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Facial Makeups Represent Different Characters
For the painted role, the different colors of
the faces represent different characters and personality. Yellow and white
represent cunning, red stands for uprightness and loyalty, black means
valor and wisdom, blue and green indicate the vigorous and enterprising
character of rebellious heroes and gold and silver represent mystic or
super-natural power.
A plastic art peculiar to the Chinese stage,
the facial makeups are various designs of lines and coloured patches painted
on the faces of certain operatic characters. They follow traditionally
fixed patterns for specific types to highlight the disposition and quality
in the personages so that the audience may immediately know whether they
are heroes or villains, whether they are kind or treacherous and wicked.
The following describes briefly the major categories of facial makeups:
The red face shows bravery, uprightness and loyalty. A typical "red
face" is Guan Yu, general of the period of the Three Kingdoms (220-280)
, famed for his faithfulness to his Emperor, Liu Bei.
The reddish purple face likewise shows a just and noble character, for
instance, Lian Po in the well-known play Jiang Xiang He (The General Reconciled
with the Chief Minister), in which General Lian was proud and impetuous
and quarrelled with the chief minister to whom he was ultimately reconciled.
The black face indicates either a rough and bold character or an impartial
and selfless personality. Typical of the former are General Zhang Fei
(of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms) and Li Kui (of Water Margin), and
of the latter is Bao Gong (alias Bao Zheng), the semi-legendary fearless
and impartial judge of the Song Dynasty.
Commonly seen on the stage is the white face
for the powerful villain. It highlights all that is bad in human nature:
cunning, craftiness, treachery. Typical characters are Cao Cao, powerful
and cruel prime minister in the time of the Three Kingdoms, and Qin Hui,
treacherous Song Dynasty prime minister who put the national hero Yue
Fei to death.
All the above facial makeups belong to a category of characters collectively
called Jing--all males with pronounced personal traits.
For the clowns of traditional drama, there is a special makeup called
Xiaohualian (the petty painted face), i.e., a small patch of chalk on
and around the nose to show a mean and secretive character, such as Jiang
Gan of the Three Kingdoms who fawned upon Cao Cao. It is also occasionally
painted on a young page or an ordinary workingman, often to enhance his
wit, humour or jesting and to enliven up the performance.
Another type of players , called "acrobatic clowns" (wuchou),
are also touched up with a tiny patch of white on the tip of the nose
to show an astute mind, a keen and quick wit. Several of the stage heroes
from the novel Water Margin are made up in this way.
The facial makeups date a long time back to the Song (960-1279) and Yuan
(1271-1368) dynasties at least. Simple patterns of painted faces are found
in tomb murals of that age. During the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), improvements
were made in the skills of drawing and in preparing the paints, leading
to the whole set of colourful facial patterns that we see in today's Peking
Opera.
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