Tsedrob, excited about the coming premiere, adds that he hopes the audience will see Tibetan tap dance as it truly is, both in style and in spirit.
At the heart of the production lies a fundamental shift — from viewing dance as a stand-alone performance to embracing it as a narrative language. The creative team says the work tries to preserve the cultural roots of traditional Tibetan tap dance, while pushing choreography, staging and dramatic expression further. The result is an attempt to give the old folk art new life on the contemporary stage.
Director Wei Dong says the idea initially seemed almost impossible: selecting one highly recognizable style from Xizang's many regional dance traditions and transforming it into a full-length drama. The team built the structure around a precise rhythm, "a small climax every three minutes and a bigger one every five", while ensuring the movement vocabulary remained grounded in Tibetan forms.