Xi'er as a ghostly figure expressed the struggle of the oppressed peasant class and the Chinese nation. The character Dachun is intended to personify the peasantry's self-identification with the CCP's cause.The portrayal of landlord Huang's mother as a devoted Buddhist who nonetheless abuses Xi'er critiques religion and traditional culture. According to academic Xiaofei Kang, "The image of Huang's mother evokes the predatory old woman whose exhaustion of feminine fertility terrorizes young lives in folk culture."
Scholars have noted the opera's use of Wagnerian-style leitmotifs: recurring musical themes tied to characters and emotional shifts. These motifs reinforce Xi'er's psychological journey and underscore dramatic tension, effectively propelling the narrative and deepening audience engagement.