Chinese contemporary classical opera is a musical art form drawing on western opera traditions - distinct from modern developments of traditional Chinese opera. One of the first western-style operas was The White Haired Girl. Chinese-language western-style opera is to be distinguished the Revolutionary operas of the Cultural Revolution such as Taking Tiger Mountain by Strategy which were mainly an adaption of Peking opera with socialist text and subjects, with some influence from Sovietmusical theatre. The 1950s-70s saw several patriotic socialist operas, such as Red Guards on Honghu Lake. Modern operas with a continuation of "realist" socialist elements include A Village Teacher. China has several separate geju companies under the Ministry of Culture, parallel with the traditional Chinese opera companies. The most prestigious are the Beijing-based central geju-yuanChina National Opera House troupe, and the Shanghai-based Shanghai Opera House company. In each case the term "Opera House," geju-yuan, refers to the institute or company, not to a fixed building or theatre. The street addresses of both companies are merely administrative offices and rehearsal rooms. Other notable geju companies around China include the Liaoning geju yuan, based in Shenyang and others. The status of geju has been boosted by availability of new world-class venues such as the China's National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing and the new Shanghai Grand Theatre. Since its opening in 2009 CHNCPA has staged operas such as Xi Shi and A Village Teacher in 2009, The Chinese Orphan in 2011, and the folk-opera The Ballad of Canal in 2012. The Shanghai Grand Theatre has similarly staged Chinese-language geju of the Shanghai Opera House company along with Italian, French and German-language operas.
List of works
The following includes some operas which are considered closer to the Chinese opera traditional model than geju or western opera.
Experimental period, 1945-1956
1945 - Ma Ke et al. White-Haired Girl at Yan'anLu Xun Art Academy
After founding of the PRC, 1949:
1954 - Chen Zi, Mao Yuan and Ge Guangrui: Liu Hulan 《刘胡兰》 Central Experimental Xin-geju Academy, Beijing
- Ma Ke: Xiao'erhei jiehun
1955 - Luo Zongxian: Caoyuan zhi ge 《草原之歌》 "Song of the Prairies"
A second wave followed National Music Week, 1956, which lasted till the last geju Ayiguli in 1966 on the eve of the Cultural Revolution.
1956 - Chen Zi and Liang Kexiang: Spring BlossomsYingchunhua kaile
1956 - Du Yu: Mongolian themed folk opera The Gada plum blossoms based on the Mongolian folk songGada meilin
1958 - Zhang Rui : Rosy CloudsHong xia
1958 - Shu Tiemin and Ceng Fangke: The Red-cloud CliffHongyun ya
1958 - Zhang Dinghe: The Tale of Huai YinHuai Yin ji
1959 - Zhang Jing'an: Honghu Chiweidui "Red Guards of Lake Hong Hu", Wuhan
1959 - Shi Lemeng: Two Women of the Red ArmyLiangge nv hongjun
1959 - Zhuang Ying and Lu Ming: Keshan hong ri "Red Sun over Mount Ke" PLA Opera Troupe
1960 - Wang Xiren and Hu Shiping: Hong Shanhu "Red Coral" libretto by Zhao Zhong, PLA Opera Troupe - also filmed by Wang Shaoyan director of the film Red Coral
1960 - Chen Zi and Du Yu: Dou E Yuan based on the playThe Grievances of Dou E, also known as "Snow in Summer"
Tenor William Wu directed 《万里长城》The Great Wall with music by Yang Yao-chang and a libretto by Pi Kuo. Premiered by the Taiwan Metropolitan Opera 1993, cross-straits production 1995.