
Outdoor drummers
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Street dancing
Ballroom
dancing is hugely popular with the elderly, but in Beijing it doesn’t
take place in ballrooms but out on the street. On warm evenings, car
parks and sidewalks are filled with dancers congregated around a
boombox. At the Workers’ Stadium you can get up to four different groups
on the forecourt in front of the north gate – choose your style: waltz,
polka, foxtrot, or gavotte.

Ballroom dancing Beijing style
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Jianzi
Western
kids play it with a football, passing the ball around with head, knees,
and feet, the idea being not to let it touch the ground; the Chinese
have their own version playing with what resembles a large plastic
shuttlecock. It’s called jianzi and it is something of a national obsession, played by young and old alike, male and female. -
Tai chi
Looking to improve the flow of qi
(life force) through their bodies, early each morning crowds of mostly
elderly people gather in Beijing’s parks to indulge in mass movements of
tai chi, or tai ji quan
as it’s better known in China. Although the discipline has its origins
in martial arts, for most folks it’s more about making sure that the
joints don’t seize up. -
Opera singing
The
Chinese are rarely inhibited by self-consciousness and behave in public
as they would at home. Hence, parks are for singing. They gather in
groups, taking it in turns to perform for each other; favored places for
this are on the north shore of the lake at Bei Hai and in the Temple of
Heaven park.

Singing opera down at the park

