2010 Tour dates announced for the stage production of Little Leap Forward: A Boy in Beijing

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Written and directed by Alison Duddle and based on the book Little Leap Forward: A Boy in Beijing, written by Guo Yue and Clare Farrow, the stage production of Little Leap Forward is touring again this Spring in the United Kingdom. Click here to see the tour dates and here to read Marjorie’s post from last year when she went to the show. Little Leap Forward is presented by the Horse + Bamboo Theatre Company in creative partnership with Barefoot Books Ltd and The Royal Exchange Theatre. With set design by Bob Frith, the production incorporates mask, puppetry, shadows and animation with original music by Loz Kaye. The music also includes the distinctive flute playing of Guo Yue (recorded).

Little Leap Forward: A Boy in Beijing has been selected for the 2010 Spirit of PaperTigers Book Set. A wealth of information about the book can be found here on our PaperTigers main website.

Little Leap Forward on stage!

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Last night we all jumped in the car after school and raced to Leeds to go and watch the beautifully crafted staging of Little Leap Forward. Adapted from the book, by Guo Yue and Clare Farrow, illustrated by Helen Cann and published by Barefoot Books, it tells the story of events from Yue’s own childhood set against Mao’s Cultural Revolution in China.

A powerful combination of masked actors, puppets and shadow-box/animation, not to mention an atmospheric score and cleverly versatile set, the story is told “only” through mime. We followed Little Leap Forward’s dawning awareness of the importance of freedom, both through the political events unfolding around him and through his love for a songbird captured for him by his best friend. No matter how much Little Leap Forward coaxes and bribes with seeds, the bird cannot sing from within the confines of a cage. A “scary” dream sequence that had Little Brother on the edge of his seat alerts Little Leap Forward to what he has to do and he sets the bird free.

I have to say that this particular performance will be looked back on by us – and probably by the cast – with very mixed feelings. There was a group of children in the audience from a local School for the Deaf, who were entranced – picking up enough of the vibrations of the music to get a feel for it, and able to particpate fully in the action on stage. Wonderful. However, the first three rows were taken up by a youth-group outing and it very soon became evident that the children did not know how to behave in a public, live performance. All the more credit to the production, then, that in the scene when Red Guards arrest Little Leap Forward’s mother (an event related in Guo Yue and Clare Farrow’s book for adults, Music, Food and Love), there was not a sound from the auditorium.

Afterwards, the four actors/puppeteers gave (more…)