The story appears on

Page A8-9

January 4, 2020

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Feature » People

Out of poverty, into spotlight: a farmer’s passion for local opera

GUO Wenying slips into her costume, dons a headset, tests her microphone and belts out traditional local opera in front of her 34,000 online followers.

Guo, 57, is a farmer in Loufan County, north China’s Shanxi Province. The county was mired in poverty for decades and only recently bid farewell to financial hardship.

“I was just making ends meet and didn’t have the time and energy to focus on music,” Guo said. “But I did want to stick with my hobby, which is singing and performing the Shanxi Daoqing, a historical opera.”

Currently, the average per capita annual income in Loufan has exceeded 7,500 yuan (US$1,077), according to the latest government figures.

“Now I can perform every day because there are no more financial worries,” she said. “I feel happy.”

Since she was a child, Guo’s passion grew for the Dao­qing opera. The musical form originated from the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) and local rural dwellers popularized it in the province. Performers usually wear colorful costumes and sing in local dialects.

Guo became a Daoqing performer in her village at the tender age of 17. She would swagger on stage and sing her heart out to the crowds during traditional festivals.

“I was a cool kid,” she said.

In the 1970s and 1980s, money was tight, and performing alone wasn’t enough to get by in a poor county like Loufan.

“After I got married, I spent all my days doing chores, growing crops and taking care of my husband and kids,” she said. “I couldn’t afford to go on stage again.”

For many years, she ate yams and cornmeal every day. A huge mountain separates the village from the nearest town, and Guo would have to walk for up to eight hours just to buy supplies.

In 1990, farmers made 328 yuan a year in the county, according to the local government. Guo was 28 years old that year. Her husband was the only one making money, and she had to attend to her two sons and daughter.

“Life was really, really hard,” she said.

As China’s anti-poverty campaign gained steam, Loufan authorities began to bolster the local agriculture and rural tourism, liberating people like Guo from hardship. Last year, the county officially lifted itself out of poverty.

With improving conditions, Guo has more time to take up her singing hobby again. This time around, she has moved her stage from the open air to the Internet.

“I saw someone live-streaming on their phone once, and I quickly learned how to do it,” she said. “I used to live for others, but for the first time in my life, I feel like living for myself by live-streaming myself singing.”

To improve her performance, Guo spent about 7,000 yuan on equipment, including a microphone, a stereo system and a smartphone.

“I perform in my costumes for my followers every day,” she said. “They feel like family.”

Sometimes she sings about Taoist stories, shares anecdotes about historical royal families and advocates benevolence. Besides the opera, she also broadcasts herself toiling in the field and making local specialties. She goes live even when she goes traveling.

“Many people don’t know what the countryside looks like, so live-streaming helps them understand,” she said. “This also brings you many, many followers.”

China’s increasing prosperity has improved seniors’ quality of life, and enhanced their self-awareness, said Xing Yuan, a professor of sociology with Shanxi University.

“Guo’s story highlights their need to search for their own values and spiritual pursuits,” Xing said. “It is also the result of the soaring Internet economy.”

Through live-streaming, Guo rakes in more than 1,000 yuan a month. For the new year, she has made a resolution: to reach 50,000 followers.

“I want to hang out more with my friends in the opera community to improve my performing skills,” she said. “I also want to take my parents to tour Shanghai.”




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend