BEIJING — Dressed in a red-and-white warrior costume, Peking opera actress Zhang Wanting balances on one foot on the narrow handle of a rosewood chair. She bends forward, lifts her other leg high and grasps the two long pheasant plumes on her helmet to strike a pose like a flying swallow.
From more than 100 spectators in a modern Beijing theater, cheers and applause rise.
It is a Sunday afternoon in early September, and Zhang is leading ''The Masked Heroine,'' a signature play from the Song School of Peking opera, founded in the early 20th century as part of a Chinese tradition centuries old. It is the 30-year-old actress's first time starring in the role in a full production, but also the fruit of over a decade of hard work that begins when she was a child.
''Ever since I first started learning this play," she says, ''I've always dreamed of performing it in full.''
A dazzling chair trick that takes a decade to master
Growing up in China's northern Hebei province, Zhang first encountered Peking opera when she was 7 and saw children practicing at a cultural center. Fascinated, she joined them — and soon realized she had the talent and determination to pursue the art professionally. After primary school, Zhang left home for a theater school in Eastern China's Jiangsu province.
Most performers in Peking opera — its name comes from a now-obsolete way of saying Beijing in English — start training at a very young age to lay foundation for good physical strength and flexibility. The process, full of repetitive practice, leaves participants soaked with ''sweat and tears.''
The pose Zhang does on the chair requires balancing on one leg, arching backward, and stretching her arms forward with absolute stillness. It derives from a basic skill in Peking opera called tanhai — literally, ''gazing over the sea'' — that most performers learn at the beginning of their career. Originating in Chinese martial arts, the skill demands immense balance, flexibility, and control.