chimney_swift: Illustration of chimney swift (bird) against blue sky (Lion Dance)
2019-04-23 05:46 pm

A Look Back at Chinese New Year

Finally! Two months later, a quick write-up of the craziest Sunday I've had this year by far.

A note: I'm referring to this celebration as Chinese New Year or CNY. This holiday is not exclusive to the Chinese, however. The lunar new year happens in many Asian countries, and is celebrated in many ways (including with lion dance! in Vietnam, the lions become unicorns, how cool). This specific event draws on Chinese customs in Boston Chinatown, and while it's definitely open to all, it's also definitely aimed at the Chinese communities in the area. So I'm using CNY as my term, but generally, it's lunar new year.

My day started at eight thirty in the morning at our den, where the whole troupe gathered to get ready for the day and to coordinate for the volunteers who would arrive. I brought two volunteers: my friends Snowy and Plover who acted as photographers and videographers all day. The photos in this post are all Snowy's, actually! There were bao for breakfast and nearly forty people in bright red troupe sweatshirts and maybe twelve of us from the performing side. We got our drum, our cymbals, our gong, our crowd control sticks, our banners, and our lions and headed out.

The way the day works is that each lion dance troupe performs on main-stage performance, and then heads out into Chinatown. We each visit every shop in the area who is participating and dance for them, bringing good luck. Each store has cabbage and oranges for the lion to eat, and in return they give us money in a red envelope. The lion performing can't stop dancing until the day is done, so we would switch out who was dancing underneath. The day for us ended at four thirty/five, and everyone who was left went to a ten course dinner. I don't think any of the performers ate lunch; there was no time and we were running on adrenaline.

It was magical. I'm not really sure how to convey everything that happened that day. There was so much and it all felt so much bigger than me. It was wonderful and overwhelming and tiring and awesome.

I think I really realized how the day was going to go when we were walking to the main stage. All of the different lion dance groups were converging on the outdoor performance space that had been set up, so everyone had all their performance lions and their troupe banners. I hadn't realized just how big the banners are--maybe eight feet tall--and we walked down the empty street with our banners and our lions and our music and all of the sudden you could hear different drums and cymbals and see different banners and I suddenly understood that we were all arriving. And I was a part of it.

I went to sleep with cymbals still in my ears.

It was the most satisfying and fulfilling community event I've ever been part of in Boston.

Some of Snowy's photos of the day are under the cut. )
chimney_swift: Illustration of chimney swift (bird) against blue sky (Lion Dance)
2019-03-02 05:21 pm

Happy New Year! Gong Xi Fa Cai! Gong Hei Fat Choy!

I made it!

A month ago, I mentioned that the lion dance troupe I'm in was about to kick into high gear. Well, we sure did! Here are some highlights from a month of dancing.

The first weekend, we did one performance out at a shopping center/outdoor mall and one at a local library. Lion dancing brings good luck and prosperity for the new year, so many businesses request a troupe to perform. The shopping mall sounded like a fun opportunity...but then they asked us to do way more than we originally thought, and barely paid us! The library was way more fun. Tons of kids to interact with and a good practice for our bigger performances.

The next weekend was our performance at the Museum of Fine Arts, for their lunar new year celebration. It's one of our biggest performances, and we actually do our routine twice. It was so cool to show off all our hard work. New for this year was a drumming piece that I was in, which was very cool. Every year we have a "mainstage" performance that's one lion doing really cool stuff, usually following a story and a "general" performance that's two or three lions doing a standard routine. MFA was our first chance to perform all of the different parts, and it went super well. The audiences were great, and during our first performance, I nailed my lift! I'd been working with my partner on it for months.

The next weekend we went out to the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem for their lunar new year celebration. We only do one performance there, but we bring our "cubs", the children's troupe to perform. They did an amazing job, and I got my lift again!

In between all that, we also performed for a Whole Foods; some supermarkets; a Buddhist temple; and the Bruins! And then we had our big day. I think I'll split off Chinatown's CNY into its own post so this one doesn't get too long. :)

Some assorted photos under the cut... )
chimney_swift: Illustration of chimney swift (bird) against blue sky (Lion Dance)
2019-02-01 05:02 pm
Entry tags:

Lion Dance!

It begins!

So I'm a member of a lion dance troupe. Lion dance, if you don't know, is a traditional Chinese dance. It's most often done as part of celebrations and to give good luck, and it draws a lot from kung fu. Here's a pretty cool YouTube video of some very impressive lion dancing. We're not that good or crazy, but our best members can do some pretty cool moves.

Yesterday, we had our first performance to celebrate Chinese New Year. New Year is a big time for lion dancing, because it's a big time for good luck. Many, many places want a lion to come and perform to bring luck to them for the new year ahead. As such, we're swamped. I'm booked three weekends in a row both Saturday and Sunday with performances, and we have a couple mid-week as well. But this will be the first year that I get to perform with the group properly. Last year I just played cymbals, and couldn't make the big CNY celebration in Boston Chinatown. This year, I'm in a lion for a bunch of performances, and I'll be at CNY--if not in a lion, at least there! I'm very excited.