SHEN YUN PERFORMING ARTS REVIEWS

Shen Yun ‘A Really Incredible Experience,’ Says Publisher

Apr 08, 2023
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Shen Yun ‘A Really Incredible Experience,’ Says Publisher
Tasha Kheiriddin and Dean Baxendale enjoyed Shen Yun at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, in Toronto, on April 7, 2023. (Andrew Chen/The Epoch Times)

TORONTO, Canada—As a publisher, Dean Baxendale has published several books on China and its ruling communist regime. He was delighted when he first saw last year’s Shen Yun Performing Arts performance. He returned to see Shen Yun—which puts on an all-new production each year—this year at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts in Toronto on April 7.

It’s just a really incredible experience, you know, uplifting spiritually. It speaks to civilization and humanity. Just the ancient tradition that, unfortunately, the Chinese Communist Party has really suppressed over the last 70 years,” Mr. Baxendale said.

He said that the performance was visually stunning.

“The choreography is beautiful. The backdrops and use of the modern video make it quite, quite entertaining. A very, very interesting presentation,” said Mr. Baxendale, who attended this performance with Tasha Kheiriddin, a writer who brought friends and family.

“I think it’s absolutely beautiful,” said Ms. Kheiriddin.

“I love the costumes and the fluidity of the dancers, the movements, the acrobatics,“ she said. ”The story about the current situation in China made me cry; it was beautiful and emotional.”

Breadth and Depth of Chinese History

New York-based Shen Yun is the world’s premier classical Chinese dance company. Since its inception in 2006, it has grown to have eight touring groups set to visit nearly 200 cities this season.
Each performance shows the breadth and depth of China’s 5,000-year history, with ancient histories and legends from various dynasties and dances from some of the 50-plus ethnic minority groups across China.

Mr. Baxendale was happy to see the Tibetan dance, as he had just returned from a visit to the Himalayas the week before.

“It was absolutely beautiful to see the different types of dances and the different parts of China as well,” Ms. Kheiriddin said.
Mr. Baxendale and Ms. Kheiriddin applauded Shen Yun’s efforts to revive this culture and shine a light on the traditional culture that the communist regime in China has tried to destroy.

“It is, I think, [a] representation of what so many people don’t know here, but what happens behind the scenes, and it’s something that has to be told so that people are aware and call out the government to call on them to stop. If the world doesn’t stand up for human rights, they won’t have any,” said Ms. Kheiriddin.

Mr. Baxendale said, “It’s everyone’s cause. Humanity is what we should be looking to preserve.”
Ms. Kheiriddin felt Shen Yun was especially effective in this, as it used the universal language of art.

“I often think when people are touched by art, they can feel the emotions behind the facts of the stories. And I think that’s what you see here. I think the audience was very moved by it,” she said.

Ms. Kheiriddin said she was moved to tears in a scene portraying the situation in China today.

“I think it has to be shown, and this way, it touches people. It makes them really understand it, feel it inside,” Ms. Kheiriddin said.

She added that Shen Yun’s artistic portrayals could help “bring some change and stop these things from happening.”

“I think it’s very important to understand because people have one vision of China ... but there’s so much culture and history that came before, and to see that come alive makes it very real and makes it living,” she said.

“It’s also so beautiful to see that rich history is still alive; it’s very special. And I think it’s wonderful. You don’t see it anywhere else.”

Reporting by Andrew Chen and NTD.
The Epoch Times is a proud sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts. We have covered audience reactions since Shen Yun’s inception in 2006.
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