(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Pingshu - Wikipedia

Pingshu (Chinese: 评书) or pinghua (Chinese: 评话) refers to the traditional Han Chinese performing art of storytelling with no musical accompaniment. It is better known as pingshu in northern China and pinghua in southern China.

Pingshu
Traditional Chineseひょうしょ
Simplified Chinese评书
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinpíngshū
Pinghua
Traditional Chineseひょうばなし
Simplified Chinese评话
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinpínghuà
Shuoshu
Traditional Chineseせつしょ
Simplified Chinese说书
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinshuōshū
Shuohua
Traditional Chinese說話せつわ
Simplified Chinese说话
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinshuōhuà

Performing art

edit

Pingshu was extremely popular in the 1980s, when the Chinese people were able to afford radios, through which many of such radio drama programs were transmitted to every household. People, young and old, would stick to the radio when they had the time, listening to these storytellings, many of which originated from ancient Chinese history. In the countryside, farmers would take radios to their fields and listen to the stories while they were working. In cities, old men would sit in a comfortable bamboo chair enjoying the stories while sipping tea. Many stories such as General Yue Fei (せつだけぜんつて), the Romance of the Three Kingdoms (さんこく演義えんぎ), Cavalier with White Eyebrows (白眉はくびだい), and Romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties (ずいから演義えんぎ) gained popularity among young and old and became major topics of conversation. Famous storytellers or Pingshu performers such as Shan Tianfang (单田かおる, 1934-2018), Yuan Kuocheng (袁阔なり, 1929-2015), Tian Lianyuan (连元, born 1941), and Liu Lanfang (刘兰かおる, born 1944) consequently became well-known.

Pingshu performers often wear gowns and stand behind a table, with a folded fan and a gavel (serving as a prop to strike the table as a warning to the audience to be quiet or as a means of attracting attention in order to strengthen the effect of the performance, especially at the beginning or during intervals). They often add their own commentaries on the subjects and the characters in their storytelling. In this way, the audience, while watching their performances, is not only entertained, but also educated and enlightened. Travelers in Beijing will often find taxi drivers listening to it on the radio.[1]

Pingshu is popular in North and most of Northeast China. The art of storytelling, with its broad mass appeal, has resulted in the growth of other art forms, nurturing talented artists. Many great writers, in consequence, continued from there to tread the path of literature.

In order to attract the new generation of listeners, some non-traditional content was also adopted as Pingshu, like Harry Potter.[2]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ とくこく记者谈 北京ぺきんじんてき文学ぶんがくせい态”. ぶん/《ほう兰克ぶく汇报》 马克·西にしこうむ斯 《参考さんこう消息しょうそく》2006ねん8がつ2にち文章ぶんしょう.
  2. ^ しょう剧场评书开讲《哈利·とく. 作者さくしゃ:张硕. らいみなもと北京ぺきんばん报 2017-05-03.