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Cantonese opera traditions must be protected as it modernises

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Cantonese opera veteran Yuen Siu-fai plays the emperor (front centre) on stage at Ko Shan Theatre. Photo: K.Y. Leung

Cantonese opera - and its conservation in this city - has come a long way since veteran Yuen Siu-fai and like-minded fellow artists set up an independent troupe in 1970 to ensure its survival and stop the traditional performance art becoming overly commercialised.

The Group of Hong Kong Experimental Cantonese Opera was the first of its kind to receive financial support from the then colonial administration.

Today, the art form is getting the attention it deserves. As Hong Kong's item on Unesco's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, Cantonese opera receives support through an advisory committee and a development fund set up by the Home Affairs Bureau in 2006.

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There is a permanent exhibition on Cantonese opera at the Heritage Museum in Sha Tin, and two public performance venues at Yau Ma Tei Theatre, and Ko Shan Theatre, which opened a new wing in October.

The auditorium in the new wing of the Ko Shan Theatre.
The auditorium in the new wing of the Ko Shan Theatre.
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Cantonese opera was incorporated into the music curriculum of primary and secondary education in 2003.

Yuen continues to be an advocate for the preservation of Cantonese opera, a highly stylised dramatic format that has been popular in southern China since the 13th century.

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