The Dance of Passion

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Dance of Passion
火舞黃沙
200px
Genre Period Drama
Starring Bowie Lam
Moses Chan
Ada Choi
Gigi Lai
Charmaine Sheh
Maggie Shiu
Kenny Wong
Chan Hung Lit
Chung King Fai
Vinci Wong
Opening theme "Wind and Sand" (風沙) by Bowie Lam
Ending theme "Lovers Within the Yellow Sand" (黃沙中的戀人) by Charmaine Sheh
Country of origin Hong Kong
Original language(s) Cantonese
No. of episodes 32
Production
Producer(s) Jonathan Chik
Running time 45 minutes (approx.)
Release
Original network TVB
Original release May 1 –
June 12, 2006
External links
Website

The Dance of Passion (Traditional Chinese: 火舞黃沙) is a TVB period drama series broadcast in May 2006.

The series was filmed in Yinchuan, (Ningxia in Mainland China) and Hong Kong.

Synopsis

The entire series revolves around the lives of two clans: the Yim clan (閻族) and the Sung Clan (宋族), in the Loess Plateau area of the Shanbei region during the Republican era.

In a time before the series, a plague swept through the area where the Yim clan lives, pushing the clan to near extinction. However, the Sung clan arrived and taught the Yim clan to use gunpowder to ward off the plague. Later, after the disease was eradicated, the Sung clan taught the Yim clan the art of making fireworks and firecrackers, and this brought the Yim clan a new level of prosperity. In gratitude, the Yim clan elders of the time issued an edict, ordering the entire Yim clan and their descendants to care for all members of the Sung clan from cradle to grave, with no exceptions.

This edict is the foundation of the conflict central to the series. By the time of the series, the Sung clan is a shadow of its former self, with no brilliant or prominent clansmen of significant accomplishment. As a result, the entire Sung clan has become reliant on the care of the Yim clan. This has caused the Yim clan to perceive the Sung clan as parasites. The series focuses on the rivalries between these two formerly harmonious clans, and the efforts by the Yim clan to remove the Sung clan from their settlement. This, in addition to the intra-clan rivalries in the Sung and the Yim clans, and the constant threat from a group of bandits known as the Horseback Bandits (馬賊), set the tone of the entire series.

Cast

The Yim clan

Cast Role Description
Chung King Fai Yim Kwok-Yip
閻國業
Yim Man-Hei and Yim Man-Yip's father.
Yim Siu-Hung Yim Kwok-Gei's older brother.
Bowie Lam Yim Man-Hei
閻萬曦
Yim Kwok-Yip's son.
Kai Ming-Fung's husband.
Yim Man-Tin's older brother.
Chiu Yuk's lover.
Gigi Lai Kai Ming-Fung
計明鳳
Yim Man-Hei's wife.
Vinci Wong (王賢誌) Yim Man-Tin
閻萬天
Yim Kwok-Yip's son.
Yim Man-Hei's younger brother.
Kai Ming-Fung's ex-lover.
Rebecca Chan Yim Siu-Hung
閻少虹
Yim Kwok-Yip and Yim Kwok-Gei's younger sister.
Tsui Wing (徐榮) Yim Kwok-Gei
閻國基
Yim Kwok-Yip and Yim Siu-Hung's brother.

The Sung clan

Cast Role Description
Moses Chan Sung Tung-Sing
宋東昇
Ka Chun-Fun's husband.
Ada Choi Chiu Yuk
焦玉
Sung Clan Leader
Yim Man-Hei's lover.
Charmaine Sheh Ka Chun-Fun
家春分
Sung Tung-Sing's wife.
Sung Tung-Yeung's ex-wife.
Kenny Wong (黃德斌) Sung Tung-Yeung
宋東陽
Su Long-Yuet's husband.
Ka Chun-Fun's ex-husband.
Maggie Shiu Su Long-Yuet
舒朗月
Sung Tung-Yeung's wife.
Helen Ma (馬海倫) Gwai Lan
桂蘭

Other cast

Cast Role Description
Chan Hung Lit (陳鴻烈) Mau To
茅土
Mau Siu-Kam and Mau Siu-Cheuk's father.
Catherine Chau (周家怡) Mau Siu-Kam
茅小琴
Mau To's daughter.
Reyan Yan (殷櫻) Mau Siu-Cheuk
茅小卓
Mau To's daughter.

