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Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?

Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?

charlesjguiteau Profile Photo
charlesjguiteau
#1Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:08pm

We're off for 12 days in China this Tuesday, and that started me thinking that I can't for the life of me name a musical that takes place in China or features it notably in the score.

Am I the only one that fills my ipod with the score to Zorba before I visit Greece or A Little Night Music before exploring Scandinavia? But China's got me stumped (aside from the Chinese-Americans in Flower Drum Song.) Any suggestions out there?

Nettik
#2Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:13pm

ADRIFT IN MACAO is set in Macao, China.

After Eight
#2Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:23pm

Lute Song

dramamama611 Profile Photo
dramamama611
#3Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:34pm

there is a musical version of Lute Song?


If we're not having fun, then why are we doing it? These are DISCUSSION boards, not mutual admiration boards. Discussion only occurs when we are willing to hear what others are thinking, regardless of whether it is alignment to our own thoughts.

CurtainPullDowner Profile Photo
CurtainPullDowner
#4Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:36pm

I too do that when I travel, then it can be a soundtrack as you tourist around. For evocative music try NIXON IN CHINA, it's wierd but full of flavor.

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henrikegerman
#5Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:39pm

Yes, albeit reluctantly: Chu Chem.

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AvenueQResident
#6Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 4:49pm

Going for the obvious...

Mulan Jr.


Everything in life...is only for now.

After Eight
#7Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 5:05pm

"there is a musical version of Lute Song?"

It opened in 1945 and starred Mary Martin and Yul Brynner. Music by Raymond Scott and lyrics by Bernard Hanighen. It had delicate, atmospheric songs. I particularly like Mountain High, Valley, Low.

nomdeplume
#8Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 5:33pm

Any Beijing/Peking or Taiwanese Opera. I'd look for one based on ancient stories and histories.

You can expect your check-in luggage to be thoroughly searched out of your presence and the zippers and fastenings and contents all askew, by the way, whenever you enter or leave China.

Think twice if you plan on routing part of your travel via a Communist Chinese airline carrier. Just don't be surprised if a hole is bashed in the side of your hard luggage (breaking contents inside your luggage as well) as you fly to or transit the Beijing airport on such a carrier, speaking from experience. Even luggage that has survived twenty years of other air travel unscathed.

Even if you go to Hong Kong, which supposedly retains some independence, all the customs and immigration is controlled by the Communists. Remember you are going to a Communist country. You won't be in Kansas anymore, Dorothy.

Hand carry anything you don't want broken or that is at all personal. Updated On: 8/29/11 at 05:33 PM

TheatreDiva90016 Profile Photo
TheatreDiva90016
#9Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 5:43pm

Hot Mikado!


"TheatreDiva90016 - another good reason to frequent these boards less."<<>> “I hesitate to give this line of discussion the validation it so desperately craves by perpetuating it, but the light from logic is getting further and further away with your every successive post.” <<>> -whatever2

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Wicked Fanatic
#10Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 5:44pm

There's the musical film version of the legendary Chinese Shangri-La love story Lost Horizon with a Chinese tinged-score by Hal David and Burt Bacharach.

http://www.amazon.com/Lost-Horizon-Original-Soundtrack-1973/dp/B000002ZBR/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1314566590&sr=1-1

I have this in vinyl and the score isn't as bad as the critics said it was even though most of the star-studded cast were dubbed. I loved this in all its forms: the novel by James Hilton, the classic Ronald Colman film and even this that got lambasted by the critics.

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CurtainPullDowner
#11Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 6:24pm

HOT MIKADO:

"If you want to know who we are,
We are gentlemem of JAPAN."

charlesjguiteau Profile Photo
charlesjguiteau
#12Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 6:39pm

you guys are all giving us invaluable help.

Well, maybe not all of you, but thanks to all regardless. Especial thanks to nomdeplume for your terrifying cautions re the Beijing luggage handlers. We were planning to check luggage on local airlines from Hong Kong to Beijing, then on to Xian, then on to Shanghai. Gotta think twice perhaps...

