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The Red Detachment of Women (Chinese: 红色娘子军; pinyin: Hóngsè niángzǐ jūn) is a Chinese ballet which premiered in 1964 and was made one of the Eight Model Operas which dominated the national stage during the Cultural Revolution.
The Red Detachment of women is a classic work in the history of Chinese film. The legendary story, the classic female image and the great revolutionary spirit of the Red Detachment of women are an immortal light in the revolutionary history and film history of the people's Republic of China. [13]
The Red Detachment of Women (Chinese: 红色娘子军; pinyin: Hóngsè Niángzǐjūn) is a 1970 Chinese filmed performance of the Chinese ballet of the same name (originally produced in 1964) – which itself was a version of director Xie Jin's original 1961 film.
The Red Detachment of Women. Jiang Qing was the chief advocate and engineer of the transformation from traditional operas to revolutionary ones, and chose the Peking opera as her "laboratory experimentation" for accomplishing this radical change in theater art. [1]
Red Detachment of Women may refer to: The Red Detachment of Women, a film directed by Xie Jin, based on a novel and well-known Chinese revolutionary themes; Red Detachment of Women, a Chinese ballet (based on the 1961 film) which premiered in 1964; The Red Detachment of Women, a filmed performance of the ballet
Xue Jinghua (Chinese: 薛菁华; pinyin: Xuē Jīnghuá; born October 7, 1946) is a Chinese ballerina who was cast in the now internationally well-known Red Detachment of Women of the National Ballet of China as Wu Qinghua, the heroine of the ballet for which she became a prima ballerina.
Performance of The Red Detachment of Women during Nixon's visit to China in 1972. The National Ballet of China (NBC), known in China as the Central Ballet Troupe was founded on 31 December 1959. [1] It is the national ballet company of the People's Republic of China.
A scene from The Red Detachment of Women: soldiers of the Women's Detachment performing rifle drill in Act II, from the 1972 National Ballet of China production. Li was born 1 October 1931 in Harbin, Heilongjiang province in Japanese-occupied Northeast China. He joined the Chinese Communist Party in March 1961. [1] [2]