National Theater and Concert Hall, Taipei

National Theater and Concert Hall, Taipei
National Theater and Concert Hall
Address 10048 Chung-Shan South Road
City Taipei
Country  Republic of China
Architect Yang Cho-cheng
Opened 1987
www.ntch.edu.tw/english/
National Theater
National Concert Hall
The pipe organ in Taiwan's National Concert Hall was the largest in Asia when installed in 1987.

The National Theater (Chinese: 國家戲劇院) and National Concert Hall (Chinese: 國家音樂廳) are twin performing arts venues in Zhongzheng District, Taipei, Taiwan. Completed in 1987, they are Taiwan's primary national performing arts venues. The landmarks stand, respectively, on the south and north sides of Liberty Square in front of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall. Together the structures are referred to by the acronym NTCH serving as facilities of the National Chiang Kai-shek Cultural Center. The square itself sits near Ketagalan Boulevard, the Presidential Office Building and National Central Library.

Contents

History

Taiwan's National Theater and National Concert Hall are two of the first major performing arts facilities to be established in Asia. Upon the death of Chiang Kai-shek in 1975, the Kuomintang government authorized the construction of a monument and cultural arts facilities on the grounds of a memorial plaza. The project cost TWD 7 billion.

Yang Cho-cheng and Architects and Engineers Associates were responsible for the overall design. The buildings, though modern in function and purpose, recall traditional elements of Chinese palace architecture. The G+H Company of Germany and Philips, based in The Netherlands, played leading roles in the design of the interior facilities, stage lighting and acoustics. Civil engineering issues were handled by Ret-Ser Engineers Agency (RSEA) and Engineering Corporation. Six directors oversaw the project from initial planning sessions to final completion: Jou Tsuo-Min, Chang Chih-liang, Liu Feng-shueh, Hu Yao-heng, Li Yen and Chu Tzung-ching.

The structures were completed on September 20, 1987, and officially opened their doors the following month as venues of the “National Chiang Kai-shek Cultural Center.” Vice President Lee Teng-hui and Premier Yu Kuo-hua presided over the opening ceremonies for the two buildings on October 31, 1987.

Taiwanese society made a peaceful transition from one-party authoritarian rule to pluralistic democracy in the 1990s. In 1999, the Ministry of Education under the administration of Lee Teng-Hui, Taiwan's first elected president, consolidated the governing bodies of the National Theater and Concert Hall with those of the National Symphony Orchestra, National Chinese Orchestra and National Chorus. In 2004, this larger organization became an autonomous executive juridicial body, the National KCS Cultural Center, headed by an artistic director who reports to a board of directors.

Each structure can host at least two events simultaneously. The National Theater contains a smaller Experimental Theater and the National Concert Hall holds a more intimate Recital Hall. Outdoor performances can be staged simultaneously on the square. The pipe organ by Flentrop Orgelbouw in the National Concert Hall was the largest organ in Asia at the time of its installation in 1987.[citation needed] Both structures house art galleries, libraries, shops, and restaurants. The National Theater houses a Performing Arts Library and publication offices for Taiwan's Performing Arts Review.

National Theater and Concert Hall, like all performing arts venues in capital cities, play diplomatic as well as artistic roles. Guests regularly include top elected leaders in Taiwan as well as international artists and dignitaries. Visitors over the years have included Margaret Thatcher of the UK, Mikhail Gorbachev of the USSR, Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore, Rafael Calderón Muñoz of Costa Rica and former First Lady Betty Ford of the U.S.[1]

Artistic Life

Apo Hsu and the NTNU Symphony Orchestra on stage in the Taiwan's National Concert Hall.
Thousands gather outside National Concert Hall to watch the broadcast of a performance inside by Sir Simon Rattle and the Berliner Philharmoniker.

The National Theater and Concert Hall host a constant stream of events by local and international artists each year.

