Zaju
Zaju was a form of Chinese opera which provided entertainment through a synthesis of recitations of prose and poetry, dance, singing, and mime, with a certain emphasis on comedy. Although with diverse and earlier roots, zaju has particularly been associated with the time of the Yuan dynasty, and zaju remains important in terms of the historical study of the theater arts as well as Classical Chinese literature and poetry. Zaju is known to have been performed during the earlier Song and Jin dynasties. The various particulars of the zaju multimedia performance were derived from many and diverse sources of musical, dance, poetry, and theater traditions.
Characteristics
The Yuan zaju were poetic music dramas comprising four acts, with the "act" defined as a set of songs following and completing a certain musical modal progression. Occasionally one or two "wedges", or short interludes in the form of an aria performed by another character might be added to either support or enhance the plot. Within the acts, lyrics were written to accompany existing tunes or set-rhythmic patterns; and, the major singing roles were restricted to one star per act. The zaju featured particular specialized roles for performers, such as dan, sheng, hua and chou. In addition to these main roles there were also a collection of side roles known as 'waijiao' and these consisted of: the jiatou, the beauty pining in her boudoir, the bawd, the coquettish young girl, the high official, the poor, the brigand, the government servant and those categories concerning immortals and Taoist deliverance, and family matters.Background
On one hand, the zaju theater is the product of a long process of Chinese art, music, and poetry; on the other hand, the zaju also appears as a phenomenon resulting from a combination of cultures of Eurasia over time. Zaju had its genesis even before the Yuan dynasty. Zaju was verified as a variety play in North China in the course of the Northern Song dynasty. Zaju was performed during the Song dynasty, particularly the Northern Song period, as well as the Jurchen Jin dynasty, which succeeded it in northern China.Zaju is now best known now from its high development during the Yuan dynasty, which was founded by the Mongol Empire under the leadership of Kublai Khan. Significant surviving literature exists from this period, including around two-hundred written scripts for zaju performances. Although the Yuan was the first non-Han dynasty to rule over China fully, varying ethno-musico influences had already made an effect upon the culture of China, most relevantly in terms of the mix of arts that went on to coalesce as the mixed zaju : this encompassed poetry, gymnastics, orchestral music, set design, along with the other arts required for this complex form of theater art. Major questions remain about the relationships between this artistic and political process in regards to how it is known in relationship to the zaju form of art. The Yuan succeeded the previous dynasties which controlled parts of China: the Jurchen Jin dynasty, the Tangut Western Xia, and the Han Song dynasty. The transitions between the various political regimes tended to involve war, death, and disorder in a large scale. However, various cultural and artistic contributions from these diverse sources melded together to help form the zaju performances: musical modes of the steppes, traditional Chinese shi and ci poetry, the newly developed and embedded qu lyrics, acrobatics, and dance, combined with the other varieties of artistic performance to contribute to the mix which zaju represents. Accompanying musical notation is evidently lacking; instead, the tune to which an aria was meant to be sung is indicated in the text by the title of a popular song or aria using the same tune. Generally, information about performances derives from preserved literary texts: arias, libretti, and/or other forms of stage direction.
Playwrights
Much of the information on Yuan era plays and playwrights derives from a book written during this time period which is entitled Register of Ghosts. Famous playwrights include:- Guan Hanqing, author of The Injustice to Dou E
- Bo Renfu, author of Rain on the Paulownia Tree, a story on Emperor Xuanzong of Tang and his lady Yang Guifei
- Ma Zhiyuan, author of Autumn in Han Palace and six other extant zaju plays
- Zheng Guangzu, author of Qiannü’s Soul Leaves Her Body
- Wang Shifu, who wrote the popular play Romance of the Western Chamber
- Li Qianfu, who wrote Circle of Chalk
- Yuan Zuguang, who wrote several plays, including Frowning Landlord and The Heavenly Music, which reflected elements of the Wuxu Reform.
Performance
In contrast to Elizabethan theater where Males would cross-dress as females during plays due to only male actors being allowed on stage, in Zaju and other Yuan drama, cross-dressing was very common, the majority of performers for Zaju were actually female and they would play a variety of male roles on the stage such as the jiatou or a 'soft' male lead.