TV Producer Appreciates the Hard Work that Goes Into the DPA Performance

Mrs. Wouters said that the show was “very colorful” and that the music sounded “very familiar.”
TV Producer Appreciates the Hard Work that Goes Into the DPA Performance
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ANTWERP, Belgium—Divine Performing Arts (DPA) dazzled an enthusiastic audience at the Stadsschouwburg theatre on Monday, Feb. 23 in Antwerp, Belgium.

Mr. Wouters, a producer in a regional TV station, attended the show with his wife.

Watching the show for the first time, Mr. Wouters appreciated the amount of hard work that goes into making a show as high caliber as the DPA performance.

“It is all smooth, and they [performances] are beautiful,” he said.

Mrs. Wouters said that the show was “very colorful” and that the music sounded “very familiar.”

She said she also liked the fact that the hosts introduced the background of each of the performances before they started.

One of the trademarks of DPA is story-based dances that convey the deeply moral and spiritual traditions of ancient China through dramatizing cherished Chinese myths and legends as well as epic modern-day events.

When asked if they would come to see the show again next year, Mr. Wouters said “definitely.”

“If there is a next one we would like to come. We like culture, so we come for sure.”

Also attending the show was Mr. TerWelle, sales manager with an international union.

He said he was most impressed with the choreography and the music, a composition that fuses the best of Western and Chinese instrumentals.

“It brings two cultures [closer] to each other,” he said.

  For more information, please visit DivinePerformingArts.org 

 

Nicolas Schols
Nicolas Schols
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