Characters

  • Yim Man-Hei (Bowie Lam) is the bullying, tyrannical leader of the Yim clan, and boss of the Yim clan's business operations: the "Kat Hing Tong (吉慶堂)". He and his brother, Yim Man-Tin, have relied on each other ever since their mother died. A childhood accident left Man-Hei deaf, but his brutal and ruthless streaks promotes him to be the clan leader.
  • Yim Kwok-Yip (Chung King Fai) is the retired Yim clan leader who appears to be genial and well-tempered which concealed a ruthless and cruel personality. He is the constant stirrer of controversies within the Yim clan.
  • Yim Kwok-Tin (Vinci Wong) is a timid, well-mannered, and educated member of the Yim clan, often used by others as a pawn in their overall power struggle.
  • Yim Siu-Hung (Rebecca Chan) is the sister of Yim Kwok-Yip, who was almost beaten to death by Kwok-Yip when she discovered his affair with a Sung clan woman. The assault led to her paralysis, which created massive guilt for Kwok-Yip.
  • Kai Ming-Fung (Gigi Lai) is the wife of Yim Man-Hei, who is almost always treated by Man-Hei with suspicion. She is very intelligent and can view people with her perspective of their personality and the situation. At first she and her husband quarrel a lot and have many arguments but slowly their relationship changes.
  • Sung Tung-Sing (Moses Chan) is part of the Sung clan who fell in love with a widow. This led to an execution by firecrackers (in what the two clans call "the Lighting of the Heavenly Lights") that was stopped by sheer luck. He was subsequently banished from the Sung clan, but managed to return shortly thereafter.
  • Ka Chun-Fun (Charmaine Sheh) was scheduled to marry Sung Tung-Sing in an arranged marriage, but the marriage was annulled because of Tung-Shung's ousting from the Sung clan. This led to her being labeled as a person of bad luck. She was forced to marry Sung Tung-Yeung afterwards, but the marriage ends in disaster.
  • Chiu Yuk (Ada Choi) is the conniving head of the Sung clan who took power upon the death of the Clan elder by forging a will. She was involved in an elaborate plan to exact revenge for her son's death towards the end of the series.
  • Sung Tung-Yeung (Kenny Wong) is part of the Sung clan who eventually rose to the level of Clan leader. His secret of impotence was hidden from the Sung Clan.
  • Mao To (Chan Hung Lit) is a well-digger who came from a family with an illustrious history of well-digging. He is also the father of the widow that Tung-Shing fell in love with.

Critical response

TVB had been promoting this series heavily, thus creating a huge hype for the series even before it began its run. An early premiere along the lines of Hollywood movie premieres was held on April 24, 2006 at the International Finance Centre Palace. Many refer to this series as the "War and Beauty II" due to its striking similarity of the cast (with the exception of Maggie Cheung and Sheren Tang, the latter allegedly due to contract disputes), most of the cast remained the same with the addition of Ada Choi and Maggie Shiu. Both productions also share the same producer Johnathon Chik. However, it is not a sequel or prequel and the storyline is completely different from the original War and Beauty.

Ratings report showed that the premiere episode broke the ratings record in recent years with an average of 36 points, which roughly translates to 2.31 million audiences. The second episode also maintained the same ratings. TVB, at the time, was confident the ratings of the series will continue to rise. However, the ratings began to fall flat following the next several weeks. Some believe that the premise of the show, which had two rival families constant bickering with each other, and the desert setting (which constantly produces a monochrome yellow color that was dramatically enhanced in Post-Production on TV), made the show somewhat tiresome. However, the ratings for all episodes were above 30 points, remarkable in Hong Kong standards.

Viewership ratings

Week Episode Average Points Peaking Points References
1
May 1–5, 2006 1 — 5
34
36
[1]
2
May 8–12, 2006 6 — 10
33
35
[2]
3
May 15–19, 2006 11 — 15
31
[3]
4
May 22–26, 2006 16 — 20
32
33
[4]
5
May 29 - June 2, 2006 21 — 25
30
32
[5]
6
June 5–9, 2006 26 — 30
31
34
[6]
7
June 12, 2006 31 — 32
35
38
[7]

Awards and nominations

Awards

39th TVB Anniversary Awards (2006)

  • "Best Actor in a Supporting Role" (Kenny Wong - Sung Tung-Yeung)

Nominations

39th TVB Anniversary Awards (2006)

  • "Best Drama"
  • "Best Actor in a Leading Role" (Bowie Lam - Yim Man-Hei)
  • "Best Actor in a Leading Role" (Moses Chan - Sung Tung-Sing)
  • "Best Actress in a Leading Role" (Ada Choi - Chiu Yuk)
  • "Best Actress in a Leading Role" (Charmaine Sheh - Ka Chun-Fun)
  • "Best Actress in a Leading Role" (Gigi Lai - Kai Ming-Fung)
  • "Best Actor in a Supporting Role" (Chung King Fai - Yim Kwok-Yip)
  • "Best Actor in a Supporting Role" (Kenny Wong - Sung Tung-Yeung)
  • "Best Actor in a Supporting Role" (Chan Hung Lit - Mau To)
  • "Best Actress in a Supporting Role" (Catherine Chau - Mau Siu-Kam)
  • "Best Actress in a Supporting Role" (Helen Ma - Gwai Lan)
  • "My Favourite Male Character Role" (Bowie Lam - Yim Man-Hei)
  • "My Favourite Male Character Role" (Moses Chan - Sung Tung-Sing)
  • "My Favourite Male Character Role" (Chung King Fai - Yim Kwok-Yip)
  • "My Favourite Male Character Role" (Kenny Wong - Sung Tung-Yeung)
  • "My Favourite Female Character Role" (Ada Choi - Chiu Yuk)
  • "My Favourite Female Character Role" (Charmaine Sheh - Ka Chun-Fun)
  • "My Favourite Female Character Role" (Gigi Lai - Kai Ming-Fung)

References

External links