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The world of heavy metal collides with classical music in “Bright & Black”, presented by the Baltic Sea Philharmonic and its groundbreaking conductor Kristjan Järvi at the 52nd Hong Kong Arts Festival in 2024. Photo: HKAF

Hong Kong Arts Festival 2024 highlights – Van Gogh set to music, ballet from Teatro alla Scala, Angelique Kidjo’s return, a full-length The Peony Pavilion

  • Immersive Van Gogh with the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the Bavarian State Opera in Richard Strauss’ Ariadne auf Naxos – festival promises a feast for arts fans
  • The Teatro alla Scala ballet company will perform Le Corsaire, there’s Peking opera Shakespeare, a 55-scene The Peony Pavilion and Grammy winner Angélique Kidjo

Audiences have come to expect at least a few big spectacles at the annual Hong Kong Arts Festival: opera, ballet and preferably, a few world-famous stars performing.

The 52nd arts festival, which will take place in February and March 2024, will not disappoint, says Grace Lang, programme director.

“This is the first fully back-to-normal edition since the pandemic. We are bringing back advance booking since the full line-up can be confirmed by October.

“And we are bringing shows that were delayed from when the Hong Kong borders were shut, as well as new commissions and touring productions that reflect the way the world has changed in the last few year,” she says.

Yo-Yo Ma, Lang Lang among highlights of Hong Kong Phil’s 2023/24 season

Big-budget showcases include the Bavarian State Opera’s version of Richard Strauss’ Ariadne auf Naxos, the ballet company of Milan’s Teatro alla Scala performing Le Corsaire, an immersive audiovisual experience that combines Van Gogh’s paintings with music performed by the Netherlands Chamber Choir, and an inventive combination of classical music and heavy metal by the Baltic Sea Philharmonic.

Other spectacles include Peking opera pioneer Wu Hsing-kuo’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and the Shanghai Kunqu Opera Troupe’s performance of the complete, 55-scene classic The Peony Pavilion.

Peking opera pioneer Wu Hsing-kuo and his Contemporary Legend Theatre will appear in the 52nd Hong Kong Arts Festival with a daring adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar”. Photo: HKAF

“There are financial pressures after the pandemic. Sponsors are inevitably affected by the economic downturn and costs such as air tickets and hotels have gone up a lot.

“At the same time, the five-year, HK$40 million (US$5.1 million) [Hong Kong] government grant received by the festival in 2018 to help nurture local talent has just expired,” says Flora Yu, executive director.

Still, the festival has managed to bring over large troupes by partnering with other cities who can share the cost of an Asia tour, she says.

The 2024 highlights also include Peter Brook’s Tempest Project, the final work by the legendary British theatre director before he died in 2022, and Canadian theatre master Robert Lepage’s Courville, a magical telling of his own life story using Japanese puppets, live actors and dazzling stage effects.
The 52nd Hong Kong Arts Festival will include a family-friendly performance by American multimedia artist Miwa Matreyek, who will appear as a shadow silhouette interacting with an animation about humans and nature. Photo: HKAF

American multimedia artist Miwa Matreyek will appear as a shadow silhouette interacting with animation in a family-friendly performance about humans and nature.

Five-time Grammy-award winner Angélique Kidjo will be returning to Hong Kong, as well as Belgian immersive theatre Ontroerend Goed.

The festival will also feature a number of cross-border collaborations involving Hong Kong artists.

Singer Angelique Kidjo will be making a return to Hong Kong for the 52nd Hong Kong Arts Festival in 2024. Photo: HKAF

August Strindberg’s Miss Julie, adapted by Hong Kong-born, London-based playwright Amy Ng, will be transplanted to 1940s Hong Kong under the direction of Tony Wong. And the trio behind the 2021 musical The Impossible Trial are joining a director from China, He Nian, for I Am What I Am, an adaptation of a popular Chinese animated film about lion dancing that will come to the Hong Kong Arts Festival after its world premiere at the Guangzhou Opera House.

The full programme of the 52nd Hong Kong Arts Festival will be announced in October. Visit https://www.hk.artsfestival.org/ for more details.

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