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First Directors of Chinese Modern Drama - Chinese Drama
 
   

Hong Shen and Zhang Pengchun had made indelible contribution to the establishment of modern Chinese director system. Prior to them, there was no director in China when any play was staged.
First Directors of Chinese Modern Drama

After Hong Shen (1894-1955) joined in the Shanghai Drama Association, the first drastic measure he took was to implement a rehearsal system in order to standardize the actors' performance. Not only did he emphasize the importance of script but also defined the authoritative position of a director so as to seek uniformity between stage art design and the style of the script. At the same time, he required the actors to act out the characters' personalities and stressed cooperation between actors. A kind gentleman in daily life, Hong Shen was very serious and exacting when directing actors in repeated rehearsals and guiding them into the realm of artistic creation. In so doing, those who considered performance as something funny came to realize the difficulty of artistic conception.

The second radical measure Hong Shen took in the Shanghai Drama Association was to get rid of the customary practice of "man playing the female role" which was the result of the influence of Chinese feudal traditions.

Zhang Pengchun (1892-1957) also promoted the establishment of the director system for modern Chinese drama. He was pursuing studies in the US when the Little Theatre Movement was at its peak there. In 1916, he came back to China and was appointed deputy head of the Nankai New Drama Troupe. He practiced the director system in rehearsal. He was considered to have benefited a lot from Max Reinhardt, a famous German director and Gordon Craig, a well-known British director. He visited Russia twice and learned something from Stanislavski in performing theory. In the 1920s, he put on stage many European and American plays in a planned way, such as Ibsen's A Dolls House and An Enemy of the People. In addition, he adapted John Galsworthy's Strife into Struggling for Power, Moliere's L' avare (The Miser) into The Skinflint and Gogol's The General Inspector into The Imperial Envoy. All these made him famous in the dramatic circle of the time and the plays he directed were very popular in the area surrounding Beijing and Tianjin.

Now let us consider features of Zhang Pengchun's directing. First, he required the actors to make a full desktop preparation, i.e. to gain a deep understanding and study of both the script and the writer. Second, he was a stickler in rehearsal, demanding the actors to act on the director's instructions, their speaking and activities on the stage should be done according to the director's directions and no offhand performance was allowed. Third, he paid as much attention to applying theories as to the artistic conception of Chinese poetry and Ci in rehearsal.

Another contribution made by Zhang Pengchun as a director rests with his success in fostering such famous playwrights as Cao Yu, Zhang Pingqun and Jin Yan.

 
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