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Shandong Kuaishu
Shandong Kuaishu is a form of Quyi arts with most of its contents spoken during performance. It originated in the reigns of Daoguang and Xianfeng (early 19th century) in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) in Linqing and Jining areas of East China's Shandong Province and popular in northern China and Shandong. Shandong Kuaishu was then popularly called Wu the Second or Telling Stories about the Big Fellow, for the storytelling artists mainly performed the story of Wu Song's Fight with the Tiger, a figure in the classical novel Shui Hu (Outlaws of the Marsh).
Shandong Kuaishu is performed in Shandong dialect and performers usually stand while singing. During the performance, performers often make use of gesture and eyes and exaggerated body language to build dramatis personae and, at the same time, pay much attention to humor and creation of suspense. Most Shandong Kuaishu lyrics are seven-character lines with a humorous language and vivid scenario, and performers use exaggerated expression and speak in quick rhythms. The art form is especially suited to tell heroic stories and describe acrobatic fighting in Chinese operas or dances. In the early period, most performers used two tiles to beat time, later ferula or armor plates and now copperplates.
In the early 1950s, Shandong Kuaishu was introduced into Beijing and Tianjin, and it was still performed in Shandong dialect. The humorous performing style got recognized by audiences and quickly spread to different places in northern China.

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