Huang Ruo's `The Monkey King' to get world premiere at San Francisco Opera on Nov. 14
'I was just thinking, wouldn't it be nice to have a superhero figure from Asia so all these kids could have something from that part of the world to wear, to look up to?' the composer said.
He decided to write "The Monkey King,' based on an episode from the 16th century Chinese novel 'Journey to the West' in which a primate born from stone acquires supernatural powers and seeks immortality. The work, with singing in English and Mandarin, will be given its world premiere by the San Francisco Opera on Nov. 14, the company announced Tuesday.
San Francisco Opera general director Matthew Shilvock issued the commission following the success of Bright Sheng's 'Dream of the Red Chamber,' which the company premiered in 2016. Librettos of both were written by David Henry Hwang, whose 'M Butterfly' won the 1988 Tony Award for best play.
'We were looking at how do we continue building this repertoire of pieces that really resonate with an Asian American audience here in San Francisco but have the potential to cross the Pacific and find resonance in Asia, as well,' Shilvock said.
Ruo's compositions include 'Bound,' which premiered at the Houston Grand Opera in 2014, and 'An American Soldier,' first seen at the Washington National Opera later that year. He is composing 'The Wedding Banquet,' based on Ang Lee's 1993 movie, to appear at New York's Metropolitan Opera in 2027-28 following its premiere at the Seattle Opera.
Ruo wrote 'The Monkey Key' in part as a response to discrimination during the pandemic.
'That was during the time that Asians and Asian Americans were being harassed,' he said. 'I thought it would be good to have some positive energy.'
There will be eight performances through Nov. 30, including a livestream on Nov. 18. Diane Paulus directs a production with scenic design and puppetry by Basil Twist. The title character is presented in three ways: by a singer, a dancer and a puppet. Tenor Kang Wang makes his company debut in the title role.
San Francisco's season opens Sept. 5 with a revival of Verdi's 'Rigoletto' in a production originally by Mark Lamos from 1997, led by music director Eun Sun Kim and starring Amartuvshin Enkhbat, Adela Zaharia and Giovanni Sala.
Jake Heggie's 'Dead Man Walking' opens Sept. 14 in new-to-San Francisco Leonard Foglia staging from 2002 to mark the 25th anniversary of its world premiere in San Francisco. Jamie Barton is featured as Sister Helen, and Susan Graham, who sang Helen in the premiere, is Mrs. Patrick De Rocher.
A new production of Wagner's 'Parsifal' directed by Matthew Ozawa opens Oct. 25 with a cast that includes Brandon Jovanovich, Kwangchul Youn and Brian Mulligan.
Rossini's 'Il Barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville)' starts the spring season on May 28, 2025, in an Emilio Sagi production from 2013 and will be followed by Strauss' 'Elektra' starting June 7 in a Keith Warner production originally seen at the Prague National Theatre in 2016 and San Francisco the following year.
The six productions match 2024-25 and are down from eight in 2023-24. Shilvock anticipates a $15 million structural imbalance in this season's budget that projects $87 million in expenses, a difference that will be covered by a greater reliance on endowment. San Francisco sold 79% of tickets for its fall season, 3% above goal, and its average audience age has dropped.
'I do take a huge amount of optimism and encouragement,' Shilvock said. 'The core relationship of audiences to the artistic product is the strongest I've ever seen it.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pop Mart shares rise 12% as Labubu maker announces stellar profits and new doll
Shares in Pop Mart soared over 12.5% in daily trading in Hong Kong on Wednesday after the Chinese company released stellar earnings. The creator of the Labubu doll saw its revenue jump 204% year-on-year in the first half of 2025, coming in at 13.88 billion yuan (€1.66bn). Net profit soared 386% to 4.68bn yuan (€559.39 million), beating forecasts. Around 40% of sales were made up by purchases outside of mainland China thanks to the international appeal of the firm's Labubu brand, part of its 'The Monsters' range. "The Monsters" brought in 4.81bn yuan (€574.99mn) in the first half of the year, accounting for 34.7% of total revenue. The elf-like dolls have become a viral sensation, boosted by the endorsement of celebrities like Dua Lipa, Kim Kardashian and David