Dance and Theatre in the History of Japan

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The earliest archaeological evidence that is related to performing arts in Japan comes from the Yamato period (300–710 AD). Excavated objects include miniature instruments, masks, and ornaments. Clay figurines, called haniwa sculptures, include representations of dancers. The tradition of the earliest dances that are still performed, the kagura dances, stems from this period. The Creation […]

Kagura, Sacred Shinto Dances

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The still thriving tradition of archaic kagura (god-performance) dances is deeply related to Japan’s earliest belief system, Shinto. Once strictly a form of ceremonial art, kagura has evolved into various forms over the course of a thousand years. Some of these forms are still related to Shinto shrines, and some to court practices, while many […]

Gigaku, Buddhist Mask Theatre

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Gigaku was a form of Buddhist processional dance drama, which reached Japan in the 7th century from Central Asia through Korea and China. Gigaku blended religious themes with comedy, and even burlesque scenes, while the performances took place in temple courtyards. Its performance tradition died out in the Heian period (794–1192). Wooden gigaku masks are […]

Bugaku, Ceremonial Dances

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Bugaku refers to a group of ceremonial dances, performed both in temples and at the imperial court. The dances were originally adopted from China and Korea in the 7th and 8th centuries and they were further refined during the next two centuries. They are still performed both in the temple context and in court festivities, […]

Noh, Crystallised Aesthetics

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Video clip: A scene from the play Hagoromo, “The Feather Mantel”, which falls into the category of Wig Plays. Its shite represents a heavenly maiden who descends to earth. To get back her wings, or the feather mantle, she performs a heavenly dance Veli Rosenberg Noh (no) is regarded as one of the great classical […]

Kyogen, Farces about Human Life

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The short farces that are performed between the serious noh plays are called kyogen. Together, these two art forms are called nohgaku. Both forms have a lot in common. Both are performed on the same stage; in both forms all the actors are men, while they are both highly stylised in their styles of acting. […]

Bunraku, an Exceptional Symbiosis of Puppetry, Storytelling and Music

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Bunraku, a form of puppet theatre, created during the early Edo period (1603–1868), is without doubt the most spectacular tradition of puppetry in the whole world. Its puppets, approximately one meter high, are manipulated by black-robed puppeteers on a wide stage, while narrators chant the story in a highly expressive manner to the accompaniment of […]

Kabuki, Theatre as Spectacle

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No other traditional form of theatre in Asia has evolved into such a grandiose stage spectacle as the kabuki theatre, which is four centuries old. As its name, kabuki (song-dance-acting), indicates, it combines various genres of dance and music while it is characterised, at the same time, by its highly exaggerated, mimetic acting style. Kabuki’s […]

The Twentieth Century

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Western influence began to be felt in Japanese cultural life during the Meiji period (1868–1911), when the Japanese Empire was transformed, through the so-called Meiji Restorations, into an industrialised world power. Many aspects of Japanese society, its infrastructure, army and laws were remodelled according to Western models. The long-lasting rule of the shogunate was demolished […]

Butoh

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Ballet was also among the Western forms of performing arts adopted in Japan in the early 20th century. Nowadays Japan has several ballet companies and dozens of first-class ballet dancers. Modern Western dance trends were introduced to Japan for the first time by the musician, choreographer and dancer Baku Ishii (1886–1962). He started his career […]

White-Haired Girl

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The play is based on a real incident in 1940. A “white-haired goddess” was found by Communist soldiers in a remote place. Actually, she was a village girl who had been raped by a landlord and had escaped into the mountains, where she gave birth to her child. Her constant suffering and hunger had made […]

Red Lantern

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This model opera tells about three revolutionaries. The leading character is a middle-aged railway worker, Li, who earlier took part in a strike. During the strikers’ riots he adopted an orphaned young girl. Li also invites an elderly woman who became a widow during the riots to live with him. They live together like a […]

Tales of the Silk Road

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The dance drama is set in the Tang Dynasty and it tells about the daughter, Yingniang, of a poor painter who works in the famous caves of Dunhuang. An evil magistrate is interested in Yingniang but a Persian merchant rescues her and takes her to Persia where she becomes familiar with local people. When she later returns […]

Snow in Midsummer

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Original Manuscript: Guan Hanqing (from about 1240 to about 1320) Prelude The Wedge Video clip: Dou E. A kun-style reconstruction of 13th century play, Dou E yuan or Snow in Midsummer. Veli Rosenberg Dou E was born into a poor family. When she was three, her mother died. Because of difficulties in his life, her […]

The Floating Lady

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In this episode, Totsakan (Ravana), blinded by passion, ponders how to get hold of Sida (Sita), the object of his love. The episode begins with an audience scene at the court of Totsakan, where Totsakan’s niece Benyakai claims that she can transform herself into Sida’s double and thus fool Phra Ram (Rama) and Phra Lak […]

