A True Daughter of the Party

North Korean opera and film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A True Daughter of the Party (Korean: 당의 참된 딸; lit. 'To Truly become a Daughter of the Righteous Party') is a North Korean revolutionary opera.[1][2] First performed in 1971, it is credited to Kim Jong Il.[3][4][5]

Native title
당의 참된 딸
LibrettistKim Jong Il
LanguageKorean
Premiere
December 11, 1971
Quick facts Native title, Librettist ...
A True Daughter of the Party
Korean revolutionary opera by Kim Jong Il
Native title
당의 참된 딸
LibrettistKim Jong Il
LanguageKorean
Premiere
December 11, 1971
Close
Hangul
당의 참된 딸
Hanja
黨의 참된 딸
RRDangui chamdoen ttal
MRTangŭi ch'amdoen ttal
Quick facts Hangul, Hanja ...
A True Daughter of the Party
Hangul
당의 참된 딸
Hanja
黨의 참된 딸
RRDangui chamdoen ttal
MRTangŭi ch'amdoen ttal
Close

The opera is considered one of the "Five Great Revolutionary Operas", a group of classical, revolution-themed opera repertoires well received within North Korea.[6][7] A True Daughter of the Party is the only one of the five set during the Korean War.[8]

It is performed with a male chorus, a smaller female chorus, with Western musical instruments, principally brass and strings.[9]

Plot

Kang Yong-ok (in military uniform) with her fellow nurses
Scene from A True Daughter of the Party

During the Korean War, Kang Yong-ok serves in the Taebaek Mountains as a nurse for injured Korean People's Army soldiers as they fight against the American forces.[10]

Reception

The main theme, "Where Are You, Dear General?", is a paean to Kim Il Sung, credited to Kim Jong Il as composer; it was added to the opera by Kim Jong Il after he noted that A True Daughter of the Party was unpopular and that "the reason for its failure was that loyalty to the great leader was not brought into bold relief and that there was no suitable theme song."[11][12]

See also

References

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