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June 18, 2016

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Disneyland adds new chapter to city’s history

EDITOR’S note:

Doug Young has lived and worked in China for 15 years, much of that as a journalist for Reuters. He currently lives in Shanghai where he teaches financial jour­nalism at Fudan University. He writes daily on his blog, Young’s China Business Blog (www.youngchinabiz.com).

SHANGHAI’S past and future are center stage in this week’s Street View, the former represented by an exhibit on one of our city’s most famous historic families and the latter by this week’s opening of our new Disneyland theme park in Pudong.

I attended “The Soong Sisters: Special Memories” exhibition shortly after it opened last month, hoping to learn more about three of Shanghai’s most famous figures in the early 20th century.

Separately, I visited the new Shanghai Disneyland a few days before its official opening this past Thursday, in a different quest to understand what is likely to become one of China’s top tourist attractions of the 21st century.

The fact that the Soong sisters — Ai-ling, Ching Ling and Mei-ling — and now Disney are Shanghai stories is no coincidence, since only such a meeting point of East and West could have spawned such tales. But the two phenomena are also quite different in what they represent.

Whereas the Soongs represent a generation that was still trying to define China’s complex relationship with the West, the new Disneyland seems to represent a newer vision of how these two very different cultures can coexist and thrive off one another.

Let’s begin with the Soong sisters, arguably the best-known historical Chinese names to many Westerners behind Dr Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek. It’s no coincidence that two of the three sisters were married to them, with Ching Ling and Mei Ling marrying Sun and Chiang, respectively. Ai Ling is the odd one out, marrying the wealthy but relatively obscure H.H. Kung, one of China’s first finance ministers.

The exhibit contains numerous photos and also a smattering of other objects, such as dresses and household items belonging to the sisters, as well as a recording of a speech made by Mei Ling in the US during World War II.

The photos provided a fascinating look at what these famous ladies looked like during their daily routines, alongside their famous spouses and other friends, in their earlier years and also toward the end of their lives.

I have to admit that I was slightly disappointed at the lack of Shanghai scenery and other landmarks in the exhibit, since the city was such an important part of the Soongs’ formative years. Instead, many of the photos were portraits, and if anything the city with the strongest presence was China’s wartime capital in Chongqing.

Still, I’d highly recommend that history buffs pay a visit to the exhibition, which runs through the end of July, and is relatively affordable at 80-100 yuan (US$12-15) per ticket.

That kind of affordability is probably the last thing on people’s minds at the newly opened Disneyland, where entry to the park costs a much higher 370-499 yuan. And whereas a couple of hours suffices for the Soong exhibition, a full day, or even two, are necessary to see the new theme park, not so much because it’s so big but because of the huge lines.

In this case Disney seems to have underestimated the Chinese love of mingpai, or famous brands, as the most talked-about rides are attracting huge crowds at the new park. The worst of those was the “Soaring over the Horizon at Adventure Isle,” which boasted a staggering 5.5 hour waiting line during my visit.

Chinese elements

I seriously doubt that anyone visiting Disney’s other parks in the US, Tokyo, Hong Kong or Paris would be willing to wait that long for a single ride that lasts 2-3 minutes at most. But this is China, and clearly the tolerance for long lines is higher if it means getting to experience a mingpai.

Disney itself has focused on the many Chinese elements it added into the Shanghai park, such as a Chinese zodiac display near the entrance. Local media, on the other hand, were focused on the high prices for food inside the park.

During my visit I only had a drink that cost a pricey but affordable 25 yuan, and I also saw numerous people munching on food they had brought themselves. But honestly speaking, the 70-80 yuan for a meal at one of the restaurants in the park may seem slightly pricey, but is still quite small compared with the total cost of a Shanghai Disneyland vacation for out-of-town families.

At the end of the day, the Soong sister exhibition was much more to my liking, mostly due to my personal interest in history and also the tasteful displays and lack of crowds. But when the history books of the next 100 years are written, it really does seem like Shanghai Disneyland could easily end up as the new star of the Shanghai story, reflecting the city’s ambitious drive to reclaim its place as Asia’s most international destination.




 

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