Sang Thong

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In Act One of the intricate story, the hero Sang Thong is supernaturally born in a conch shell. He is, in fact, a god incarnated in a conch shell in the womb of a childless queen. The queen’s strange childbirth is the subject of much attention at court, and an evil concubine plots with the […]

Paduma

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U Pon Nya’s (1807–1866) play deals with the recurrent theme in the author’s Jataka-derived plays, the conflict between good and evil. In this play, the king is warned by his ministers that his seven sons are planning a coup, and driven by suspicion, he exiles his sons and their wives to the jungle. The journey […]

The Water Seller

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A prince is returning home after completing his studies in India. Resting for a moment by the gate of his hometown, he is approached by a poor water seller, who tells him how he comes every day to the town to sell water to eke out a living. The man goes his own way, and […]

The Panji Story

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Prince Panji is distressed over the mysterious disappearance of his bride Candra Kirana on the eve of their wedding. A princess claiming to be Candra Kirana arrives at his palace, but she does not look at all like her. She is, in fact, a female demon who has fallen in love with Panji. The false […]

Arjuna Vivaha

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In Arjuna Vivaha, the heavenly realm of the god Indra is in a state of turmoil. A terrifying demon, who is possessed by his love for the nymph Supraba, becomes enraged when Indra refuses to give the maiden to him. A difficult situation arises, for none of the gods can beat the demon in battle, […]

The Mahabharata

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The main action in the Mahabharata revolves around the legendary struggle at Kurukshetra between the Kauravas and the Pandavas over land rights. The Kauravas are the hundred sons of Dhrithrashtra, and the Pandavas, the five sons of Pandu, are their cousins. The Pandavas become the heirs to the Kuru throne, since Dhrithrashtra is blind and […]

The Ramayana

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Prince Rama goes to a neighbouring kingdom to compete for the hand of Princess Sita. Being the only one able to bend the magic bow, Rama wins Sita as his bride. Rama is about to be named heir to the throne of Ayodhya, but one of the king’s wives, referring to a promise made by […]

Shakuntala

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Video clip: King Dusyanta and his charioteer are out hunting; the opening scene of Shakuntala in the kutiyattam style Veli Rosenberg King Dusyanta is out hunting with his charioteer in a forest. Just when he is about to shoot a deer with his arrow a voice is heard, which forbids the king to shoot an […]

The Song of Hungbu

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Nolbu, a greedy brother, seizes his father’s entire fortune and leaves his brother Hungbu in poverty. When Hungbu appeals to his brother for help in order to feed his family, Nolbu refuses to help him and accuses him of being lazy. Hungbu and his wife rescue and tenderly care for a swallow with a broken […]

Hagoromo

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Video clip: A scene from the play Hagoromo, “The Feather Mantel”, which falls into the category of Wig Plays. Its shite represents a heavenly maiden who descends to earth. To get back her wings, or the feather mantle, she performs a heavenly dance Veli Rosenberg Hagoromo or The Feather Robe is one of the most […]

Aoi no ue or Lady Aoi

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The play is based on a short sequence from the Genji Monogatari, or the Story of Genji, by Lady Murasaki (1004). Lady Aoi, the official wife of the handsome Prince Genji, has been taken ill mysteriously. (She is discreetly represented by a brocade robe placed in the front of the stage.) The nearly dying Lady […]

Tenko

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The play is based on a Chinese legend that recounts the deeds of a youth called Tenko. He has received a supernatural drum from the heavens. The emperor wants the drum for himself but Tenko refuses and flees. Finally he is captured and drowned at sea. Once the emperor receives the drum a wonder happens: […]

Boshibari or Tied to a Pole

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The wily servants Tarokaja and Jirokaja steal their master’s sake wine whenever the master is away. The master has a plan. He orders Tarokaja to tie Jirokaja’s hands and arms to a pole so that he cannot steal the sake. Then he quickly also ties Tarokaja’s hands behind his back. So the master assumes that […]

Sonezaki shinju or Love Suicides at Sonezaki

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by Cikamatsu Monzaeomon (1703) A clerk from a soya sauce shop, Tokubei, is deeply in love with the courtesan Ohatsu. He has not consented to a marriage arranged by his uncle. So he must quickly return the handsome dowry given to his stepmother. He receives the money, but stupidly he lends it to his old […]

Sukeroku

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1713 The main character of the play is Sukeroku, a handsome townsman of the aragoto type. He is brave, arrogant, a “chivalrous commoner” who always defeats his better samurais. He is in love Agemaki, the most celebrated courtesan of the pleasure quarter. An old samurai, Ikyo, also admires Agemaki and is very jealous of Sukeroku. […]