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Kabuki Theatre in Japan Introduction: For nearly four hundred years Kabuki theatre has been a popular entertainment among common people in town areas in Japan. It is a rich blending of realism and formalism, of music, dance, mime and spectacular staging and costuming. The Chinese word- compounds in current use by the 16th century was kabu. At the beginning the Japanese added to this their own ending ‘su’ (meaning-‘to do’), and arrived at a verb, meaning ‘to sing and dance’. Then the word used by the Japanese people is kabusu,1 meaning is ‘to do singing and dancing’, can be considered as a verb. However, today what is known as ‘Kabuki’ is a broad concept. In modern Japanese, the word is written with three characters; ‘ka’ signifying ‘sing’; ‘bu;’ ‘dance, and ‘ki;’ ‘skill’. So, Kabuki is the skill of sing and dance can be considered as a noun. With the influence of the west and new types of theatrical performances in Japan, the meaning of the word ‘Kabuki’ became more restrictive. It now refers to a specific and particular type of classic theatre, and communicates the synthetic idea of a special and rarefied style of acting, certain types of plays, and a set and inflexible repertoire. There is evidence that the word ‘Kabuki’ was used as early as the ninth century to describe actors.2 However, this use was not continued. The meaning of the word had changed completely by the sixteenth century. Kabuki is a type of acting based on the arts of singing and dancing, occurs during the course of the development of a story characterized by dramatic elements. Kabuki’s roots lie in musical theatre. Evidence of this ranges from the onstage accompaniment by singers and players of drums, flutes and, most importantly, of the three- stringed sha misen to the offstage background music provided by the geza musicians who add immeasurably to the atmosphere and emotion of any scene. In the case of dances, of course, music and especially songs are of vital importance. Kabuki actors also have to study traditional Japanese dance called Nihon buyo. Dances make up around one third of the existing repertoire, and while some are more skilled than others. All Kabuki actors are to some degree also dances. Kabuki, in fact, began as dance drama. Many Kabuki dances were created as part of longer plays. Even when there is no particular story to tell, the dancer will still be in character. Kabuki dance is never separated from acting. Acting also is the very essential part of Kabuki drama. All young Kabuki actors, as part of their training, have to learn the basic movement patterns, postures, and speech of typical male and female roles. While some clever actors can play both male and female characters successfully. The whole performance is executed as a highly refined art. To be exact the Kabuki may be described as a play more like a revue than a drama.3 However, the Kabuki is a kind of classical drama for the masses and is rich in artistic qualities. Moreover, the Kabuki can be considered as a very complicated dramatic form. The Kabuki drama is so complicated in its nature that it is a difficult task to define it in a few words.4 Kabuki plays are also known as kyageki or plays of the old school. Kabuki is referred to by the Japanese as ‘Living pictures’ and ‘Living history’. Both terms convey, the colour, beauty, and faithful representation of ancient customs and manners embodied in the art.5 Kabuki, the national theatre of Japan, is generally conceded by scholars, 6 both Asian and Western, to be the most perfect and elaborate classical theatre extent. Kabuki theatre is so vivid, spontaneous 1 and dynamic that it throws open a door and gives us a clear view of the Japanese people, customs and art.7 Background for Kabuki According the tradition, the first Kabuki performance was done in Kyoto in 1596, but it was during the Tokugawa or Edo period (1603-1868) that Kabuki developed its distinctive form. Since the evolution of Kabuki is unintelligible out of its historical context, a brief description of the configuration of these centuries is necessary. During the Tokugawa regime, the society was organized according to Confucian principles, stressing the importance of morality with particular emphasis on filial piety and loyalty and the hierarchical ordering of the society. The emperor, who was believed have descended from the Sun Goddess, was at the apex of the political system and represented the ultimate authority, through most of Japan’s history, however, others wielded authority in his name. The Fujiwara family (894-1068) were the first to rule, then the Taira or Heike (1068-1185), the Minamoto or Genji (1185-1199), followed by the Hojo (1199-1333) and the Ashikaga (1336-1574). Moreover, during the supremacy of the Tokugawa family, the Emperor in Kyoto had no political power. He legitimised the authority of the Tokugawa and several as a ceremonial figurehead.8 Apart from the court nobility in Kyoto, the society was organized into four hereditary classes. Warriors or Samurai (Bushi) belonged to the highest class, then came farmers (hyakusho), followed by craftsmen (shokunin), and at the bottom the merchants and other townsmen (chonin). Merchants were frowned upon because they did not produce anything, earning their living by buying cheaply and selling dearly and profiting from interest on loans. Priests and nuns were regarded as a separate group. Others, such as actors and prostitutes excluded from the four-class system. Each group was given a separate identity by law. Not only were townsmen told what kind of clothes they could and could not wear, but samurai were also commanded to dress and live in a style appropriate to their rank. The Tokugawa