China
SPOTLIGHT ON CHINESE THEATRE
Chinese Traditional Theatre in the UK: Interview w...
Posted by Xunnan Li | Jul 24, 2025 | China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, News, Theatre and Opera
From Lawyer to Lyricist/Librettist: An Artist Prof...
Posted by Morgan Skolnik | Feb 7, 2025 | China, Directing, Musical Theatre, United States of America, Worldwide
Trauma In Translation: Stratford’s Milestone...
Posted by Barbara Gabriel | Oct 19, 2024 | Canada, China, Review, Theatre and Politics
Contemporary Transnationalism Theatre in China: Th...
Posted by Xunnan Li | Aug 30, 2024 | China, Review, Theatre and Politics
Adapting Lu Xun for the Contemporary Stage: A Prod...
Posted by Xunnan Li | Aug 28, 2024 | China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, Edinburgh 2024, Review
Intercultural Chinese Dance Artist in the UK: Inte...
Posted by Xunnan Li | Aug 28, 2024 | China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, Edinburgh 2024, Interview
How A New Play Reimagines Rural Hunan For The Mode...
Posted by Fan Yiying | May 27, 2024 | China, Interview, Israel
Is There a Right Way to Make Chinese Opera?
Posted by Guo Chenzi | Dec 16, 2023 | China, Essay
On Stage And In A Wheelchair
Posted by Liu Qing | Oct 5, 2023 | China, Review, Theatre and Disability
The Spotlight on China showcases new developments in Chinese theatre both at home and abroad. From performance reviews and interviews, to an ever-growing archive of essays, the series offers The Theatre Times' readers a window on the Chinese theatre landscape.


Current Plans: Hong Kong’s Collaborative Art Space

The Troubled State of Performing Arts in Hong Kong




Transnational Chinese Theatres in Pandemic Times













Tianjiao Li and Xuexi Li from Quirky Moth Theatre – China’s leading theatre company discuss the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic had on China’s theatre and its communities from the perspective of a theatre maker and spectator. Tianjiao Li and Xuexi Li talk about how the particular situation of artists in China made them resilient to the COVID-19 pandemic, encouraged experimentation, and increased their own visibility. They also explain why they think Theatre will survive the pandemic.
Is There a Right Way to Make Chinese Opera?
by Guo Chenzi | Dec 16, 2023 | China, Essay
With countless adaptations, The Peony Pavilion is China’s answer to Swan Lake. But recent attempts...
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On China’s Broadway, IP Is King — For Now
by Wu Changchang | Jul 1, 2023 | China, Essay, Musical Theatre
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China Asks: How Many Cultural Landmarks Is Too Many?
by Xudong You | Dec 18, 2021 | China, Essay
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How China’s Musicals Lost Their Groove
by Wu Changchang | Nov 15, 2021 | China, Essay, Musical Theatre
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On Stage And In A Wheelchair












“I Want My Own Sky”: Chinese Migrant Mothers Onstage


The Play That Never Sleeps: “Macbeth” In China

Cross-cultural Encounters In World Theatre: Bertolt Brecht, The “Alienation” Effect And Chinese Drama
by Letizia Fusini | May 20, 2018 | Acting, China, Essay
The German playwright and drama theorist Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) is particularly famous for...
Ambiguous Space: A Review of the Chinese Play “L’histoire d’un Accident” at Avignon 2025
by Xunnan Li | Jul 26, 2025 | Avignon 2025, China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, Design, Review
Feng Lu’s “L’histoire d’un Accident”, presented in Avignon 2025, offers a layered exploration of theatrical space inspired by Henri Lefebvre’s theory of spatial production. The play unfolds through a play-within-a-play structure, blending backstage conflict, parody, and audience disruption to challenge the boundary between fiction and reality. A planted “spectator” blurs the line between performance and life, turning spatial ambiguity into a central aesthetic strategy. Rather than seeking clarity, the production invites audiences to dwell in uncertainty, where ambiguity becomes an essential part of how space is experienced, performed, and emotionally understood.
From Lawyer to Lyricist/Librettist: An Artist Profile of Jill Ohayon
by Morgan Skolnik | Feb 7, 2025 | China, Directing, Musical Theatre, United States of America, Worldwide
Jill Ohayon grew up believing there were only two respectable career paths: doctor or lawyer. And...
“Gangsters Of Hong Kong:” A New Stage Play Fleshes Out Triad Drama
by Zolima Citymag | Feb 23, 2019 | China, Festivals, Hong Kong, News, Playwriting
Hong Kong’s reputation as a safe city is well-deserved. It ranks frequently among the top 10...
Trauma In Translation: Stratford’s Milestone Salesman In China
by Barbara Gabriel | Oct 19, 2024 | Canada, China, Review, Theatre and Politics
“My head feels like a bridge that all of Beijing has been walking over.” The stage is...
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How “Hamilton” Got Chinese Thinking About Who Tells Their History
by Yi Yang | Aug 12, 2020 | China, News, Theatre and Politics
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On Stage And In A Wheelchair
by Liu Qing | Oct 5, 2023 | China, Review, Theatre and Disability
Zhao Hongcheng has made hundreds of videos about the challenges of life as a disabled person. Now...
Hustling at the Bottom of the Stand-Up Pyramid
by Hou Xueqi | Jan 5, 2022 | China, Interview, Theatre and Gender
All the rage in Beijing’s stand-up circuit, Pazilye Parhat says much of comedy stems from...
Welcome to the Slug Parade: Representation of Asexuality and Autism in “The Slug Show”
by Yizhou Zhang | Jul 5, 2022 | China, LGBTQ+ Theatre, London, Review, Theatre and Disability, United Kingdom
As London celebratess the 50th anniversary of the Pride Parade on July 2, I’m reminded of the only...



