Shen Yun Performing Arts
  • Over Shen Yun
    De Voorstelling
    Is Shen Yun nieuw voor u?
    9 eigenschappen van Shen Yun
    Klassieke Chinese dans
    Symfonie Orkest
    Factsheet
    Shen Yun
    Ons verhaal
    Het leven bij Shen Yun
    De uitdagingen waar we mee te maken hebben
  • Artiesten
  • Video's
  • Wat is nieuw
    Wat is nieuw
    Nieuws
    Blog
    In de media
  • Persberichten
  • Vragen en Antwoorden
  • Recensies van het publiek
  • Ontdek Nieuwsbrief Zoek
    Nederlands
  • English
  • 中文正體
  • 中文简体
  • 日本語
  • 한국어
  • Česky
  • Deutsch
  • Español
  • Français
  • Indonesia
  • Italiano
  • Polski
  • Português
  • Latviski
  • Pусский
  • Română
  • Svenska
  • Việt
  • Melayu
  • עברית
  • Norsk
  • Kaarten & Info
    Menu
    Shen Yun Logo
    Kaarten
    Wat is nieuw
    Menu
    • Over Shen Yun
      • Is Shen Yun nieuw voor u? 9 eigenschappen van Shen Yun Ons verhaal Het leven bij Shen Yun Shen Yun feiten De uitdagingen waar we mee te maken hebben Klassieke Chinese dans Symfonie Orkest
    • Artiesten
    • Video's
    • Wat is nieuw
      • Wat is nieuw Nieuws Blog In de media
    • Persberichten
    • Vragen en Antwoorden
    • Recensies van het publiek
    Shen Yun 9 Characteristics Link Image

    Wat maakt ons uniek?

    ONTDEK DE 9 EIGENSCHAPPEN
    • Ontdek
    • Nieuwsbrief
    • Zoek
    Taal
    • English
    • 中文正體
    • 中文简体
    • 日本語
    • 한국어
    • Česky
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Indonesia
    • Italiano
    • Polski
    • Português
    • Latviski
    • Pусский
    • Română
    • Svenska
    • Việt
    • Melayu
    • עברית
    • Norsk
      Blog
      Terug Blog > Great Expectations

    Great Expectations

    Irony bears much fruit in British wit, and England is full of its orchards. So I’ve humbly concluded after performing in the UK for two consecutive years in two separate locations.

    It started last year when we went to Cardiff, Wales. We had a long drive ahead of us after exiting the Chunnel, and I looked forward to taking souvenir photos of the English countryside. The scenery couldn’t be more picturesque: flocks of sheep grazing on fresh green pastures against rolling hills shrouded in mist. Alas, these first impressions were sorely misleading. The afternoon mists existed via the goodwill of a cloudy sky (read: poor lighting conditions), and I struggled to take pictures through the bus window without a flash. The road we drove on was lined with attention-seeking trees who couldn’t resist getting their faces in front of my camera. As for the sheep, they were all the unwilling victims of country graffiti artists. Entire flocks were color-coded by a giant splotch of spray paint on their woolly sides. Divided by groups of pink, blue, or neon-green, they toddled in the fields like piles of cotton candy with bad dye jobs. A sudden rainstorm precluded further photo attempts.

    With my visions of an idyllic countryside foiled, I turned my hopes elsewhere. This year’s shows in London seemed to promise an authentic English experience. The first morning of our arrival, I went to the hotel breakfast with an expectant, though cautious, air. A prior encounter with “black pudding” (assuredly not made from dairy products) had taught me to be wary. Happily, everything looked like tame fare except for the last item in the buffet line. It was a large, heated, egg-shaped container, filled to the brim with some sort of white soup.

    Milk or melted cheese were my prime suspects. Perhaps it was even a giant pot of white chocolate fondue. Yet none of these items had the thick, lumpy texture of Mystery Liquid X. Then I spotted the bowls of condiments nearby. Peanuts. Pickled vegetables. Dried fish flakes. Freshly chopped onions and a bottle of soy sauce.

    Could...could this be a giant pot of congee?

    Sitting placidly between the bacon and prepackaged Weetabix, the porridge of the East was indifferent to its utter incongruity. Neither did anyone else find it strange. Impossible. Had Chinese rice porridge become a permanent addition to British hotel breakfasts?

    Well, no. It just turned out that our hotel had a (Singaporean) Chinese restaurant.