shogun was the supreme head of Japan’s ruling military class. His ‘tent government’ (bakufu) kept the entire country under right control. Samurai were expected to behave according to strict codes that governed all aspects of their life. Samurai usually dressed meticulously and always wore two swords as a token of their privileged status. The sword was more than a weapon. It was a symbol of honour and considered a sacred family treasure. At the other end of the social spectrum were the farmers, craftsmen and merchants. In daily practice, there was no clear distinction between merchants, shopkeepers, craftsmen, peddlers and day labourers. Townsmen were not permitted to take surnames and samurai had the right to strike down a townsman if he did not show enough respect. Generally townsmen were not allowed to attend the sophisticated pastimes of the samurai class, such as Noh and Bugaku. Farmers, just below the samurai in rank, grew the rice that provided the samurai’s income. They lived in villages and were obliged to form groups based on mutual assistance and responsibility. Each village had a headman who mediated between the villages and the supervising samurai class. In the Tokugawa period, most Japanese were made of wood and plaster with standard-sized thick straw mats (tatami) covering the floors. The houses were furnished with standing lamps, low tables and small chests, all made of undecorated wood. Trade and commerce became more important and the economy expanded throughout the Seventeenth and Eighteenth century. The non productive samurai class did not profit from these developments. Their financial position, based on fixed stipends of rice, declined because their income remained unchanged while the cost of living increased. They were trained in martial arts, poetry and philosophy and not brought up to engage in any form of trade or labour. While the economic power of the samurai class gradually declined that of the townsmen 2 increased. At the end of the Seventeenth century, Kabuki, financially patronized by wealthy merchants developed into an immensely popular form of entertainment where townspeople could enjoy themselves.9 It is evident that Kabuki actors were frequently invited to the residences of daimyo and samurai and sometimes even stayed overnight. In these circumstances, love was offered for a price without regard for rank or status. Brothels operated in all the large cities in the first decades of the Tokugawa period. Kabuki and prostitution were closely linked throughout this period. Both catered primarily to the interests of the townsmen. Kabuki theatres were surrounded by teahouses (chaya). The Tokugawa government regarded popular enthusiasm for kabuki and the high profile of brothels with suspicion. In 1668, prostitutes and Kabuki actors were forbidden to wear any material better than ordinary silk clothes. In the Genroku period (1688-1704), a colourful, bourgeois culture developed among the commoners of the three great cities. For the first time commoners enjoyed pastimes that had previously been the preserve of Japan’s elite, such as reading books, writing poetry and playing music. In this golden, cultural period, lavishly illustrated in paintings and woodblock prints, the brothel districts and the Kabuki and Puppet theatres flourished. Next centuries were engaged in civil wars over the country. At the beginning of the seventeenth century, the Tokugawa Shogunate brought peace in the form of a centralized military dictatorship. The shogun maintained his power by an unforgiving hierarchical control of nearly all aspects of Japanese society. Since the samurai went up the top, the class system descended through farmers and craftsmen and finally to merchants, the later despised particularly for their association with such vulgar matters as usury and trade. Merchants, living in town came an underclass known as hinin (non humans), or kawaramono (objects of the riverbed).10 These were people who had either dropped out of society or whose professions were concerned with matters which were considered unclean, such as butchers or tanners. Actors and prostitutes were included in this underclass as they, too were thought to be no better than social pariahs. Shrines and temples had traditionally sent out groups of priests and nuns for the purpose of spreading religion and collecting funds. By the end of the 16th century, however, groups of these nuns had degenerated into travelling entertainers, and some were also involved in prostitution. Kabuki Performances: Women (Onna) Kabuki : The conventional account of the origins of Kabuki opens with the appearance in Kyoto of Okuni in 1603 or perhaps earlier. Some scholars express that Kabuki was appeared in 1597 or before, but there are no historical records. An itinerant dancer who claimed association with Izumo shrine, she was said to have performed suggestive dances and skits in the dry riverbed of the Kamo river by Gojoo bridge, than the eastern edge of the city proper, which was given over to amusements and sideshows. Okuni’s dances were probably standard contemporary skits dressed up with novel dramatic elements and a farcical or erotic twist. Okuni should be a miko(young female shrine assistant) or shrine maiden from the great shrine at Izumo. Her troupe may consist of female dancers. Okuni was also socially provocative in that she sometimes dressed as a youth, and seems to have worn elements of Portuguese dress adopted from early missionaries and even a crucifix. Her performances consisted of a Buddhist ceremonial dance with original variations. The audience had seen Buddhist dances before what impressed them were the variations.11 The performances were expanded, with flute and drum 3 