
?ibimbap ?a Korean dish of assorted vegetables with rice and hot
pepper paste -- was the first thing that came to my mind when I was
asked to come up with a performance based on Korean cuisine,?said
Choi Chol-gi, 36, the director of the nonverbal performance ?ibap
Korea.??ibimbap is dynamic in the way it mixes all kinds of
ingredients. I also liked that fact that I would be the first to
make a stage performance out of Korean food.?br>
Choi is already well known for his other two big non-verbal
performances, ?anta?and ?ump,?which have received rave reviews
both at home and abroad. This time he's back with a new kind of
entertainment: ?at-ertainment?as he calls it, which demonstrates
the spirit of mixing and harmony of the Korean dish.
Bibap Korea is funded through the joint investment of CJ
Entertainment and the Ministry of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries, as part of the government's plan to globalize Korean
cuisine -- or Hansik -- overseas.
? needed some powerful movements to express the term ?ibida?(mixing and harmonizing) that is at the root of bibimbap. I also
had to ponder what Korea is good at, to express that vibrancy, too.
All this pointed toward Korean b-boys, currently the reigning world
champions in the field,?Choi said. ? expressed break dancing and
the process of mixing a bowl of ingredients with beat box. I added
a cappella music and a bit of Korean traditional martial arts
movements like taekkyeon, too.?br>

The basic storyline is how
eight young cooks learn the recipe for bibimbap from a master chef.
The sound of sizzling oil, the slicing of vegetables and sprinkling
of condiments trigger the cooks to dance to the rhythm.
Indeed, one thing that sets ?ibap Korea?apart from ?anta?and
?ump?is the music. It is the music that leads the story all
along. Moreover, the dancers will actually demonstrate the making
of a giant bowl of bibimbap. The smell of fresh vegetables, sesame
oil and other food ingredients will most likely stimulate audience,
leaving them to eagerly await the food sampling session that comes
right after the 30-minute performance.
To emphasize bibimbap as a health food, director Choi plans to show
a video of Korea's beautiful scenery together with beat box music,
break dancing and martial arts on the stage.
Bibap Korea will not be performed regularly yet. It will first be
employed as an element of promotional material for Hansik-related
functions or festivals at home and abroad. Commercial performances
must wait, as more time is needed to add details to make the story
richer and longer.
?e plan to bring Korea to international festivals like the Cannes
International Film Festival and other state-run festivals to
promote Korean food,?said Min Eung-gyu, First Vice Minister of
Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. It was he who came up
with the combination of bibimbap and dance.
Choi is equally enthusiastic about his new project, due to his own
love for the food he grew up with. ?henever I go abroad for
performances and don't get to eat kimchi-jjigae (kimchi stew) or
doenjang-jjigae (bean paste stew) I get so upset that I have
trouble concentrating on my work. These days I always pack my
doenjang and gochujang (hot pepper paste) when I need to visit
places with no Korean restaurants,?he said.
?ibap Korea?had its first performance last October at the AT
Center Building in Yangjae-dong before an audience of some 100
guests from Hansik Globalization Committee and culinary
students.
Hard times for show's creator

Like all good musicians or artists, Choi too has had his
own share of tough days. ?he time when I was preparing ?ump' was
the hardest,?he recalled. ? developed it over five years from the
time I was in my late-20s to my mid-30s. In the end, I was so out
of cash that I had to sell practically everything. All I had left
for myself was the laptop computer that held the stage plans and
scenario for ?ump.'?br>
It wasn't hard to find investors who were interested in ?ump.?So
what took so long for the show to materialize? ?any agreed with
the basic concept, but they wanted to continue revising it to their
tastes,?Choi said. ?ot that I was tempted to compromise. I was
having a hard time just getting by, but I couldn't betray my staff
who had faith in me all along and tell them we're going to stage
something totally different.?br>
He and his team members would often skip meals. They walked all the
way home because they couldn't afford bus fare. One young actress
burst into tears when she didn't have money to buy a sanitary
napkin. Having had enough, Choi asked the members to leave, since
everything looked hopeless.
?any young people who wish to work on the stage ask for my advice.
I tell them to pour out all their passion on the stage for three
years. In truth, three years will hardly do. However, once that
happens, it becomes hard for them to give up by then. Success will
come sooner or later from that point. Our ?ump' team is the living
proof.?br>
Three days later, the Jump staff again gathered at the rehearsal
space. They all showed up voluntarily and for one reason only ?they couldn't stand throwing away their three years of hard
work.
In 2005, the team was invited to Scotland's Edinburgh Fringe
Festival. Of the 1,800 shows, ?ump?came first in ticket sales.
Choi and his team hugged each other with tears in their eyes,
seeing the endless lines waiting to see their performance.
?y dream is to make a stage show that could represent the whole of
Asia: a combination of Korean software, Chinese story and Japanese
techniques. We're still dominated by western stage art, but now I
would like to move people's hearts with the mysterious wonders of
Asia,?Choi said.
*Adapted from Weekly Gonggam Magazine
By Kim Hee-sung
Korea.net Staff Writer
SOURCE :
Korea.net