Artist Profile: Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu

“Good techniques can’t just be achieved through mechanical practice. You have to think about the angles, directions, and trajectory to get the best results.”
Artist Profile: Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu
Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu performs during the NTD Television International Classical Chinese Dance Competition. (Edward Dai/The Epoch Times)
Amelia Pang
7/26/2012
Updated:
8/14/2015
<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Liu_Xinyi_Cindy.jpg"><img class="wp-image-270901" title="Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu" src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/Liu_Xinyi_Cindy-299x450.jpg" alt="Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu" width="328"/></a>
Ms. Xinyi Cindy Liu

Adorned in a pristine white costume, Xinyi Cindy Liu dashes forward into a walkover—a flip with hands—while raising ivory, sequined handkerchiefs that represent snowflakes.

“That was easy because the handkerchiefs are still in my hands,” she jokes.

Ms. Liu tosses her handkerchief, which whirls high into the air. She does another walkover, and gracefully meets the flying handkerchief, catching it on cue.

“You have to throw it with a certain momentum and a certain speed,” she said. “And catch it on the right beat of the music from the live orchestra that may be faster or slower than the previous day.”

Ms. Liu said she was assigned with just about every difficult technique there was in the dance—Snowflakes Welcoming Spring.

She completed 85 shows when performing in practicum with Shen Yun Performing Arts during tour this year, and all without a single dropped or tangled handkerchief.

“I found some tricks to that. I have to really calm myself before I do it so I have a good starting point,” she said. A great performer needs to have the skill of keeping calm while hundreds of eyes are watching one’s difficult solo.

“It comes with the years of experience. I don’t get as nervous on stage anymore,” she said.

Ms. Liu is the award-winning lead dancer performing in practicum in Snowflakes Welcoming Spring, a dance in Shen Yun Performing Arts’ 2012 program. Shen Yun is a classical Chinese dance company based in New York, with a mission to revive 5,000 years of Chinese culture.

Classical Chinese dance requires more technical aspects than ballet, including a variety of tumbling, flips, and jumps.

Amongst the group of world class dancers, choreographers find that Ms. Liu is particularly strong in her techniques.

“I’m normally always selected to do the techniques,” she said.

While other distinguished dancers may get to the top by working hard, Ms. Liu does a little more than just practicing overtime.

“Good techniques can’t just be achieved through mechanical practice. You have to think about the angles, directions, and trajectory to get the best results,” she said.

Ms. Liu uses mathematical and physical axioms to improve her techniques. “I discovered that for any kind of leap, the best liftoff jumping angle for achieving the maximal horizontal distance is indeed an angle of 45 degrees.”

Ms. Liu says that coordination is a big part of it. “I’m pretty coordinated so I’m good with techniques. But I like to think a lot, so that helps with portraying characters.”

Portraying the feeling behind the dance moves is an essential aspect of classical Chinese dance. It is expressed through bearing, or the inner spirit of the ethnic Chinese flavor that focuses on the internal spirit, breath, persona, and deep emotional expressions.

Bearing is closely tied to a deep understanding of the Chinese heritage.

Apart from training and rehearsals, Ms. Liu enjoys reading about Chinese history in her spare time. “There’s so much there that you can never get through it all. Reading helps extend my understanding of traditional Chinese culture,” she said. “There’s a whole cultural process of building the movements.”

<a href="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/MG_1124_CindyLiu.jpg"><img class="wp-image-270880" title="CindyLiu" src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/07/MG_1124_CindyLiu-315x450.jpg" alt="CindyLiu" width="300" height="429"/></a>
CindyLiu

Amelia Pang is a New York-based, award-winning journalist. She covers local news and specializes in long-form, narrative writing. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in journalism and global studies from the New School. Subscribe to her newsletter: http://tinyletter.com/ameliapang
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