Beckham. Part of the attraction is that the toys are sold in blind-box packaging. This means that customers don't know what they have purchased until they open the product. Although the firm was created back in 2010, Pop Mart launched its first blind-box series in 2016. The popularity of the range allowed the company to list in Hong Kong in December 2020, achieving a market capitalisation of around €6bn. Since the IPO, shares have risen by over 300%. Related Labubu: Has the TikTok-led obsession over these 'creepy' dolls gone too far? Thieves make off with $7,000 in Labubu dolls as toy craze sparks smash-and-grab in LA Pop Mart opened its first European store in London in January 2022, hoping to expand in overseas markets. Today, the company operates around 2,600 vending machines and almost 600 stores across the globe, meaning Labubu dolls can be bought in more than 30 countries. Given the demand for dolls, Pop Mart is now considering expansion in the Middle East, Central Europe, and Central and South America. The firm operates around 40 stores in the US, with 10 more sites expected to open by the end of 2025. In an earnings call on Wednesday, CEO Wang Ning also said that Pop Mart would this week launch a new, mini version of Labubu that can be attached to phones. Wang added that his firm was on track to meet its 2025 revenue goal of 20bn yuan (€2.39bn), noting that '30bn this year should also be quite easy'. Some analysts have nonetheless raised doubts over the sustainability of the company's rise, driven by social media sites like TikTok. 'The craze for the elf-like Labubu dolls is translating into big profit and cash flow,' said AJ Bell head of financial analysis, Danni Hewson. ''Consumers can be capricious when it comes to this type of fad though and Pop Mart will have to work hard to build on this success if it is to avoid being a one-hit wonder.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Jamie Lee Curtis Goes Viral for Low-Cut Top In New Video
Jamie Lee Curtis' appearance in a new social media video, promoting her new film Freakier Friday, has become a hot topic of discussion. The 66-year-old Hollywood veteran sported a look that unveiled a new side to the actress that had never been seen before. Over the years, she has adopted a versatile fashion style, including suits and casual clothing, for various events. The movie was released in theaters across the United States on August 8, 2025, and received positive reviews from critics. It is a sequel to 2003's Freaky Friday and features Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan reprising their roles as Tess and Anna Coleman, respectively. Jamie Lee Curtis wears low-cut top in new video Disney recently uploaded a new video on TikTok, promoting Freakier Friday's release. In it, Jamie Lee Curtis can be seen wearing a low-cut grey top, encouraging viewers to check out the film in theaters. The clip was interspersed with footage from the film. 'Come see Freakier Friday,' Curtis tells viewers. 'The same level of nostalgia, and joy, and laughter, and happiness, and tears, and friendships, are being enjoyed again now 22 years later.' The Halloween star continued, 'You're going to join with a big group of people who are finding something really sweet at the end of the summer to remind them what it is to be alive.' 'I'm just privileged that I get to take you on the ride,' she concludes. 'And so thank you.' The video went viral on social media, and fans could not help but fawn over Curtis' appearance. 'Jamie Lee Curtis always was a baddie,' a fan wrote. 'WOAHHHHHHH,' another added. 'Heeeeeyyyy Ms. Curtis,' one user commented. One fan shared that they could not 'focus on anything else' in the video, outside of the Oscar winner's appearance. They wrote, 'Im sorry, but I could not focus on anything else, respectfully of course.' Freakier Friday is currently playing in theaters across the United States. The film currently has a 73% fresh and 93% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. Nisha Ganatra directed the film from a screenplay penned by Jordan Weiss, who also co-wrote the story with Elyse Hollander. Besides Curtis and Lohan, the film's cast includes Chad Michael Murray, Manny Jacinto, Mark Harmon, and Julia Butters, among others. The post Jamie Lee Curtis Goes Viral for Low-Cut Top In New Video appeared first on Mandatory. Solve the daily Crossword


National Geographic
3 hours ago
- National Geographic
What do your dreams reveal about you? It depends where you're from.
