Date:
Ongoing from February 22, 2007 through March 3, 2007.
See details for exact dates and times.<BR/>
Location: Memorial Auditorium
http://campus-map.stanford.edu/index.cfm?ID=08-300<BR/><BR/>
<p>Two theater groups are mistakenly booked into the same theater for rehearsal. One is performing Secret Love, a serious contemporary drama; the other is performing the farce In Peach Blossom Land. The two groups fight for the stage, and eventually resign to sharing it. In between, madness ensues, and a mysterious woman roams about the theater searching for a man who may or may not exist…What happens in a methatheatrical collage, a structured chaos, a meeting point of modern Chinese politics, ancient visions, tragedy, and rollicking comedy.</p>
<p>Secret Love In Peach Blossom Land is arguably the most famous play in the modern Chinese language theater. Created in 1986 by Stan Lai and his Taipei-based theater group Performance Workshop, this landmark play has touched the heartstrings of Chinese audiences everywhere, and has now been adapted for Stanford audiences.</p>
<p>Directed by the playwright Stan Lai.</p><BR/>
Ongoing from February 22, 2007 through March 3, 2007.
See details for exact dates and times.<BR/>
Location: Memorial Auditorium
http://campus-map.stanford.edu/index.cfm?ID=08-300<BR/><BR/>
<p>Two theater groups are mistakenly booked into the same theater for rehearsal. One is performing Secret Love, a serious contemporary drama; the other is performing the farce In Peach Blossom Land. The two groups fight for the stage, and eventually resign to sharing it. In between, madness ensues, and a mysterious woman roams about the theater searching for a man who may or may not exist…What happens in a methatheatrical collage, a structured chaos, a meeting point of modern Chinese politics, ancient visions, tragedy, and rollicking comedy.</p>
<p>Secret Love In Peach Blossom Land is arguably the most famous play in the modern Chinese language theater. Created in 1986 by Stan Lai and his Taipei-based theater group Performance Workshop, this landmark play has touched the heartstrings of Chinese audiences everywhere, and has now been adapted for Stanford audiences.</p>
<p>Directed by the playwright Stan Lai.</p><BR/>
