Bai Xianyong: Lifelong Devotee of Kunqu Opera
In 1963, two years after his graduation from university,
Bai went to the United States for research with the Writers Studio of Iowa
University, and received a master's degree two years later. Since then, he has
taught at California University.
He has published a number of books, including several short story collections
in the magazines Lonely Seventeen, Taipei People, and the New Yorker, a prose
collection titled Mo Ran Hui Shou, and a long novel called Nie Zi (Unfilial
Son), and so on. Through combining modern western writing skills of modern
western literature and traditional Chinese expressions, Bai portrays the stories
and lives of those people in a transitional period; hence his literary works are
filled with historical ups and downs as well as the vicissitudes of life.
Bai took fancy to Kunqu opera when he was still a small boy, and his
novel Waking From a Dream (You Yuan Jing Meng) is an inspiration from Peony
Pavilion. Passionately devoted to Kunqu opera, he has volunteered in
promoting the opera for more than twenty years.
In recent years, he has relentlessly worked in introducing the art to the
young generation by cooperating with Kunqu artists in Hong Kong and
Taiwan and delivering lectures. To produce a youth-version of Peony Pavilion has
long been one of his dreams: In 2004, his dream finally came true.
Inextricable Guilin Complex
Bai's uncommon life experience and emotional world molded his particular
personality. Any one who is acquainted with contemporary Chinese literature
knows very well Bai's position in contemporary Chinese literature, especially in
contemporary Taiwanese literature. However, Bai Xianyong's literary works, his
interests and hobbies, his language, and his thoughts are all inseparable from
Guilin, his birthplace. Bai has always embraced an inextricable Guilin complex.
Though Bai lived in Guilin for only seven years, he can speak real authentic
Guilin dialect and has employed the dialect in many of his novels, imparting a
unique flavor to his works. One of his novels is titled Grandma
Ji n, which to the locals is imbued with a touch of Guilin flavor.
Bai Xiongyong is also a lover of Guilin rice noodles. As he recalls, once
when his father came back from a battle, the first thing he did was to have a
bowl of hot rice noodles. Later, when living in Nanjing and Shanghai, Bai's
family also invited people to cook Guilin rice noodles. After moving to Taipei,
however, Bai seldom had the chance to enjoy the rice noodles. In one of his
famous novels, Bai vividly related the story about rice noodles.
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