국립무용단 ‘향연’ 공연 실황 | National Dance Company of Korea ‘The Banquet’
국립무용단 ‘향연’ 2015 12 5 -12 6 , 국립극장 해오름극장 공연 실황 제작진 제작 국립극장, 국립무용단 안무 조흥동, 연출 정구호, 협력안무 김영숙·양성옥, 음악감독 박재록, 편곡·지휘 유인상, 조안무 윤성철·문창숙 © 2015 국립극장 본 영상물의 무단 전재, 복제 및 배포를 금합니다 The Banquet National Dance Company of Korea National Theater of Korea ‘The Banquet’, choreographed by Cho Heung-dong, master of Korean traditional dancing and produced by Jung Ku-ho, an active creator in diverse fields of art and culture, is a high quality Korean traditional dance performance where 12 types of traditional dancing are combined in the omnibus format with sophisticated sensibility While maintaining the original format of Korean traditional dancing, the show attempts to give life to the contemporariness of Korean dancing by dismantling and reorganizing the structure of the dancers and the on-stage elements to suit the modern aesthetics The first act, (Spring), starts with the court dancing that announces the beginning of the banquet, the second act, (Summer), features religious dancing based on the rite of prayers and the third act, (Autumn), provides a variety of traditional dancing The last act, (Winter), has ‘Sintaepyeongmu’, a sequence of dancing representing the wish for the days of reign of peace While [Korea Fantasy] put the female dancers at the spotlight, ‘The Banquet’ applied equivalent arrangement to male and female dancer groups to add energy and dynamism Cho Heung-dong, the choreographer of ‘The Banquet’ is admittedly one of the dancers who expanded the role of male dancers and widened their expressive realm Jung Ku-ho, the producer of ‘The Banquet’ who is active in different fields such as fashion, movie and performances, applied his own sensibility to the show to turn it into the performance of traditional art that the contemporary audience can enjoy His stage aesthetics that amplifies impressive contrast of colors on a minimalistic stage make the Korean dancing stand out even more ‘Sintaepyeongmu’ that completes the stage consisting of ‘Obangsaek (five main colors)' by applying each of the five colors often found in Korean dancing shows to individual elements such as stage floor, clothing, props and video clips is literally the representative part of ‘The Banquet’ The stage circling in 360 degrees while 24 dancers plays ‘Ogomu(five drum dance)' thereon will provide the magnificent scene where colors and dancing mingle in harmony © 2015 National Theater of Korea All rights reserved