Performers who have appeared in the National Theater include the Cloud Gate Dance Theatre, The Kirov Ballet, the Suzuki Company of Toga and its director Tadashi Suzuki, Yang Li-hua Taiwanese Opera, the Ming Hwa Yuan Theater Troupe, the Fei Ma Yu Opera Troupe and Pili Heroes, kabuki performer Bandō Tamasaburō V, stage director Robert Wilson, and dancers Martha Graham, Merce Cunningham, Rudolph Nureyev, Pina Bausch, Trisha Brown, Liu Feng-hsueh, Lin Hwai-min, Lo Man-fei, Yu Hao-yen and Liu Shao-lu.[1]

International performers in the National Concert Hall have included composers Philip Glass and Samuel Adler and Fredrick Ernest, sopranos Jessye Norman, Barbara Hendricks and Mirella Freni, tenors Placido Domingo, José Carreras and Luciano Pavarotti, baritone Bryn Terfel, violinists Pinchas Zukerman, Hilary Hahn and Akiko Suwanai, cellists Mstislav Rostropovich and Yo-Yo Ma, pianists Ruth Slenczynska, Tatiana Nikolayeva, Fou Ts'ong and Vladimir Ashkenazy, conductors Simon Rattle, Günther Herbig, Sergiu Celibidache, Michael Tilson Thomas, Apo Hsu, Helmuth Rilling and Lorin Maazel. Ensembles include the Juilliard String Quartet, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra and the Vienna Boys Choir.[2] Concerts by visiting orchestras are often broadcast to overflow crowds numbering in the thousands who fill the Square. Taiwanese ensembles that regularly appear in the hall include the National Symphony Orchestra, the Evergreen Symphony Orchestra, the Taipei Symphony Orchestra, the National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra, the Taiwan National Choir, the Formosa Singers, and the Taipei Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus.

Artistic styles and traditions from across the world are represented in the halls' events, including kabuki theater, Shakespearean drama, Taiwan opera and puppet drama, Verdi opera, African dance, Beijing opera, Broadway shows, Wagnerian music drama, American jazz, Parisian comic opera, and Latin dance. Both venues are the site of a variety of festivals and special events, including the Taipei International Arts Festival, a series of International Arts Festivals ("Call Out in Ecstacy", "Poetic Essays with Lively Meanings"), the British Theatre Festival, the Chinese Drama Festival, the Taipei Film Festival. The buildings regularly provide a backdrop to events on Liberty Square, including visits to Taiwan by foreign leaders and the annual Taipei Lantern Festival.[2] The Classic 20 festival in 2007-2008 commemorates the twentieth anniversary of the halls. The festival season features visits by Tadashi Suzuki, Philip Glass, Robert Wilson, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and the Deutsche Oper am Rhein as well as Taiwan's Cloud Gate Dance Theater (雲門舞集), Yang Li-hua Taiwanese Opera (楊麗花歌仔戲), Performance Workshop Theater (表演工作坊) and New-Classic Dance Company (新古典舞團).[3]

Nomenclature

The standard abbreviation NTCH (National Theater and Concert Hall) refers to the Cultural Center in its entirety. NCH (National Concert Hall) refers to the concert hall alone.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "About Us: History". National CKS Cultural Center. http://www.ntch.edu.tw/englishAbout/showHistory. Retrieved 2007 July 31. 
  2. ^ a b Official Site: National Theater and National Concert Hall "National Theatre and Concert Hall". National CKS Cultural Center. http://www.ntch.edu.tw/ Official Site: National Theater and National Concert Hall. Retrieved 2007 July 31. 
  3. ^ Noah Buchan (2007 March 4). "Country's top arts venue turns twenty". Taipei Times (taipeitimes.com): p. 19. http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2007/03/04/2003351005. Retrieved 2010 December 8. 

External links

Coordinates: 25°2′6″N 121°31′5″E / 25.035°N 121.51806°E / 25.035; 121.51806


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