Lion Dance
(06)
...During the Chinese New
Year, lion dancers from martial art school will visit the store
front of businesses to "choy chang" (採青
lit. picking the greens).
The business would tie a red envelope filled with money to a head of
lettuce and hang it high above the front door. The lion will
approach the lettuce like a curious cat, consume the lettuce and
spit out the leaves but not the money. The lion dance is supposed to
bring good luck and fortune to the business and the dancers receive
the money as reward. The tradition becomes a mutual transaction.
Other types of "greens"
(青)
may also be used to challenge the troupe, for instance using
pineapples, pomelos, bananas, oranges, sugar cane shoots, earthern
pots to create pseudo barriers and challenges.
The dance also performed at
other important occasions including Chinese festivals, business
opening ceremonies and traditional weddings.
Nowadays, the businesses do
not demand much from the performers, and it is easy money for the
martial art schools. In the old days, the lettuce was hung 15 to 20
feet above ground and only a well-trained martial artists could
reach the money while dancing with a heavy lion head. These events
became a public challenge. A large sum of money was rewarded, and
the audience expected a good show. Sometimes, if lions from multiple
martial arts schools approached the lettuce at the same time, the
lions are supposed to fight to decide a winner. The lions had to
fight with stylistic lion moves instead of chaotic street fighting
styles. The audience would judge the quality of the martial art
schools according to how the lions fought. Since the schools'
reputation were at stake, the fights were usually fierce but
civilized. The winner lion would then use creative methods and
martial art skills to reach the high-hanging reward. Some lions may
dance on bamboo stilts and some may step on human pyramids formed by
fellow students of the school. The performers and the schools would
gain praise and respect on top of the large monetary reward when
they did well.
During the 1950's-60's,
people who joined lion dance troupes were “gangster-like” and
there was a lot of fighting amongst lion dance troupes and kung fu
schools. Parents were afraid to let their children join lion dance
troupes because of the “gangster” association with the members.
During festivals and performances, when lion dance troupes met,
there would be fights between groups. Some lifts and acrobatic
tricks are designed for the lion to “fight” and knock over other
rival lions. Performers even hid daggers in their shoes and clothes,
which could be used to injure other lion dancers’ legs, or even
attached a metal horn on their lion’s forehead, which could be
used to slash other lion heads. The violence got so extreme that at
one point, the Hong Kong government had to put a stop to lion dance
completely. Now, as with many other countries, lion dance troupes
must attain a permit from the government in order to perform lion
dance. Although there is still a certain degree of competitiveness,
troupes are a lot less violent and aggressive. Today, lion dance is
a more sport-oriented activity. Lion dance is more for recreation
than a way of living.....