Only Lute Song rang a bell, but I realize Mary Martin serenading in my ear might not really appropriate as I tour the Forbidden City in any event.

I'm thinking to switch over to the soundtracks of The Last Emperor and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. And maybe a snippet of Mad Dogs and Englishmen for comic relief (I'm certain Noel has a snooty line or two about the Chinese in there somewhere)...

Mister Matt Profile Photo
Mister Matt
#13Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 7:01pm

Heading East by Leon Ko and Robert Lee
Heading East


"What can you expect from a bunch of seitan worshippers?" - Reginald Tresilian

AlfieByrne
#14Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 7:51pm

And it should be noted that most of the shows mentioned were written by Westerners or Asians growing up in the western culture, writing for the western audience with their ethnocentric bias of what China (or Asia) should "sound like".

peerrjb
#15Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 8:37pm

Most baffling of all is Cole Porter's final opus, "ALADDIN", written for CBS television's "DuPont Show of the Month and aired 21 February 1958. (Book by S.J. Perelman) The show took what most think of as the Arabian-bound tale into "Cathay". Most folks only know the song "Come to the Supermarket in Old Peking" via Streisand's early recording of it. In any event, it was directed by Ralph Nelson (who also had done the R&H "Cinderella" with Julie Andrews) and starred SAL MINEO, ANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI, CYRIL RICHARD, BASIL RATHBONE (no less), DENNIS KING, AKIM TAMIROFF (!), UNA MERKEL (!!!), and a very young GEOFFREY HOLDER as the Genie! Lawdy, Lawdy. It was pretty soundly dismissed by the critics, even though it was given a sumptuous production (by the standards of the day, of course). The score isn't top-flight, but there are some cute tunes like the "Emperor's" "Wouldn't It Be Fun not to be wealthy...", "Opportunity Knocks But Once at Thuh Door" and "No Wonder Taxes are High". The ballads aren't great.

Yeah, I know it's not going to change anyone's trip to China. But it does address the thread's original query.
Updated On: 8/28/11 at 08:37 PM

TheatreDiva90016 Profile Photo
TheatreDiva90016
#16Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 9:25pm

HOT MIKADO:

"If you want to know who we are,
We are gentlemem of JAPAN."




Yes. I guess a sarcasam font is needed...


"TheatreDiva90016 - another good reason to frequent these boards less."<<>> “I hesitate to give this line of discussion the validation it so desperately craves by perpetuating it, but the light from logic is getting further and further away with your every successive post.” <<>> -whatever2

PennybankBill Profile Photo
PennybankBill
#17Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 10:29pm

Umm... CharlesJGuiteau, A Little Night Music is based on the film SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT made by legendary SWEDISH director Ingmar Bergman.

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PennybankBill
#18Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 10:31pm

Umm... CharlesJGuiteau, A Little Night Music is based on the film SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT made by legendary SWEDISH director Ingmar Bergman, It's not set or based on anything from Scandinavia.

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givesmevoice
#19Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 10:41pm

Umm... CharlesJGuiteau, A Little Night Music is based on the film SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT made by legendary SWEDISH director Ingmar Bergman, It's not set or based on anything from Scandinavia.

Except that Sweden is in Scandinavia.


Oh, and I love Patti LuPone's recording of "Come to the Supermarket in Old Peking" on her Live album.

Wiki page on Scandinavia


When I see the phrase "the ____ estate", I imagine a vast mansion in the country full of monocled men and high-collared women receiving letters about productions across the country and doing spit-takes at whatever they contain. -Kad
Updated On: 8/28/11 at 10:41 PM

nomdeplume
#20Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 11:06pm

If you have a choice, I would experience the art, history and culture of Bangkok over Hong Kong any day. The arts, crafts, etc. in Thailand are outstanding. Their music is great. The cuisine far exceeds Chinese cooking. I was wowed. You can ride elephants and tour ancient temples. Buddhist monks wandering all over the country in their saffron robes, just doing their thing. Lots of rivers and boats you can ride with super views.

