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Xiangsheng Master Jiang Kun |
Jiang Kun
was born in 1950 in Beijing. He took to literature when he was a primary school
pupil, and joined dramatic activities organized by the local Children's Palace.
At the age of 18, he went to the countryside and joined the Heilongjiang
Province Production and Construction Corps, but he never gave up his amateur
Cultural activities. In 1976, he was transferred to the Central Broadcasting
Recitation and Ballad Troupe as a Xiangsheng actor He studied under Ma Ji
in his spare time. Before long, another actor in the troupe, Li Wenhua, became
his partner in performing cross-talk comic dialogue. In 1999, he founded a
well-known website for Chinese literature and became the first person that
promotes Chinese Quyi culture via the Internet. He is now a national
grade-A actor in the Chinese Broadcasting Recitation and Ballad Troupe.
Taking Photos, which he wrote himself, reflects the ultra-"left" atmosphere
during the Cultural Revolution. It established his position in the field of
Xiangsheng. Since the 1980s, he has performed a number of cross-talk
comic dialogues with Li and other partners, including Poems, Songs and
Love, The Story of the Nose and Watching Television. His most
popular items are those written by Xiangsheng writer Liang Zuo and
performed together with Tangjiezhong. They are Reverie in the Jaws of
Death, Front Page News and An Adventure in an Elevator. These
vividly portrayed the state of mind of ordinary people in the early period of
reform and opening to the outside world. These items are called
Xiangsheng which reflect social psychology. As the items compiled and
performed by Jiang Kun mainly deal with the joys, contradictions, aspirations
and helplessness of people who find it hard to keep abreast of the times, so it
is very hard to classify his items by the usual rules in the categories of
satire and praise.
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Jiang Kun (left) and Li Wenhua in a cross comic dialogue
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Compared with his seniors, Jiang Kun has a more
original performing style and pays more attention to entirety in terms of the
expression of the content of his performances. His performances have little
trace of deliberately showing off his special talent, for he puts more stress on
harmony.