The Greatest Event in a Doll’s Life
In 2019 Yangyang Guo, Selena Lu, Cuixi Lin, Yisha Lu, and Lelia TahaBurt was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for the project The Greatest Event in A Doll's Life.
In 2019 Yangyang Guo, Selena Lu, Cuixi Lin, Yisha Lu, and Lelia TahaBurt was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for the project The Greatest Event in A Doll's Life.
Chinese readers were first introduced to Henrik Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House” via Hu Shi, a chief figure of China’s New Culture Movement at the beginning of the 20th century. Hu’s translation of” A Doll’s House” triggered a series of sociopolitical discussions among intellectuals and beyond, and helped spark the beginning of the feminist discourse in China. Ibsen’s masterpiece also inspired Hu to write “The Greatest Event in Life”, a one-act play that portrays a modern Chinese woman and her eventual choice to walk out.
To inherit the revolutionary spirit and to make our own manifesto, our all-female cast is proposing to reinvent the two plays. We think the time for the middle-aged man, writing about the female condition has come to an end, and it’s a time for us to directly engage with the concept of marriage, what it means and what it could be, as well as “the female condition” on a personal and historical level. Thus, we are creating an original devised theatre piece that takes” A Doll’s House” and “The Greatest Event in Life” as thematic starting points. Through workshop sessions led by each collaborator, we singel out central questions on the nature of feminism and marriage, such as: What would the “miracle of miracles” mentioned by Nora be today? Who would Nora and Yamei (the protagonists of the plays) be today? What is our contemporary equivalent of “walking out”? How do we live out our legacies, both of marriage and feminism? How can we renovate the institution of marriage?
Through workshops focusing on physical exercises, research trips to the Marriage Market at Shanghai People’s Park, interviews with “leftover women” (the name given to Chinese women who are still unmarried by age 27), and more, we hope to go beyond merely engaging with the topics “on paper”. We want to see what we have been neglecting or ignoring, what is underneath our experiences that reveals the true contradictions we face contrasting ideals with reality.
The collaborators on this project, Yangyang Guo, Selena Lu, Cuixi Lin, Yisha Lu, and Lelia TahaBurt, are a diverse group of young female theater makers who are all themselves of “marriage age”. With a wide range of interests and experiences that include psychology, mathematics, and economics, they met and came together in Shanghai, and share a passion for and commitment to creating theater that serves as an agent for reflection, connection, and questions.