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How a man from a village changed traditional art form

By Chen Nan | China Daily | Updated: 2016-11-30 07:42

How a man from a village changed traditional art form

[Photo by Zou Hong/China Daily]

In 1996, Li Yugang, the first person in his hometown, a remote village in Northeast China's Jilin province, to pass the national university entrance exam, had to drop out because his family could not afford college fees.

However, Li, then 19, did not want to farm the land like his ancestors had done for generations. So, he left home to pursue his dream of performing and became a club singer.

"Everyone laughed at me and they said I was gambling," says Li, now 38.

A year later, he returned home without achieving success. "Those were my darkest days and I even contemplated suicide," he says.

In 2000, Li left home again and tried to make a living in Shenzhen, in southern Guangdong province. He worked at a record store by day and sang at a bar by night.

Things did not get better until one night he stood in for a girl, who was supposed to sing a duet with him. He sang both the male and the female parts, which made the audience happy.

From then on, Li worked on his act, borrowing from the nan dan genre (males playing female roles) in Peking Opera, giving the traditional art form a modern edge by combining it with pop music.

It paid off. In 2006, with his cross-dressing performances, Li had his breakthrough - performing on CCTV's popular talent show Star Boulevard, a program for grassroots artists.

Now, Li is a household name on the music scene.

With three studio albums behind him, he has performed twice on CCTV's most watched annual Spring Festival Gala - in 2012 and 2013.

His stage productions - The Painting of Four Beauties and Flower in Mirror, Moon in Water - have toured China and abroad, including New York and Sydney.

To mark the 10th anniversary of his Star Boulevard performance, Li will launch his latest tour in Beijing on Dec 17 at the Workers' Gymnasium. He will visit Shanghai, Chengdu, Toronto, San Francisco and Sydney next year.

"The past 10 years saw my personal reinvention. I wanted to do a show that showcases my memorable moments onstage," says Li, who will perform some of the classic female characters he has portrayed, such as the four ancient Chinese beauties: Xi Shi of the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476 BC); Wang Zhaojun of the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 24); Diao Chan of the Three Kingdoms (220-280) and Yang Guifei of the Tang Dynasty (618-907).

But while delving into the past, Li also finds himself being pulled toward the future.

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