Shen Yun Performing Arts Is ‘Really Spectacular,’ Says Company CEO

Shen Yun Performing Arts Is ‘Really Spectacular,’ Says Company CEO
Michael Lawler enjoyed Shen Yun's evening performance at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts on April 17, 2025. (Linda Jiang/The Epoch Times)
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COSTA MESA, Calif.—On April 17, company CEO Michael Lawler enjoyed Shen Yun Performing Arts for the first time at the Segerstrom Center for the Arts.

He had first heard about the performance five years ago when he picked up a flyer, but never made it to a show—until the evening before, when he spontaneously decided to purchase last-minute tickets. Exiting the theater after the performance, he was thrilled with his decision.

“It was really spectacular. I didn’t think we expected all the different types of things … the different kind of [programs] all the way through, that was really cool,” he said.

The bilingual hosts were “really helpful. Not understanding the Chinese language but being able to get an introduction to each [piece] and each presentation was really, really nice.”

Mr. Lawler especially enjoyed the female dance piece featuring the “water sleeves.” They were a part of ancient Chinese feminine attire, symbolizing humility and grace. Light and airy, they billow and flow on stage, evoking the gentle movement of water.

“I also liked the male dancers when they were in the old era, and they had a lot of [flips and jumps] in it. That was really neat,” he said. “That was spectacular.”

As one of the oldest civilizations in the world, China’s 5,000 years of history are filled with breathtaking legends and rich traditions. Yet, within just a few decades of the Chinese communists’ rise to power, this magnificent culture was destroyed.

The spread of atheism quickly eradicated the Chinese people’s belief in the divine. The cherished virtues and values learned from the teachings of Buddhism, Daoism, and Confucianism disappeared overnight.

Today, the New York-based Shen Yun is working to revive this lost civilization and bring back to the world through dance and music, the beauty of pre-communist China.

Mr. Lawler was deeply moved by the artists’ commitment to revive traditional culture. He thoroughly enjoyed their portrayal of the divine.

Shen Yun showed “a religious faith from the history and a [divine] overseer, if you may, coming down and telling the story of his creation and then [beings] following into the earthly world. I thought that was really neat,” he said.

“I also like the different generations of life and how they were talking about [the] old world all the way to present, and how that belief system still seems to come through. That was really impressive.”

Summing up his experience, Mr. Lawler said every aspect of the evening was spectacular.

“The dancing was amazing, the acrobatics were very cool,” he shared. “Looking through the [program book,] I saw people from [early] 2000s all the way to present, which means they’ve been doing this—what a toll that must be on [their] body. It’s fascinating. Beautiful.”

Since its establishment in 2006, Shen Yun has earned widespread acclaim. Each year, the artists present a brand-new set of choreography and musical compositions, ensuring that both new and returning audience members are always in for a surprise.

Reporting by Linda Jiang and Jennifer Tseng.

NTD is a media sponsor of Shen Yun Performing Arts, covering audience reactions since 2006.