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Dance academy stages 10-year reunion(3)

2014-07-08 13:21 China Daily Web Editor: Wang Fan
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"Art should guide people's thoughts. But what we have now are girls wearing less clothes to attract eyeballs and stages that are decorated as extravagantly as possible. Everything is about money and bringing in audiences," she says.

She is comforted, however, by the positive feedback from many audiences. There are some modern dance fans, whose support helps people like her survive.

Qu Jiabo is a modern dance fan. The 32-year-old woman, who moved from Haikou, Hainan province, to Beijing in 2006, works as a marketing manager. In 2011, she started taking part in the weekly modern dance class organized by Beijing LDTX Modern Dance Company, an independent professional dance company founded by Willy Tsao in 2005.

A dance lover since childhood, Qu first studied modern dance out of curiosity while pursuing her master's degree at Lancaster University in the United Kingdom.

During the upcoming annual Beijing Dance Festival, a two-week program launched by Beijing LDTX Modern Dance Company, workshops will be taught by international modern dancers, and there will be performances by professional and amateur dancers.

Qu will perform a work, choreographed by Liao Sidi from Beijing LDTX Modern Dance Company.

According to Tsao, who is also the founder and artistic director of City Contemporary Dance Company in Hong Kong, bringing audiences close to modern dance is important for the development of the art form.

"Hong Kong has more than 40 modern dance companies. Modern dance shows are available every weekend. But on the Chinese mainland, modern dance companies have to tour abroad to make ends meet, and audiences have nowhere to watch high-level modern dance shows," Tsao says.

Jin Xing, choreographer, dancer, actress and TV host, who founded the Jin Xing Dance Theater in Shanghai in 1999, credits Yang with introducing modern dance to her.

"Some people asked me why I am still dancing. I said I feel most confident when I am dancing," she says.

"Modern dance needs to communicate with audiences rather than narrowing in a small circle."

The 47-year-old is one of the judges of a popular dance show on Zhejiang Satellite TV Station, the Chinese version of American reality TV show, So You Think You Can Dance. Jin says that such TV shows help popularize modern dance among mainstream audiences.

"The current development for modern dance in China is slow. We have to work together and figure out a way for it to grow," she says.

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