Li Shutong (1880-1941), one of the
pioneers of China's drama development, was talented in music, calligraphy,
painting and drama. He lived in Tianjin, but his ancestral home was Zhejiang Province. After he came back from
Japan, he worked as a teacher
and editor. His representative work was La Dame aux Camelias, in which
he played the role of Marguerite.
In the winter of 1906, the Spring Willow
Society, an organization devoted to the study of various literatures and arts,
was founded by some Chinese students in Tokyo. At the beginning, the society had only
one performance department presided over by Li Shutong. Among its main members
were Ouyang Yuqian, Wu Wozun, Ma Jiangshi and Zeng Xiaogu. Most of them were
enthusiastic about drama and highly praised the "New Japanese Drama," and they
took it as their obligation to research and imitate the "New Japanese Drama".
In the spring of 1907, the Spring Willow
Society performed the third act of Alexandre Dumas's famous play La Dame aux
Camelias in Tokyo and was
well received by both the Chinese and Japanese audience there. They "adopted
colloquial Chinese, soliloquy and aside instead of recitation and singing" in
the performance. Li Shutong played the role of Marguerite in La Dame aux
Camelias. Such a performance can arguably be categorized as modern Chinese
drama.
But, shockingly, Li Shutong, the first La
Dame aux Camelias in China,
gave up his artistic career and chose to be a monk in 1918. This was a great
loss the Chinese literature circle. Twenty-four years later, Li died at the age
of 63. His life and death was quite a mystery.