You hear about Hong Kong and Singapore all the time but they are crowded financial and shopping centers. Hong Kong is expensive and no bargain; shopping is better in NYC. The Communists who have moved there in droves have hurt whatever charm the culture used to have from its British days. Has an interesting History of Hong Kong Museum and when you see the pic of Prince Charles' face of dismay during the handover ceremony of the colony to the Communists you'll understand what's happened to the place. Singapore is a little better but a borderline fascist state. Has a nice Asian Civilizations Museum.

I only saw Beijing from the air and it was so ugly and gray with nothing but rows and rows of what looked like big factory warehouses. It made me not ever want to visit. Now I know you'll want to see the Great Wall and the Emperor's Palace and the Terracotta Army and all that, so I don't mean to disillusion you and I hope you have a great time. Updated On: 8/28/11 at 11:06 PM

PennybankBill Profile Photo
PennybankBill
#21Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 11:15pm

Right......Do-Over?

(Un-crumples paper and stands in front of podium)
"I apologize for my poor knowledge of Geography. I would also like to apologize to the many Scandinavians whom I have hurt with my aforementioned knowledge. That is all."

(A stream of reporters flood the podium with mics, cameras, and pencils and pads aplenty.)

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Elphie3
#22Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 11:16pm

Is "Pacific Overtures" Japan or China?


Madame Morrible: "So you take the chicken, now it must be a white chicken. The corpse can be any color. And that is the spell for lost luggage!" - The Yellow Brick Road Not Taken

givesmevoice Profile Photo
givesmevoice
#23Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 11:28pm

Japan.

I take it you're unfamiliar with the show.


When I see the phrase "the ____ estate", I imagine a vast mansion in the country full of monocled men and high-collared women receiving letters about productions across the country and doing spit-takes at whatever they contain. -Kad

nomdeplume
#24Can anyone suggest a musical set in China?
Posted: 8/28/11 at 11:58pm

For airlines, I highly recommend the top-rated discount carrier Air Asia which is Malaysian. (You can probably fly that from HK to Beijing.) You have to pay for food or bring your own. You get 30 pounds (15 kilos) carry-on luggage free and have to pay a little surcharge for check-in luggage of an extra 20 kilos. But the price is super, especially if you can catch one of their sales. Cebu Pacific is also a good discount carrier which I have also flown several times.

A flying tip, don't fly the U.S. carriers to Asia. The major Asian carriers have newer planes and better service, at least for now. Use your mileage to fly those carriers instead, which is a deal. I have had great experiences with JAL, ANA (top Japanese carrier), Cathay Pacific and Korean Air. I would also like to fly these highly-rated carriers which I have not yet flown: Singapore Airlines and Thai Airways.

Beware customs in Vietnam. A friend had a camera or cell phone stolen recently from his luggage he believed by their corrupt customs workers. Hand carry all valuables there especially.

Another tip. Watch your time of year if flying to Southeast Asia because it can get very hot, so check average daily temperatures and recommended times to go. Check TripAdvisor for recommendations of where to stay (read the reviews). Stick to the top-rated ones who are rated by many visitors and you should have less worry of theft at your lodging. Book near to your sightseeing destinations. Always get A/C and non-smoking rooms. You can generally get breakfast included free so you don't have to hunt down breakfast before you head out for the day. They'll even advertise American breakfasts which is much better than Continental which is basically only coffee and a croissant or some such rot.

TripAdvisor is also helpful for sightseeing, but be aware that some of the reviews are fakes, or can be written by people who have no cultural interests. I have found some of the pans in the reviews, though, to be very honest, accurate and funny!

If you do go to Hong Kong, stay in the old Kowloon area, or not too far from there. You'll see cheap 5-star hotels advertised but they are far away from the things you may want to do and see.