The Vietnamese historical play "The Duke of the Left Army Le Van Duyet - The Man with 9 Death Sentences" (author Pham Van Quy, script editor: Vo Tu Uyen, director Hoang Duan) is causing a fever for tickets for two shows on April 21 and 28 at the Youth Cultural House.
In particular, if Dinh Toan's role as Le Van Duyet creates attraction under the brilliant transformation of an artist who has a heart that loves Vietnamese history, Dai Nghia's villainous role as Huynh Cong Ly is no less attractive.
What audiences and experts appreciate about Dai Nghia's extremely serious work capacity is that he focuses highly on deeply expressing the character's personality. Originally a charming MC, a comedian with the ability to improvise and create lively laughter, but when playing the role of Huynh Cong Ly, he does not make people laugh indiscriminately. He is serious with every line, even though there are many layers of acting, he can freely express himself because of the character's greedy, brutal personality in front of the personal benefits achieved.
However, Dai Nghia restrained himself and did not show "naturalism" so that his role would be beautiful in the eyes of the audience and worthy of applause after each action, gesture, and line.
The main character's charm lies in the very real dialogues between two characters at two extremes: good and evil. Dai Nghia's Huynh Cong Ly is therefore a necessary addition to the climax, where the character Le Van Duyet condemns tyranny, corruption, and injustice, winning the people's trust to a convincing level.
In terms of the art of portraying characters, Dai Nghia has reached a new level, reigning in hatred when he plays the villain but is praised. Viewers are excited because they know the fate of Huynh Cong Ly will be judged by Le Van Duyet, but they wait to predict and ponder Dai Nghia's performance. From there, they admire the intelligence in the way he handles the words, the emphasis, and the emotional levels of the character who is the father-in-law of King Minh Mang, unable to believe that one day he will be judged by the Left Army Le Van Duyet.
In the journey of more than 100 years of formation and development of Vietnamese drama, many villain roles have become trademarks and this has also helped artists gain prestige when receiving roles from directors. For Dai Nghia and Dinh Toan, this Vietnamese historical play by IDECAF Drama Theater is an opportunity to shine.
Villains are often the fates that create conflicts. They are the opposite of the protagonists, becoming representatives of the problems of betrayal, injustice and evil.
"I understand that playing a villain is not easy, it requires me to have a certain understanding of the character's life and society to be able to transform well. I want to reflect the hidden corners, the deep darkness in Huynh Cong Ly's heart. Through that, bring warning lessons to today's viewers, to have a clearer, deeper view of history. And the positive thing is to aim at the community's life with good things, to love Vietnamese history and the work that we have worked hard to practice" - artist Dai Nghia expressed.
Source: https://nld.com.vn/dai-nghia-tao-suc-hut-manh-liet-voi-vai-phan-dien-huynh-cong-ly-196240412102440252.htm
Comment (0)