LOUISVILLE, Ky.—After wanting to come see Shen Yun Performing Arts for years, Tim McClain, a children’s dentist, was finally able to make it on April 29.
“I thought the show was magnificent,” Mr. McClain said.
Shen Yun uses classical Chinese dance as its vessel to tell stories from Chinese history, literature, myth, and legend. Mr. McClain enjoyed the dance stories, “Pigsy Joins the Journey” and “Story of Village Boy and the Fairy.”
“They had the story of the star-crossed lovers ... it was really fun to see. It’s fun to just watch some folklore play out,” he said.
One dance that left a deep impression on Mr. McClain was the ‘Water Sleeves.’
“It’s magnificent. They were replicating the effects of water with their sleeves. They had their sleeves going up and down, and it really created just a really good effect to what they were trying to accomplish,” Mr. McClain praised.
Shen Yun’s live orchestra is a unique combination of traditional Chinese instruments and a classic Western ensemble.“[Shen Yun] implemented Western instruments with Chinese instruments, and there was a lot of synergy there,” Mr. McClain said.
“It was great. The person who played [the erhu], of all the performers at the very end. ... She got the loudest applause, which was very impressive what she did,” Mr. McClain remarked.
Shen Yun’s singers are trained in bel canto technique, and the digital backdrop provides a translation of the Chinese text being sung.“I like the concept that they said. We lived with divinity before. And we came to this earth, to experience parts of that divinity so that we could eventually return to the divinity itself,” Mr. McClain said.
He was also drawn to the text that touched on the moral deficiencies of today’s society.