Jia Zuoguang was regarded as the founder of
Inner Mongolian dances. However, Jia was a Manchurian, not a Mongolian. Jia
spent most of his life on the pastureland of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region. He called himself Hudeqinfu (son of the pastureland in Mongolian
language), while the herdsmen called him Manai (ours). Dance works of Jia
remind people of galloping horses and soaring swans. This is not only because he
created Herding Horses and Swan Goose, but also because of his
character.
Jia Zuoguang was born into a peasant family
in the Suburbs of Shenyang, Liaoning Province, in 1923. At the age of 15, he
passed the examination and entered the children's dance class under the
Manchuria Film Association (predecessor of Changchun Film Studio). From the
Japanese modern dance master Baku Ishii, he learned ballet and modern dance as
well as classical music, drawing and literature. His natural gifts and
exceptional diligence immediately brought out his talent.
To avoid the Japanese army, he escaped to
Peking (now Beijing). In 1942, he held a solo dance performance, at which he
performed the programs full of just and national feelings such as
Hometown, Soul of the State, Child Standard-Bearer and
Devil. These aroused a feeling of patriotism among the common people who
did not want to be enslaved.
In the late 1940s, Jia Zuoguang led his
people to newly liberated areas in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The
boundless prairie kindled the youths' enthusiasm. They put on a Mongolian long
gown and galloped on the vast pastureland. Jia engaged in small talks with
Mongolian grannies and trained horses, milked and cut grass with young people.
During festivals, he attended horsemanship and marksmanship and wrestling
competitions. At the local banquets, he drank and sang with the local people.
Consequently, he began collecting the folk dances of the pastureland like a
gold-washer. All the works he produced have a strong sense of life, various folk
colors and exquisite dance skills.
From the 1940s to 1980s, Jia Zuoguang
created a large number of excellent works. The solo dance Herding Horses
choreographed and performed by Jia himself in the 1940s successfully presented
to us a broad-minded herdsman good at riding.
His Erdos Dance finished in the 1950s
(a group dance composed by Ming Tai and premiered by Siqin Tariha and Liang
Huimin) for the first time made the plateau tribe known to the world. It won the
golden award in the Fifth World Youth Festival.
The Sea Waves in the 1980s (a male
solo dance composed by Yang Zhihua and premiered by Liu Wengang) combined
perfectly the images of seagulls and sea waves by concise and distinct dance
steps and superb skills, showing the dauntless spirit that fights against
storms.
The three works mentioned above are included
in the Dance Classics of the Chinese Nation in the 20th Century.