Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing
The National Theatre of China is blending food and performance, turning Cantonese culinary history into an edible, immersive experience.

Welcome to China’s soaring “performance + consumption” economy, where the line between audience and cast, dinner and drama, has officially been blurred. At the end of last month, the National Theatre of China teamed up with Tongli Tea House to launch Yanshi: Elegant Gathering in Beijing. This immersive, two-week event serves as an edible prelude to their upcoming production, Food is Heaven (燕食記), an ambitious drama tracking a century of Cantonese Lingnan food culture.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

But this goes beyond being just dinner and a show. The venue serves a “Yanshi Set Menu” directly inspired by the tea snacks mentioned in the script. Actors weave through the garden mid-scene, while guests read lines with the cast in between bites. This format perfectly taps into the growing demand for high-value “experience economy” outings—spaces where photogenic dining, heritage cosplay, and live storytelling intersect.

Immersive theatre has evolved rapidly in China. From historic water towns to massive institutional stages, China’s youth aren’t just paying to sit quietly in the dark anymore. They want time-travel, narrative-driven escapism that looks amazing on Xiaohongshu. By literally serving the script, the National Theatre of China is leaning into what today’s audience wants while offering a unique take on live, artistic performance. It’s a recipe that blends creativity, art, and appetite.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

All images via Weixin.

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Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

1 min read

The National Theatre of China is blending food and performance, turning Cantonese culinary history into an edible, immersive experience.

Welcome to China’s soaring “performance + consumption” economy, where the line between audience and cast, dinner and drama, has officially been blurred. At the end of last month, the National Theatre of China teamed up with Tongli Tea House to launch Yanshi: Elegant Gathering in Beijing. This immersive, two-week event serves as an edible prelude to their upcoming production, Food is Heaven (燕食記), an ambitious drama tracking a century of Cantonese Lingnan food culture.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

But this goes beyond being just dinner and a show. The venue serves a “Yanshi Set Menu” directly inspired by the tea snacks mentioned in the script. Actors weave through the garden mid-scene, while guests read lines with the cast in between bites. This format perfectly taps into the growing demand for high-value “experience economy” outings—spaces where photogenic dining, heritage cosplay, and live storytelling intersect.

Immersive theatre has evolved rapidly in China. From historic water towns to massive institutional stages, China’s youth aren’t just paying to sit quietly in the dark anymore. They want time-travel, narrative-driven escapism that looks amazing on Xiaohongshu. By literally serving the script, the National Theatre of China is leaning into what today’s audience wants while offering a unique take on live, artistic performance. It’s a recipe that blends creativity, art, and appetite.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

All images via Weixin.

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Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing
The National Theatre of China is blending food and performance, turning Cantonese culinary history into an edible, immersive experience.

Welcome to China’s soaring “performance + consumption” economy, where the line between audience and cast, dinner and drama, has officially been blurred. At the end of last month, the National Theatre of China teamed up with Tongli Tea House to launch Yanshi: Elegant Gathering in Beijing. This immersive, two-week event serves as an edible prelude to their upcoming production, Food is Heaven (燕食記), an ambitious drama tracking a century of Cantonese Lingnan food culture.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

But this goes beyond being just dinner and a show. The venue serves a “Yanshi Set Menu” directly inspired by the tea snacks mentioned in the script. Actors weave through the garden mid-scene, while guests read lines with the cast in between bites. This format perfectly taps into the growing demand for high-value “experience economy” outings—spaces where photogenic dining, heritage cosplay, and live storytelling intersect.

Immersive theatre has evolved rapidly in China. From historic water towns to massive institutional stages, China’s youth aren’t just paying to sit quietly in the dark anymore. They want time-travel, narrative-driven escapism that looks amazing on Xiaohongshu. By literally serving the script, the National Theatre of China is leaning into what today’s audience wants while offering a unique take on live, artistic performance. It’s a recipe that blends creativity, art, and appetite.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

All images via Weixin.

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

RADII NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox

Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

1 min read

The National Theatre of China is blending food and performance, turning Cantonese culinary history into an edible, immersive experience.

Welcome to China’s soaring “performance + consumption” economy, where the line between audience and cast, dinner and drama, has officially been blurred. At the end of last month, the National Theatre of China teamed up with Tongli Tea House to launch Yanshi: Elegant Gathering in Beijing. This immersive, two-week event serves as an edible prelude to their upcoming production, Food is Heaven (燕食記), an ambitious drama tracking a century of Cantonese Lingnan food culture.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

But this goes beyond being just dinner and a show. The venue serves a “Yanshi Set Menu” directly inspired by the tea snacks mentioned in the script. Actors weave through the garden mid-scene, while guests read lines with the cast in between bites. This format perfectly taps into the growing demand for high-value “experience economy” outings—spaces where photogenic dining, heritage cosplay, and live storytelling intersect.

Immersive theatre has evolved rapidly in China. From historic water towns to massive institutional stages, China’s youth aren’t just paying to sit quietly in the dark anymore. They want time-travel, narrative-driven escapism that looks amazing on Xiaohongshu. By literally serving the script, the National Theatre of China is leaning into what today’s audience wants while offering a unique take on live, artistic performance. It’s a recipe that blends creativity, art, and appetite.

RADII talks about the collision of live performance plays and dining experience in Beijing at the National Theater of China. With Yanshi: Elegant Gathering

All images via Weixin.

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Feature image of Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

Ever Wanted to Eat the Plot of Your Favorite Play? Now You Can in Beijing

The National Theatre of China is blending food and performance, turning Cantonese culinary history into an edible, immersive experience.

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