There are a total of seven plays in "Seven Colors of Solitudes": Yellow, Blue, Green, Purple, Cyan, Red, and Orange. The seven plays show seven anonymous people, living in secluded places over the course of seven monotonous days. They all get a letter from a strange girl which records her lonely footprints.
Among the seven different stories in the performance, I loved the Yellow Act the most. The topic of it is "Yellow: A Photographer Captured by Time." The background of this play is Peace Memorial Museum in Hiroshima. A photographer (acted by Ray Yuen) dated an old friend. The setting there is as below. The Peace Memorial Museum exhibits the story of the explosion of the Atomic Bomb, which gives a feeling of sadness and death, and yellow provides a feeling of the past; I do think the director is using this background as a hint to present the relationship of the photographer and his old friends. Also, at the beginning of the play, the photographer shouted, "Every history has its end!" At first, I just thought it was only talking about the explosion of the Atomic Bomb during WWII, but later, I think that it's also talking about the relationship between the photographer and his old friend. And my conjecture is right, the photographer's old friend refused to come to the museum to meet him but sent her daughter, Riko to come. This is telling the photographer she doesn't want to meet him again. The director did a good job here: before telling us the photographer's old friend wanted to stop the ambiguity with him, he tried hard to build an atmosphere: All the visitors in the museum move very slowly (except the photographer, he
move in normal speed), and suddenly a broadcast called out, saying the electronic supply in the museum has been temporarily cut. It indicted the stoppage of the clock and air-conditioner, The clock is stopped, the atmosphere is hot, everyone is moving slowly...all of these produce an association of agglomeration ...