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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2008/03/22/2003406699 A walk in the clouds U-Theatre, the Taipei-based drumming performance group, sets off on a mammoth walkabout tomorrow to mark the group's 20th anniversary
by Diane Baker
A very long walk. Around Taiwan. Fifty days, 100 townships, 1,200km, plus about 30 performances big and small along the way. After all, this is a company whose motto could be summed up as "no pain, no gain." The company, founded by Liu Ruo-yu (劉若瑀), is internationally renowned for its drumming, thanks to the work of drumming master and musical director Huang Chih-chun (黃誌群). In Taiwan, it is also known for taking very long walks. In 1996, the troupe walked from Kenting to Taipei, a 28-day journey. The following year, they walked from Ilan to Taipei. In 2003, they went to Tibet, where they walked the traditional pilgrims' path to and around Mount Kailash, the mountain revered by Hindus, Buddhists and others as the heart of the universe.
"I was checking my e-mail and the Internet and saw the news that some people were walking in Taiwan [for the Democratic Progressive Party]," he said in an interview on March 15. "But our walk will be very different. We will bring our drums; we want to make connections - for the environment, for education - to inspire people."
The company hopes its walk will help inspire people to make a commitment to improve their lives, their communities, the country, to show they care. U-Theatre wants to show people that there are some things they can devote their time to, their lives to, he said.
So U-Theatre has invited its friends and fans to join the troupe on the walk, either for a few hours, a few days, or for a hardy few (the limit is 10) the entire 50 days. Kuo said the best leg for people who want to join the walk would be the fourth section from Hualien to Taitung.
The company will post the starting point for each day's walk on its Web site (www.utheatre.org.tw), although only on the Chinese-language page. U-Theatre has had a relatively short period of time to pull this project together, but Kuo said people and companies around the country have been calling up with offers to help.
The Eslite Books chain store offered to host a photographic exhibition of U-Theatre's performances at some of its premises in Taipei, Taitung and Tainan. The company also has outfitted a truck to turn it into a traveling bookstore that will follow the company on the walk, taking books into small towns that don't have an Eslite branch.
While the show in Taipei was up for just one week and closes tomorrow, the Eslite branch in Taitung will host the exhibit from April 4 to April 20 and the Tainan branch will host it from April 25 to May 11. The PCA Life Assurance company is contributing both walkers on the first full day of the walk and sponsoring a performance in Nantou on the return leg of the journey. The head of the company was in the audience for the performance U-Theatre gave in Taipei's Da'an Forest Park to mark the conclusion of its 1996 walk and she has been a fan ever since. "They [the insurance firm] have been supporting an orphanage in Nantou for a year and in three years she [the firm's president] wants to raise NT$15 million [US$489,000] for the orphanage. So we are very happy to be a partner with them," Kuo said, citing the company as an example of people and groups who are doing something for their community. U-Theatre will kick off its birthday tour tomorrow when its members walk from the group's home on Laoquanshan (老泉山) in Muzha to the Eslite bookstore on Dunhua South Road, where the walkers are expected to arrive at 11am. At 2:30pm there will be a small ceremony to formally start the expedition. The company will then walk to Da'an Forest Park, where at 7:30pm its members will perform what Kuo calls "a small gathering, not a full performance." Going to Da'an Forest Park was important because it was the ending point for the troupe's first big walk in 1996, so it seemed the right place to begin the new circle that is this year's walk. U-Theatre members will then return home to get ready to hit the road for real on Monday, heading to Ilan. They will head down the east coast to Hualien and Taitung before cutting through the mountains to Pintung County and then onto Kaohsiung, the halfway point. The company is working with the national Police Radio Station [警廣, FM104.9] to help ensure the safety of the walkers. The station will be giving traffic reports, telling drivers where the company is heading and what road they are walking on. It will also announce the performances. For fans that just want to see and hear the troupe, there will be several opportunities over the next month and a list of the shows is posted on the U-Theatre Web site. The company has revived its 1996 production Sound of the Ocean (聽海之音) for this tour and there will be a full performance in Kaohsiung on April 19 to mark the halfway point in the walk and one on May 11 in the Taiwan Democracy Memorial Plaza in Taipei City to mark the journey's end. Excerpts from the five-part show will be performed in smaller venues along the way. This year's walk will be a challenge, Kuo said, but it is meant to be uplifting.
"We want people to enjoy it, so we are calling it 'A Cloud Walk,'" he said.
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