    All right. The scenery wasn’t what I anticipated. The food wasn’t what I expected. But these were trifling details and did little to mar my memories of Great Britain. Between our shows at the London Coliseum in the heart of London adjacent to Trafalgar Square, my friends and I decided to do some souvenir shopping. Things turned out a bit differently.

    My group entered a lovely English tea shop and left with Brazilian instant coffee and Japanese tea leaves. Another group found themselves entranced with the local Chinatown. A third ended up sipping Starbucks frappuccinos as they wandered the streets.

    After getting two postcards, some key-chains, and a waffle ice-cream cone, I was convinced that the English pound had the toughest reputation in the currency exchange office. With a month left in Europe and still countries to see, it made sense to spend prudently. Yet just before leaving England, we stopped at the duty free shops on the border. I resisted the urge for frivolous goods, resolving to put my money in a safe place—and ended up buying a brand new wallet. In my defense, I have to say that it was made by an established London company. Thus, it’s authentically English while being astonishingly cute and agreeably tax-free—or as the British call it, a sheep deal.

    • Perspectieven van artiesten
    • Regional Snapshots
    • Het leven tijdens de tournee
    • International Cuisine
    Jade2

    Jade Zhan

    Contributing writer

    Bekijk alle posten

    21 april 2011

    Commentaar
    verification

    Vorige

    Sunrise Over the Grand Canyon

    Volgende

    Photoblog: Journey Across Asia-Pacific (1)
    Meest recent
    • Mijn eigen missie
      Jason Zhu Thumb
    • Gingen mijn kinderen maar naar Fei Tian...
      AlWhitted Edit Thumb
    • Mijn Poolster
      Angela Lin Thumb
    • Vriendelijkheid brengt culturen samen
      Nara Oose Thumb
    • Waarden die generaties overbruggen: Toewijding en hard werken
      Lillian Parker Thumb
    Meest populair
    • Alle
    • Nieuws
    • Blog
  • 1 Kennedy Center ontvangt bommelding gericht tegen Shen Yun
  • Zie meer
    Zie meer
    Zie meer

    Tags

    • Perspectieven van artiesten
    • Regional Snapshots
    • Het leven tijdens de tournee
    • International Cuisine
    Shen Yun logo golden
    Shen Yun logo golden

    Shen Yun Performing Arts is een vooraanstaand klassiek Chinees dans - en muziekgezelschap dat is opgericht in New York. Het speelt klassieke Chinese dans, etnische en volksdans, en verhaal gebaseerde dans met orkestrale begeleiding en soloartiesten. Vijfduizend jaar lang floreerde de goddelijke cultuur in het land China. Door middel van adembenemende muziek en dans laat Shen Yun deze glorieuze cultuur herleven. Shen Yun, of 神韻, kan worden vertaald als: "De schoonheid van goddelijke wezens die dansen."

    Over Shen Yun
  • Is Shen Yun nieuw voor u?
  • Shen Yun Symfonie Orkest
  • Het leven bij Shen Yun
  • Shen Yun feiten
  • De uitdagingen waar we mee te maken hebben
  • Shen Yun & Spiritualiteit
  • Ontmoet de artiesten
  • Veelgestelde Vragen
  • Video's
  • Nieuws
  • Over Shen Yun
  • De artiesten
  • Recensies
  • In de media
  • wat is nieuw
  • Hoogtepunten
  • Nieuws
  • blogs
  • Recensies
  • In de media
  • Ontdek
  • Chinese Dans
  • Muziek
  • Zang
  • Shen Yun Kostuums
  • Digitale Projectie
  • Shen Yun Rekwisieten
  • Verhalen en Geschiedenis
  • Shen Yun en traditionele Chinese Cultuur
  • Communiceer met ons
    Volg ons op Gan Jing World
    Teken ons gastboek
    Lees meer over Shen Yun
    op ons streaming platform
    Beoordelingscentrum voor kunstvaardigheid
    Aandenken en premium collecties
    Geïnspireerd door Shen Yun
    Artist Fashion
    Shen Yun Performing Arts officiele website Copyright ©2025 Shen Yun Performing Arts. All Rights Reserved.
    Neem contact met ons op Voorwaarden Privacy Sitemap

    Op ShenYun.com. gebruiken we cookies. Door het gebruiken van deze site accepteert u onze Cookie Policy.