HANGZHOU-Actors, camera operators and lighting engineers are busy in film studios. Internet celebrities hold up mobile phones to livestream on the street. Vendors set up food stands when night falls.
As an annual event to celebrate Children's Day in China on Monday, China Media Group-the country's largest broadcaster-usually holds a dazzling, annual celebrity-studded gala.
Despite the inconvenience of drizzles, the annual Concert on the Green at Shanghai's popular Chenshan Botanical Garden in Songjiang district presenting a scenic feast of nature combined with classical music, kicked off on Saturday as scheduled.
Florida officials have approved plans for a phased reopening of Walt Disney World in Orlando starting on July 11, according to a memo from a state agency released on Friday.
China's top theaters for children are joining hands to present various children's plays on several television and internet platforms ahead of the International Children's Day, which falls on June 1.
A renowned Chinese acrobatic troupe in Wuhan staged its first performance since the novel coronavirus outbreak on Wednesday, with the audience's cheers coming by way of online comments.
The Shanghai office of the Canadian entertainment company Cirque du Soleil announced Tuesday that it will reopen its resident show The Land of Fantasy in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou on June 3.
Gyms shut down, sporting fixtures suspended, and owners faced with financial losses. China's fitness industry has taken a huge blow from the COVID-19 outbreak, with people now fighting to get back on their feet.
A memorial and museums to commemorate the nation's fight against the COVID-19 pandemic have been separately proposed by a legislator and two political advisers.
Central Conservatory of Music launched the second Yan'an Art Festival on March 23, with about 300 art schools and 10 Chinese symphony orchestras taking part in the event.
Every day, a sense of tranquility pervades Tibetan artisan Shilok's yard, as his apprentices are busy crafting opera masks while other workers sew costumes and clothes.
With more than 20,000 rare specimens, from hairy rhinoceros and wild donkey skeletons to fossils unearthed locally, the collection left by French Catholic Jesuit priest and naturalist Paul Emile Licent (1876-1952) a century ago is well preserved in the museum that he built in North China's Tianjin c