Hustling at the Bottom of the Stand-Up Pyramid

“Toolbox Manoeuvre”: The Beat of Hong Kong On Stage













Anthony Wong in Theatre and Indie Films

The Man Who Played With Fire


Ambiguous Space: A Review of the Chinese Play “L’histoire d’un Accident” at Avignon 2025
by Xunnan Li | Jul 26, 2025 | Avignon 2025, China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, Design, Review
Feng Lu’s “L’histoire d’un Accident”, presented in Avignon 2025, offers a layered exploration of theatrical space inspired by Henri Lefebvre’s theory of spatial production. The play unfolds through a play-within-a-play structure, blending backstage conflict, parody, and audience disruption to challenge the boundary between fiction and reality. A planted “spectator” blurs the line between performance and life, turning spatial ambiguity into a central aesthetic strategy. Rather than seeking clarity, the production invites audiences to dwell in uncertainty, where ambiguity becomes an essential part of how space is experienced, performed, and emotionally understood.
Chinese Traditional Theatre in the UK: Interview with Joanna Zenghui Qiu on the 10th Anniversary of the UK Chinese Opera Association
by Xunnan Li | Jul 24, 2025 | China, Chinese Theatre Abroad, News, Theatre and Opera
In 2025, the UK Chinese Opera Association marks its 10th anniversary, celebrating a decade of bridging tradition and innovation in Chinese opera. Founded by Joanna Zenghui Qiu, a former performer with the Mei Lanfang Opera Troupe, the Association has become a cornerstone of Chinese cultural life in the UK. Inspired by her lead performance at the British Museum’s first Chinese New Year event during the 2015 UK-China Year of Cultural Exchange, Qiu established the Association to preserve and promote Chinese opera on British soil. Through performances at venues such as Buckingham Palace and grassroots programs like “Chinese Opera Fans’ Home” the Association has flourished as both an artistic platform and a diasporic community hub.
In China’s Voguing Houses, Queer Millennials Strike a New Pose
by Wang Xuandi and Fan Yiying | Feb 1, 2021 | China, LGBTQ+ Theatre, News, Theatre and Dance
Ballroom culture is quietly flourishing in China’s cities, creating a safe space for young LGBT...
A Son, His Father, and Steampunk: Reliving Days of Future Past
by Fu Beimeng | Dec 10, 2020 | China, Directing, Interview, Puppetry, Theatre and Opera
Filmmaker Sun Yang discusses his recent documentary about visual artist Ma Liang, also known as...
The Sphinx’s Riddle Remains Unsolved. Scattering Chinese Art with “The First-Ever Metaverse Theatre Festival”
by Anna Gryszkiewicz | Apr 14, 2023 | China, Festivals, Review, Theatre and AI, Transmedia
Even though for the last decade there have been numerous attempts to unleash Chinese theatre’s...
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Chinese Director Wang Chong Publishes “Online Theatre Manifesto”
by Yizhou Huang | Sep 12, 2020 | Adaptation, China, Covid-19, Transmedia
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