SHEN YUN PERFORMING ARTS REVIEWS

Shen Yun Brings Spirituality and Tradition to the World

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Shen Yun Brings Spirituality and Tradition to the World
Sheryl Kingston and Craig Hanley at the Shen Yun Performing Arts performance at Keller Auditorium, Portland, Ore., on March 19, 2022. Frank Zhang/The Epoch Times
PORTLAND, Ore.—The audience loved Shen Yun Performing Arts at the Keller Auditorium on March 19. Craig Hanley, a computer scientist, and Sheryl Kingston, who works as a receptionist in a carpet store, enjoyed the performance. Mr. Hanley, who had been waiting two years to see the performance because of the lockdowns, liked that Shen Yun took a stand against communism.
Shen Yun Performing Arts is based in New York and was formed by artists escaping from communist-run China to form a music and dance company. It brings to the world a taste of what Chinese traditional culture was like before communism took over and destroyed it.

Mr. Hanley, who grew up in Germany, said traditions are important, especially in the modern world. “I think we have gotten too far in technology. I like [the] traditions in Germany.”

Ms. Kingston agreed. “I think that if we don’t learn from history, it’s just going to repeat [it] in the future.”

Mr. Hanley said Shen Yun can “bring hope back to the world through tradition. I mean going back to basic things that make people happy.” He noted the dance “where people had cell phones and were bumping into each other. They are so self-absorbed. The further back you go in time, the happier people were.”

It’s just nice to be able to get out, and be with people and socialize.
Craig Hanley
Ms. Kingston enjoyed just the fact of coming to a performance. “It’s just nice to be able to get out, and be with people and socialize.”
She would definitely encourage people to come. “This is a magnificent show. It’s full of talent and amazing dancers, and it’s really well done.”

Spirituality Connects Us All

Eric Leong, the chief inpatient psychiatrist at Good Samaritan Medical Center, enjoyed the performance with Anna Leong, a professional jewelry buyer, who said the performance was very inspirational. “I loved the combination of Western music and ancient Chinese music.”
Anna Leong and Eric Leong attend the Shen Yun Performing Arts performance at the Keller Auditorium, Portland, Ore. on March 19, 2022. (NTD)
Anna Leong and Eric Leong attend the Shen Yun Performing Arts performance at the Keller Auditorium, Portland, Ore. on March 19, 2022. NTD

Mr. Leong, who is a Chinese American, said, “There’s a lot about Chinese culture that I don’t know” and was impressed by the artistry of the dances. His family had left China before communism took over, but he heard many horror stories about it. “It’s good to see that ... a lot of the culture from before communism has been preserved. That’s the best thing.”

Mrs. Leong noted the contrast in the dances. “I love the combination of strength and weakness, strong and soft. Those contrasts in Chinese culture were very, very inspiring to me. I love the symbol of the plum tree, being the symbol of spring and strength. That’s a beautiful symbol.”

She also noted how spirituality “connects all people that live on this planet.” Whatever a person’s belief, the Divine is above, Mrs. Leong said.

“As a psychiatrist, I believe that there’s more to us than just our physical bodies and our brains. There’s our spirit as well, which is beautiful, and it connects us all as people,” Mr. Leong said.

“It’s a testimony of strength, spirituality, and art, all in one. That’s Shen Yun. That’s what it [meant] to me,” Mrs. Leong said.
Reporters Frank Zhang, NTD and Yvonne Marcotte.
The Epoch Times is a proud sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts. We have covered audience reactions since Shen Yun’s inception in 2006.
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