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Elegant rain-themed dance enthralls viewers at Spring Festival Gala

China

China

China

Elegant rain-themed dance enthralls viewers at Spring Festival Gala

2026-02-16 22:58 Last Updated At:02-17 04:47

An enchanting dancing performance themed on 'spring rain' brought a pleasant atmosphere to the China Media Group (CMG)'s 2026 Spring Festival Gala on Monday evening, with a captivating melodic track and graceful choreography extending wishes for vitality during the Chinese New Year.

The dance performance, led on stage by the accomplished Chinese classical dancer Meng Qingyang, enthralled viewers with its rhythmic movements and soft elegance, while traditional musical instruments added an absorbing soundtrack.

Set against a backdrop of lush mountains and lucid waters depicted in the style of traditional Chinese ink paintings, dancers moved with a series of well-designed steps and smooth and graceful transitions.

The Spring Festival, or the Chinese New Year, is the most important traditional holiday for the Chinese people, and watching the Spring Festival Gala, also known as "Chunwan," is a cherished part of the celebrations every year in hundreds of millions of Chinese homes.

Since first being broadcast in 1983, the gala has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the most-watched annual television program on the planet.

The Spring Festival itself was inscribed on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in December 2024.

The 2026 Spring Festival falls on Tuesday this year, ushering in the Year of the Horse.

Elegant rain-themed dance enthralls viewers at Spring Festival Gala

Elegant rain-themed dance enthralls viewers at Spring Festival Gala

The 2026 Spring Festival Gala hosted and aired by the China Media Group (CMG) delivered a more than four-hour-long feast of captivating cultural performances and entertaining variety acts to audiences tuning in from all around the world as people celebrated the arrival of the Chinese New Year on Tuesday.

Themed "The Steed Gallops, Momentum Unstoppable," the gala opened at 20:00 Monday Beijing time and saw performances being staged at the main venue in Beijing and at four sub-venues set up across the country, as people prepared to welcome the Year of the Horse.

Taking the grand show to a different set of locations each year has now become a tradition for the gala, shining a spotlight on more of China's varied landscapes and cultural traditions.

This year, the gala sub-venues included Harbin, the provincial capital of Heilongjiang in northeast China known as the "ice city," Yiwu in east China's Zhejiang, which has been dubbed "the world's supermarket," Hefei, the provincial capital of the eastern Anhui Province which has emerged as a hub for sci-tech innovation, and Yibin in the southwestern Sichuan Province, known for its ancient architecture and picturesque scenery along the banks of the Yangtze River.

As always, the gala featured a carefully curated line-up of performances, including a host of stirring songs and dazzling dances, enchanting operas, comedic sketches, magic shows and a number of creative fusion performances, all of which highlighted the spirit of the new era, capturing the dynamic beauty of China's future.

This year's gala drew on China's traditional culture and incorporated the spirit of the horse, a symbol of self-improvement and striving forward, into its creative design.

The gala has increasingly taken on a high-tech feel in recent years and among the highlights this year was the appearance of advanced AI-embodied robots, who dazzled audiences with their innovative stage presence and impressive physical abilities, particularly during a highly-energetic Kung Fu performance.

Meanwhile, the CMG's artificial intelligence-generated content (AIGC) real-scene special effects technology made its debut with its first innovative application as part of this year's show, highlighting China's technological advances.

The Spring Festival, or the Chinese New Year, is the most important traditional holiday for the Chinese people, and watching the Spring Festival Gala, also known as "Chunwan," on is a cherished part of the celebrations in hundreds of millions of Chinese homes.

Since first being broadcast in 1983, the gala has been recognized by Guinness World Records as the most-watched annual television program on the planet.

The Spring Festival itself was inscribed on UNESCO's Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in December 2024.

CMG stages annual Spring Festival Gala as China celebrates Year of Horse

CMG stages annual Spring Festival Gala as China celebrates Year of Horse

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