Lu Chin's mid-16th century painting entitled "Zhuangzi Dreaming of a Butterfly." Zhuangzi was an influential Chinese philosopher who lived around the 4th century BCE during the Warring States Period, a period corresponding to the philosophical summit of China's Hundred Schools of Thought. Photograph by CPA Media Pte Ltd/Alamy Stock Your dreamscape is the land where anything is possible. One minute you're walking through a beautiful meadow—and the next you're falling to your death over a cliffside. Your teeth may fall out for no apparent reason, or you may see a snake slither out the corner of your eye. The average adult spends roughly a third of their life asleep, which means there are plenty of opportunities for our minds to experience these personalized dreamscapes. But do dreams actually mean anything? That depends on who you ask. 'Anthropologists say that if you understand what a given group believes about dreaming, you have understood their whole [culture],' says Robin Sheriff, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of New Hampshire. Western psychologists like Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung have popularized some of the most well-known ideas about dream interpretation, but these doesn't necessarily align with how experts in fields like anthropology and folklore understand dreams. Here's what you need to know about dream interpretation and how your culture may influence what a dream means to you. What is dream interpretation? Dream interpretation can be traced back to ancient Rome and ancient Egypt, but Sheriff says the practice likely has roots in prehistoric cultures without written records. Before dream science, also known as oneirology, was developed, dream interpretation was a cultural practice that could connect people to cultural ancestors or spirits. 'Dreams held deep significance in traditional Chinese culture…particularly within a supernatural worldview where ghosts, spirits, and ancestral souls were believed to actively participate in human affairs,' said Ze Hong, an assistant professor of evolutionary biology at the University of Macau who has researched Chinese dream interpretation from an evolutionary perspective. Dreams were often regarded as meaningful channels of communication from the spiritual realm, capable of revealing hidden truths or predicting future events, Hong says. In ancient Rome, records show that dreams were seen as divine communications from the gods, and dream oracles played an important role in interpretation. Hong says this kind of practice also existed during China's Zhou Dynasty, which lasted between 1046 B.C. to 256 B.C. Hong explains that oneiromancy, the practice of divinatory dream interpretation, became widely used to provide insight into personal relationships, illness, and even political decisions. However, this practice has declined in popularity over Chinese history, said Hong, particularly by the end of the Imperial era in the early 1900s. The connection between dreams and the spiritual realm is something that anthropologist Roger Lohmann also found while studying the dreaming culture in Papua New Guinea. Though Westerners might view dreams as purely metaphorical, Lohmann, an associate professor of anthropology at Trent University in Ontario, Canada, says dreams in Papua New Guinea can be interpreted as a parallel journey that your soul went on while you slept. This meant that dreams could be interpreted as being prophetic or revealing hidden information, Lohmann said. He recalls sleeping in a village near the border of Indonesia and waking up from a nightmare about his research notes catching fire. (This is the story of the world's oldest nightmare.) 'I interpreted that [dream] as an expression of my anxiety about that something going wrong with my computer,' he said. '[But] I told the story to a man who was visiting me that morning and he said 'Oh, you better watch out. Be very careful with the fireplace,' because he interpreted that dream to mean something that's likely to happen in the future.' The guidelines for interpreting dreams in Western cultures today typically come from psychologists Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. The father of psychoanalytic theory, Freud wrote in 1900 that dreams represent the dormant wishes of our subconscious and could be a way to carry out repressed instinctual, or even hypersexual, desires. Over the next six decades, psychologist Carl Jung proposed his own interpretation of dream theory that says dreams might be a conversation between our conscious and subconscious selves. Jung, who had a complex friendship with Freud, believed that instead of revealing repressed desires, our dreams are meant to process our waking problems and find potential solutions. (The brilliant women of psychiatry who were overshadowed by Freud and Jung.) Jung's dream theory also includes the idea of a collective subconscious, which suggests dreams can be interpreted in a symbolic way through distinct archetypes, such as the hero, the mother, and the trickster. According to Jung, these archetypes could be found across cultures and had universal meanings. However, this theory is quite different from what anthropologists have found when studying the importance of dreams and their meaning across cultural contexts. Interpreting dream symbols across cultures Depending on what culture you are dreaming in, common themes or symbols can have drastically different meanings. Take a snake, for example. In Western cultures familiar with Freud, dreaming of a snake may be interpreted as something potentially sexual, Lohmann suggested, or Jung himself wrote of snakes as representing power or danger, declaring that a 'state of instinctual hell is represented as a snake with three heads.' Hindu interpretations, however, suggest that dreaming of snake could foretell wealth and fertility—if you're eating it in the dream, at least. Hopi and Pueblo tribes in the American Southwest also link fertility to snake dreams, although particularly in relation to agricultural cycles and the fertility of land. On the other hand, Pentecostal Christian communities in Zambia may interpret that snake in your dreams as proof of the devil. There isn't a set interpretation of snakes in the traditional Chinese practice, said Hong—Chinese dream interpretations were more likely to be concerned with more culturally significant symbols such as dragons or suns, signs of divine favor. But some historical documents suggest that a pregnant women dreaming of snakes once would have predicted the birth of a son—or, contradictorily, also a daughter. Do dreams mean anything? A person will have countless dreams in their lifetime, but that doesn't necessarily mean that all dreams are equally important. By the end of the Imperial period, which was right around when Freud and Jung were forming their dream theory, Hong said that it became popular to view the origins of dreams as supernatural and related to a person's psychological state. 'For instance, dreams caused by 'overthinking during the day' were often dismissed as uninterpretable and meaningless,' he said. (You can learn to control your dreams with lucid dreaming. Here's how.) In the Western tradition, how much or how little a dream means is up to the person having or interpreting the dream. 'Dreams, like poetry and art, offer ways to think about human experience,' Sherrif said. 'There may be better or worse interpretations or analyses but we have no objective means of ascertaining their accuracy.'