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Results tagged “theatre”
Hong Kong's last dedicated Cantonese opera theatre calls it a day

Hong Kong's last dedicated Cantonese opera theatre calls it a day

The curtain is falling on Hong Kong's last dedicated Cantonese opera theatre which will fade into history after its final show this week: more ›

Pencil This In: Aug 29 - Sep 1

Pencil This In: Aug 29 - Sep 1

All the things you'd want to do this Monday through Thursday. On the schedule this week: Yoga superstar master Duncan Wong is in town, catch an arty lecture at Sasha's, a special project at Bridge 8, or one of most well known Chinese plays, 'Rhinoceros in Love' is on at the Shanghai Grand Theater! Read on (or check out our calendar) for more! more ›

Pencil This In: April 5-9

Pencil This In: April 5-9

Brush up on your culture this week: Learn about the history of Hongkou district or Shanghai cabaret culture, catch a performance of Aida or King Lear, and drink and golf for charity- though not at the same time. more ›

Interview: Alan Greig - thoughts from a choreographer

             + 13 more

Deep down, somewhere in the heart of the orchid-like construct we all know as the Oriental Art Center, a creative meeting between masters recently took place. Scotland's leading choreographer and dance icon, Alan Greig, led a workshop with Jin Xing Dance Theatre, one of the most prominent dance companies in our city. Both performed at the recent Shanghai Dance Festival - the fourth one ever held. more ›

Simple script, shallow plot, but still quite charming - It's not theater, so call it by its name!

       

Recently "Tale of 4 Cities" launched it's weekly dinner "theater" series, a Thursday cabaret evening with the vision to impart a bit of "Le Gai Paris" into Shanghai´s nightlife scene. The problem is, if you're looking for actual "theater," the show invariably will seem like it doesn't fit. It's a drag show, pure and simple - and a charming one full of social potential - so you might as well just call it by its proper name and put it in its proper genre. more ›

Cinematheque: Finally a Truffaut classic is in town - French film at its best! (and other film news)

Cinematheque: Finally a Truffaut classic is in town - French film at its best! (and other film news)

Vienna Café cooks up with a Truffaut movie this coming Thursday! One of film history´s most important directors didn't only write and direct Les 400 coups, Jules et Jim, Baisers volés...but also Le Dernier métro (The last metro), which is the movie of choice for this week. more ›

Interview: Zuloo Theatre Productions - hyperactive, creative up the wazzoo, and close as family

Interview: Zuloo Theatre Productions - hyperactive, creative up the wazzoo, and close as family

You need only to visit Zuloo productions homepage to realize how busy this theater group is. A long list of ongoing and future productions, weekly events, workshops and courses piles up before you, and makes you wonder - is this something bigger than just a makeshift theater thing; an artistic platform, a springboard to creativity perhaps? After meeting the team behind the magic, the four core members of Zuloo productions, the answer is obvious. more ›

The Laramie Project: a hate crime depicted on stage

The Laramie Project: a hate crime depicted on stage

One of the banned events during last week´s Pride festival, was the theatrical production "The Laramie Project". But don't worry about missing it, you´ll get a new chance to watch it this weekend! The organizers have found a new venue, and the play can finally be showed at River South Art Center, on Friday and Saturday. more ›

Interview: East West Theater - on stage this weekend

Interview: East West Theater - on stage this weekend

Time for the most exciting theater happening of this week - East West Theater premieres this friday with California Suite, Neil Simons' 1976 bittersweet comedy. EWT is one of Shanghais first locally-based English theater groups in Shanghai. In an interview with Shanghaiist, producer and actress Rosita L. Janbakhsh and directors Jonathan Geenen and Daniel Connelly, tell their thoughts around the play, life as an artist in China, male dominance within the theater world, and much more. more ›

<em>Beautiful Thing</em>: First gay play for Shanghai

Beautiful Thing: First gay play for Shanghai

Eriksson) would rather watch rainbows and musicals than be at school and is infatuated with his athletic classmate and neighbour Ste (Derek Kwan) who has to deal with a drug-dealing brother and abusive, alcoholic father at home. Their sassy neighbour Leah (Sophie Lloyd — formerly fashion editor of SH Mag) has been kicked out of every school in the area, has a drug problem and can't stop listening to her mom's Cass Elliott records. Meanwhile, Jamie's feisty mother Sandra (Christy Shapiro) juggles her job as a barmaid and her ever-changing string of lovers, the latest of whom is Tony (JP Lopez) who is younger than her and a neo-hippie. more ›

The play's the thing: Hamlet in Shanghai

The play's the thing: Hamlet in Shanghai

One of William Shakespeare's most famous plays comes to Shanghai tonight as TNT's production of Hamlet begins its run over at the Shanghai Dramatic Arts Centre on Anfu Lu. Arguably among the most intriguing and complex of the tragedies penned by the Bard, Hamlet explores the themes of revenge, madness (both apparent and real), and, ultimately, death — all in the "rotten" state of Denmark. Featuring some of Shakespeare's most famous and revered moments (the 'to be or not to be' speech and the 'play within a play' scene, for example), the tale of Prince Hamlet's attempts to avenge his father's murder contains great drama throughout. more ›

