I watched Bai Xianyong's side shot for the second time in the documentary, and watched the number of performances of "The Peony Pavilion for Youth" climb up again and again. Taiwan was full, China was full, and the United States was also full. A traditional and possible The withered culture seems to have spread in a new way. When I saw this, I thought of the young man who was shaken by classical literature for the first time, and was ecstatic because of the ideas between the words. That current-like enlightenment is unforgettable, and if I really want to describe it, it should really be the so-called love that doesn't know where it came from, but it goes deeper.
The purpose of art's existence is not necessarily telemarketing list practical, but it is to depict the most fragile and soft but also the most touching thoughts and feelings of human beings. When I watched "The Peony Pavilion", I didn't seem to be watching "The Peony Pavilion" itself, but the warm and mature cultural height behind it. After spending a lot of time understanding Western literature, I always look back at this point, and I almost forgot about the quaint Oriental love. It has to be expressed in such a shy and tactful way. Unforgettable. When interviewing documentary director Deng Yongxing, Hong Kong's "Duan Media" said: "His (Bai Xianyong) life is too splendid. I accompany him and let him take us for a walk in the garden of his life." I am nameless.
The public is not a family from other provinces who retired to Taiwan in 1949, not a gay group who is madly in love but deeply hurt, nor is it a big woman who is locked in a house. I rely on and comfort. "Beautiful Purple" condenses Bai Xianyong's works and life into a tender record to "transform the silent pain in the human mind into words". The pain may never go away, and the knots in the hearts of generations cannot be solved in an instant, but these texts can help readers understand the pain that a person has undertaken in his short life. And use this as a starting point to forgive others and yourself with a more humble and compassionate heart.