Zhang Jigang

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Zhang Jigang
张继钢

Zhang Jigang at Sina.com, 2006
Born December 25, 1958 (1958-12-25) (age 49)
Flag of the People's Republic of China Shanxi, China
Spouse(s) Zhang Lamei
1 child

Zhang Jigang (simplified Chinese: 张继钢; traditional Chinese: 張繼鋼; pinyin: Zhāng Jìgāng; (born December 25, 1958) is an internationally acclaimed Chinese choreographer and a military Lt. General. He was the former director of the Song and Dance Ensemble with the People's Liberation Army before promotion in 2006. Zhang Jigang now holds the highest non-combat military officer rank in China. [1]

He is the only choreographer to receive the crown title of "Century Star" in the country, and is responsible for the creation of more than 300 large-scale productions in over 60 countries. Currently, Zhang Jigang is developing and directing the 2008 Summer Olympics Opening and Closing Ceremonies with Zhang Yimou. [2]

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[edit] Early career

Zhang Jigang was born in the ancient Chinese city of Yuci located in the Shanxi Province. As a young child, he was influenced by Zhong Ziwu (Cultural Revolution Dance). He began formal dance training at the age of 12 in Taiyuan at the Song and Dance Ensemble of Shanxi Province. By the age of 17, he was working as an established choreographer for the Chinese government. In the 1980s he received the highest national dance award called Quan Guo Wu Dao Da Sai (simplified Chinese: 全国舞蹈大赛). Zhang Jigang became the first resident of Shanxi Province to receive such an award, propelling his career to national stardom putting Shanxi Province in the entertainment spotlight for the first time. Shortly after, in 1988 he enrolled at the Beijing Dance Academy where he graduated with a degree in choreography. He would later return to university and finish with a Masters in Political Science.

[edit] 1980s

Zhang truly began to establish himself as a leading choreographer during this period, although he was yet to obtain the level of international success he would experience in the 90's. His works contained many traditional cultural Chinese dance influences throughout the decade, and were often categorized by heavy militaristic symbols.

[edit] Mother and Son (母与子)

Created by Zhang in 1986, it revolves around a mother and her criminal son. It was performed in Beijing, and was one of Zhang's first major works.

[edit] The Night of Yuanxiao Festival (元宵夜)

A comedic story created by Zhang Jigang revolving around a couple who visit the Yuanxiao Festival and lose each other in crowd. It quickly became a smash hit, and was franchised across China by dozens of provincial theatre companies.

[edit] Feelings of the Yellow River Girl (黄河儿女情)

A show developed by a number of choreographers.

[edit] 1990s

A prolific period in Zhang's career, in 1992 he was invited to work as Choreographer for the Art Troupe of the PLA's General Political Department. Representing the highest attainable level of dance, the troupe continues to be the most famous group of its kind in China.

[edit] Yellow Earth (黄土黄)

Received the 20th Century Classical Dance Award, and a national smash success. It also received the 3rd Taoli Award for outstanding dance production.

[edit] A Man Who Dances Yangge (一个扭秧歌的人)

Another production to receive the 20th Century Classical Dance Award. The story revolved around the passion of dance in China.

[edit] I Come From the Yellow River (俺从黄河来)

[edit] Be Kind, and Take it Easy (善之)

[edit] Wing of Life (生命之翼)

[edit] Happy Girls (女儿红)

[edit] Flying (翔)

[edit] Daughter's River (女儿河)

[edit] 2000–present

A period of international acclaim and militaristic success for Zhang Jigang. He was promoted to the rank of Lt. General in 2006 and currently holds the highest military rank in China for any non-combat officer. Aside from receiving awards in Hollywood California, North Korea,Japan and Monaco, Zhang Jigang created a number of multi-million dollar large-scale productions that subsequently toured America, Australia, Italy and Spain. He currently resides in Beijing, China with his wife Zhang Lamei.

[edit] Thousand Hand Bodhisattva (Guan Yin) (千手观音)

Zhang Jigang's most famous and influential production. The piece features 21 hearing impaired dancers who form remarkable arm and hand positions by standing behind each other in a perfect column. Breathtaking images are created as the dancers produce perfectly timed and choreographed movements. The show quickly became a national treasure and overwhelming domestic success. It was first performed internationally at the Kennedy Centre in Washington, D.C. in front of former President of the United States Bill Clinton, senior White House staff and spectators. It generated rave reviews and was showcased shortly thereafter around the world in countries including Australia, Japan, North Korea, Egypt, Turkey and Italy. In 2004 it was performed at the Closing Ceremonies for the 2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, Greece (see it here) and Miss World 2004 pageant was held in Sanya, China[3]. The primary filmed version was captured in 2005 at the Spring Festival in China on CCTV. It subsequently spread across the internet on such sites as Google Video and YouTube (see it here). It is widely estimated that hundreds of millions of Chinese and international viewers around the world have viewed the videos online.

[edit] Poison Dates (一把酸枣)

Poison Dates, Shanghai 2007
Poison Dates, Shanghai 2007

Zhang Jigang's most recent production. The large scale show features a cast with some of China's most famous acrobatic and traditional dance stars. It revolves around the life of a young man who seeks his fortune in Shanxi during the Tang Dynasty. Poison Dates includes a huge ensemble with over 200 dancers. It is franchised across China and has been received by soldout shows in over 100 cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Taiyuan and Hong Kong. In early 2007, the show toured Japan and in December 2007 travelled to Taiwan.

[edit] CCTV National Dance Competition, Season 4 (第四届CCTV电视舞蹈大奖赛)

Zhang Jigang was a returning celebrity judge on China's most popular dance idol show. The program could be compared to that of the Idol series or Dancelife, with contestants vying to win a coveted prize in ballet, hip-hop, Latin, folk and Chinese classical dance. It was broadcast nationally every night from April 19th - 28th 2007 at 7:30pm on CCTV 3. Season 4 received the highest domestic ratings for the series ever, with an estimated national audience over 200 million viewers per episode.[4]

[edit] 2008 Summer Olympics

Dancing Beijing emblem depicted in a flower garden.
Dancing Beijing emblem depicted in a flower garden.

Zhang Jigang is currently co-directing the 2008 Summer Olympics Opening and Closing Ceremonies. The project is shrouded in secrecy and not much is publicly known about its current status. Steven Spielberg was commissoned in 2006 to act as an independent Creative Consultant for the high profile ceremonies. On February 12th, 2008 Steven Spielberg withdrew from his involvement in the Olympic Opening ceremonies, criticizing the Chinese government for not pressuring ally Sudan to end the "continuing human suffering" in the region.[5] No official word on budget, but it is widely speculated to be the most expensive opening ceremonies of all time when presented in August, 2008. [6]

[edit] Awards

  • 1986 Third Annual National Dance Competition 3rd Award
  • 1986 National Folk Singing and Dance Competition 1st Place of the Grand Prize
  • 1987 National Wen Hua Award
  • 1990 Tao Li Award
  • 1992 20th Century Classical Dance
  • 2002 The Wing of Life, Best International Production, Japan
  • 2002 April Spring International, Best Choreography, North Korea
  • 2003 Hollywood Star Award, Best Director

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "BOCOG announces creation team for games ceremonies", 2010 Commerce Center, B.C. Olympics Secretariat.
  2. ^ Beijing’s Gift to the World in 2008
  3. ^ Missosology.Org - Miss World 2004 Review
  4. ^ CCTV - "Hand in Hand" steals CCTV Dance Contest
  5. ^ BBC News - Spielberg in Darfur snub to China
  6. ^ Markets to Bankroll 80% of Beijing 2008 Olympiad Cost

[edit] External links

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