Cao Yu's trilogy,
Thunderstorm (1934)
, Sunrise (1936) and
Wilderness (1937) helped to usher the modern Chinese drama into the first "Golden Age" in the mid-1930s. These plays and their productions marked the maturation of Chinese dramatic literature and achievement in professionalism in staging production, including lighting, props, sets and costumes. Cao Yu's works launched the wave of "realistic drama" in the 1930s, which reflected the society's different sides and served as the instrument of criticism. The leading figures in the modern Chinese spoken drama including Cao Yu,
Hong Shen,
Guo Moruo,
Xia Yan,
Ouyang Yuqian,
Tian Han and
Lao She composed a new trend of Chinese spoken drama, that interpreted the drama as a critique of the whole society and social values, and aroused the masses of the people.
Thunderstorm (雷雨 Lei yu), (1934) Thunderstorm is considered as one of the most popular dramatic Chinese works of the period prior to the
Japanese invasion of China in 1937. It was first published in the literary magazine,
Literary Quarterly (wenxue jikan), which was founded in 1934 by Chinese intellectuals,
Zheng Zhenduo and Jin Yi. Shortly after its publication, a production of the play was mounted in
Jinan, and later, in 1935, in
Shanghai and in
Tokyo, both of which were well received. In 1936,
Thunderstorm debuted in
Nanjing, with Cao Yu himself acting in the lead role. In 1938, following its theatrical triumphs, the play was made into two separate movies productions, one in
Shanghai and another in
Hong Kong, that were almost coincidental versions of one another. The latter production, made in 1957, co-starred a young
Bruce Lee in one of his few non-fighting roles. The plot of
Thunderstorm centers on one family's psychological and physical destruction as a result of
incest, as perpetrated at the hands of its morally depraved and corrupt patriarch, Zhou Puyuan. Although it is undisputed that the prodigious reputation achieved by
Thunderstorm was due in large part to its scandalous public airing of the topic of incest, and many people have pointed out technical imperfections in its structure,
Thunderstorm is nevertheless considered to be a milestone in China's modern theatrical ascendancy. Even those who have questioned the literary prowess of Cao Yu, for instance, the noted critic C.T. Hsia, admit that the popularization and consolidation of China's theatrical genre is fundamentally owed to the first works of Cao Yu.
Sunrise (日出 Richu), 1936 and The Wilderness (原野 Yuanye), 1937 In Cao Yu's second play,
Sunrise, published in 1936, he continues his
thematic treatment of the progressive moral degradation of individuals in the face of a hostile society. In the play, the history of several
Shanghai women are narrated; their stories show their lives disintegrating in response to lack of affection and of acknowledgment by the society surrounding them, leading them down a tragic path from which they cannot escape. By centring upon the female characters, Cao Yu introduced feminism ideas and included the early enlightenment of women's liberation in his works. In 1937, Cao Yu's third play,
The Wilderness (the Chinese name of which can also be translated as
The Field), was released, but enjoyed less attention than his previous works. ==During the Japanese occupation, 1937–1946==