Photo of the Day: The Shanghai Grand Theatre

Photo of the Day: The Shanghai Grand Theatre

Share with us how you see Shanghai, or China! Post your photos on Flickr, tag them with "shanghaiist", and we'll select one favorite image per day. Or you can simply email your photos to photos at shanghaiist.com. more ›

<em>Singapore Season</em> presents <em>Little Toys</em> by Mark Chan

Singapore Season presents Little Toys by Mark Chan

Singapore Season, a series of cultural diplomacy events that started in London in 2005, has been kickstarted in Shanghai with a sell-out concert by pop star JJ Lin at the Hongkou Stadium last Sunday. more ›

Now Playing at the Majestic Theater: 42nd Street

Unlike some of the previous musicals that have taken the stage in Shanghai, 42nd Street is a musical more in line with Broadway's roots and traditions, a true reflection of the Broadway of old...you know, before shows adapted from Hollywood movies took it over. Originally, the show debuted in 1980, based upon the 1933 movie of the same name. After it's Broadway debut and subsequent Tony award for Best Musical, 42nd Street went on to become one of the longest running musicals in Broadway history. more ›

Actress Sharon Stone arrives in Shanghai

Actress Sharon Stone arrives in Shanghai

Hollywood actress Sharon Stone arrived in Shanghai late Tuesday night at Pudong International Airport. After passing immigration casually dressed in white slacks and a dark long-sleeved top, she was quickly driven downtown in a Mercedes Sedan to the JW Marriott Hotel. more ›

Yesterday's Links: Environment, banks and big umbrellas

Yesterday's Links: Environment, banks and big umbrellas

Editor's Note: Sorry, forgot to send these out last night in our rush to get to the Sonic Youth show.

  • "In the meantime,here, from today’s Wall Street Journal, is another thing all those green minded local officials are doing: locking up irksome environmental activists"
  • "Beijing will use aircraft, missiles and cannons in what could amount to a massive umbrella over the city to keep athletes dry during next year's Olympics, state media reported on Friday."
  • "U.S. intelligence knew about preparations for January's test in China of an anti-satellite weapon but the U.S. government chose not to intervene because of insufficient leverage with Beijing, The New York Times reported on its Web site Sunday."
  • "The guardrails on each side of the bridge were only ten centimeters in height, far lower than the minimum height of 46 cm required by law, Li Yizhong, Minister of the State Administration of Work Safety (SAWS), said at the scene of the accident."
  • "The Guanghe Theatre, which sits in Beijing's historic Qianmen quarter, will meet the wrecking ball, making way for the capital's "remorseless" onslaught of modernisation, Xinhua news agency reported."
  • "For those Chinese rich enough to open an 80,000 yuan ($10,350) account, Citigroup Inc and Standard Chartered are now promising an alternative to the long queues at China's big state lenders."
  • "The lights at Renren Restaurant now are dim all the time. The once thriving cafe has fallen prey to a dispute between the Hong Kong company represented by Ho, a Canadian citizen, and its mainland Chinese partners, who want him out."
  • Chinese blogs. Keso is No. 1.
  • "China has delayed indefinitely its national 'action plan' on climate change, which was due to be released on Monday after exhaustive consultations among ministries in Beijing and provincial and local governments."
  • "The all-English signboards are catering to a false admiration for anything Western. Some people tend to think it's a high-end shop if the name is written in a foreign language," said Huang Anjing, an editor of a local monthly journal, Yaowen Jiaozi.
  • "This year’s world bridge championships are in Shanghai beginning Sept. 29. And one week ago Shanghai won the Chinese Contract Bridge Association Open Teams championship, beating Qinggong in the 96-board final, 239 international match points to 211."
  • "Xuhui District People's Court ... ordered the Shanghai Normal University to compensate 9,000 yuan (US$1,166) to Francesca Manganelli [who] said the institute used her photo without her agreement in an advertisement for student recruitment in June 2005."
  • "非常真人,非常娱乐 (Very Real People, Very Entertaining) is a blog that posts short, amusing photo-comics of every day life in Beijing."
  • "China .. has given American regulators permission to enter the country to investigate whether Chinese suppliers exported contaminated pet food ingredients to the [US] earlier this year, leading to one of the largest pet food recalls in American history."
  • "Chinese President Hu Jintao on Monday launched a campaign to rid the country's sprawling Internet of 'unhealthy' content and make it a springboard for Communist Party doctrine, state television reported." This happens every week, no?
  • "Lax safety measures, unsuitable equipment and 'chaotic' conditions have been blamed for the deaths of 32 steel workers engulfed in molten metal, Chinese investigators announced, warning that such failings were common."
  • "Jianguo was arrested and tried in the summer of 1999, and I remember with perfect clarity the moment I learned what had happened."
For more del.icio.us links, visit the Shanghaiist Contribute page, which is updated throughout the day.

Photo by Swiss James found via the Shanghaiist Contribute page. more ›

Yah mon! Ziggy Marley tomorrow night

All you reggae fans who missed the legendary Byron Lee on his Shanghai tour last year must be kicking yourselves. (Actually, everyone missed the legendary Byron Lee on his Shanghai tour last year, because his band showed up on stage at the Shanghai Centre but he didn’t). more ›

Kanye West, Gnarls Barkley and ... the Super Voice Girls?

Kanye West, Gnarls Barkley and ... the Super Voice Girls?

While the rest of the world is wondering how George W. Bush will further fuck up Iraq and where Becks and Posh are going to settle in L.A., we came across a report about a concert event in Las Vegas: more ›

Dishing the Dirt: When rock concerts go bad

Dishing the Dirt: When rock concerts go bad

The band, scheduled to perform at 7:30 with an end time around 9:30, was bumped up to accommodate a double booking with a Chinese acrobat show intended to entertain "distinguished guests" both of the governmental, business and tourist variety, said the Yunfeng Theatre manager. more ›

Shanghai Dialect Theater: A failed comeback?

Shanghai Dialect Theater: A failed comeback?

According to a recent report (in Chinese) there hasn’t been a play performed in Shanghai dialect since the 1970s until the recent performances of the The Crow and the Sparrow was put Shanghai Dramatic Arts Theatre. Unfortunately, the reaction seems to be have been lukewarm at best, and the blame is being assigned to the fact that the production was too hastily prepared, leading them to overlook things like subtitles. more ›

Westlife, Da Shan, and China's teenagers

Westlife, Da Shan, and China's teenagers

Yeah, we know -- unfair fight. Pop music versus (diluted agitprop) theater. But that's what this article is about: more ›

This Week In <em>-ist</em>: Elsewhere in the Gothamist Network

This Week In -ist: Elsewhere in the Gothamist Network

Torontoist immediately wins our heart by using the word "Jackass" in a headline. In fact, we love their use of it so much that we're going to use it as much as possible throughout this post. For example, it looks like there are Toronto-area jackasses besides those who misuse the sidewalk: look at the crap on sale on Toronto's craigslist. But it looks like Toronto doesn't contain the kind of jackasses who pee in public pools, as the issue never came up when they interviewed the creators of art installations in their public wading pools. more ›

Hurry! Only four more chances to catch <em>Octopus 2</em>!

Hurry! Only four more chances to catch Octopus 2!

We were walking on Maoming Lu near Huaihai Lu recently when we spotted (behind the watch/bag/shoe hawkers announcing to us that Xiangyang Market was no longer) a rather large image of the Statue of Liberty being attacked by a giant octopus. This caught our attention. The advertisement adorning the west-facing wall of the Cathay Theatre was for the movie Octopus 2: River of Fear (also known as "OCPOTUS" on some local posters). We generally try to stay on top of the latest goings on in the film world, and we were curious as to how we failed to notice the release of a movie about a massive cephalopod that attempts to take over Manhattan. So we did a little research. more ›

Martin Luther King: I have a Chinese dream

Martin Luther King: I have a Chinese dream

Shanghaiist has always been intrigued by the bits of Western history and culture that seep into the Chinese mainstream — the terrifying, ungodly mix of Buicks, Kenny G, and Da Shan gives us a headache, but is fascinating to behold. Though not quite as fascinating as washing your hair with birth control pills. more ›

Time to dust off your accordions, Shanghai

Time to dust off your accordions, Shanghai

The 2006 Shanghai International Accordion Festival kicked off yesterday! All of your favorites will be performing, including Peter Soave, Alexey Peresidly, Nikolay Sivchuk, Antonio Mancini, Pavel Fenjuk, Jerome Richard and Cyril Blanchard. All told, there are 500 accordion players in Shanghai this week -- 501 if you count the guy who always plays on the corner of Nanjing Xi Lu and Shaanxi Lu. more ›

Dedicated followers of fashion

Dedicated followers of fashion

Shanghaiist is neither fashionable nor interested in fashion, but we know a good party when we hear of one. Which is why we held on to the three invitations that landed on our desk for the opening of the Giorgio Armani Retrospective at the Shanghai Art Museum, a Giorgio Armani fashion show in the Shanghai Grand Theatre, and a Vogue China after-party at Three on the Bund, all on Saturday night. more ›

Shanghai fans get up offa their thing for Mr. Dynamite

Shanghai fans get up offa their thing for Mr. Dynamite

James Brown might be the Hardest Working Man in Show Business, but yesterday Shanghaiist felt like the Hardest Working Man in Shanghai. Which is why this post is a day late. And because we were recovering from the "Sex Machine" after-party at Mint. more ›

Shanghai: Too funky in here

Shanghai: Too funky in here

Well, we predicted it. In a prophetic piece of posting from the very early days of Shanghaiist’s existence, we raised the possibility of a James Brown concert in this city. Or rather, we suggested it would be a very welcome thing. more ›

Valentine's Day round-up

Valentine's Day round-up

"I think their approach is understandable," said Wu Hehu, deputy manager of Shanghai United Cinema Lines, the city's biggest cinema chain. even though we're already very rich, we want to suck money from pressured youths like the RMB-obsessed vultures that we are "No one wants to miss Valentine's Day's huge business potential." more ›

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