accompaniment. Okuni’s performances belonged to the type of entertainment which was of old called shirabyoshi and originated in an adaptation of the Kagura- the earliest folk drama in Japan. During the Eiroku period (1558-70) there was a man called Nagoya Sanzaemon. He had originally been a samurai but had fallen on bad days. Later, he was in the capital and formed an intimate close relationship with the dancer Okuni. They met each other, took counsel together, and evolved kabuki performances; 12 other troupes also formed in imitation. However, unexpectedly Okuni was dead in about 1610, according to the some sources. Within a few years of Okuni’s death in Kyoto, there were imitations of her performance by troupes of prostitutes. In 1612 Sadoshima Yosanji set up a stage on the riverbed at Shijoo. These shows were known as Yuujo Kabuki (prostitute’s kabuki). However, their performances were known as Onna Kabuki or women’s Kabuki, which Okuni had popularized, was largely due to its sensual dances and erotic scenes. Performances forwarded by Okuni were considered disciplined and emotional. But the prostitute’s Kabuki had not been controlled their erotic scenes. Many of the skits demonstrated techniques used by prostitute to approach prospective clients. Occasionally male performers assumed female roles, producing a great deal of sexually confused pantomime. 13 According to Hayashi Razan (1583-1657), A contemporary Confucian scholar ‘the men and the women sing and dance together. This is the Kabuki of today. Screens and hands scrolls of the time depict girls swinging their hips and throwing their arms about with an abandon not to be seen in later dancing. Descriptions of performances leave no doubt those they were prostitutes as well.’ Fights sometimes occurred among the more hot blooded samurai or foot soldiers in the audience for keeping sexual connection with beautiful prostitutes. Because of these circumstances, high class army officer, the Shogunate had to prohibit women from appearing on the stage in 1629. This ban was repeatedly issued, and after a few years actresses ceased to appear in the theatres of the principle cities. Later, their place was taken by young male actors.14 Young Boy’s Kabuki or Wakashu Kabuki With the disappearance of women from the theatre their roles were taken over by long-haired handsome young boys. They had been performing Kabuki (Wakashu Kabuki) before women were banned from the stage, incorporated the women dances into their own performances. These young boys, not older than fourteen or fifteen, offered sexual services as well. Homosexual practices had become extremely prevalent during the military campaigns of the 15th and 16th centuries and were also common in Buddhist monasteries. During the 17th century some of the shoguns and feudal lords exercised their preference for beautiful youths. Homosexuality was, moreover, widely practised among commoners, following the example of their betters. Homosexual prostitution was banned in 1648, but too little effect. Finally, in 1652, the authorities seized upon an incident to close the theatres in Edo and other cities. Youth’s Kabuki, or at least Kabuki, or other names of Kabuki by that name, come to an end.15 Elder Men’s Kabuki or Yaro Kabuki After much pleading by the Kabuki operators, the officials yielded and the theatres were allowed to reopen under certain conditions, which included what was presumably intended to be a fundamental requirement. Kabuki in the future, should restrict itself to representational drama, and also that wakashu, who had hitherto used elaborate styles of hairdressing, should shave off their front hair (as did the majority of males at the time) to make them less attractive. Then adult male actors had to perform all the female roles (onnagata). This custom has been continued until today. Some actors 4 performed as onnagata, which other became specialists in tachiyaku (male roles) or in comic roles (dokeyaku). In the second half of the 17th century, Kabuki evolved from a variety show featuring dance and music into a new form of drama. Actors were no longer appreciated for their sex appeal alone but also for their acting abilities. The number of roles increased and their staging became more complicated. Development of Kabuki The performers were now forced to compensate for their lack of physical charm by improved technique and stranger scripts. Kabuki began to produce works in strict play form divided into acts, and to develop its own playwrights. The history of Kabuki proper is usually divided into three main phases. At the beginning, the art grew up in several centres independently, and distinct local styles emerged. Kyoto preferred its acting realistic; Osaka developed the delicate, while Edo delighted in aragoto playing, more romantic and highly emotional. The leading Edo actor, Ichikawa Danjuro1 (1660-1704) introduce a bombastic, rough style of called aragoto that reflected the dynamic samurai-dominated atmosphere of the New capital. In Kyoto, the actor, Sakata Tojuro1 (1664-1709), developed a gentle more romantic style of acting (wagoto), which was highly appreciated by the more educated and culturally refined theatregoers of the Kamigata region.16 Other Kamigata actors like Yoshizawa Ayame 1 (1673-1729), and Mizuki Tatsunosuke 1(1673-1745) developed acting standards that brought the onnagata to an artistically high level. Towards the end of the 17th century, the urban societies of Osaka and Edo reached a peak of material prosperity and commoners enjoyed an unprecedented level of wealth and freedom. Successful merchants lived a life of luxury and patronized the theatre and other arts. In this fruitful cultural climate, with star actors, such as Ichikawa Danjuro1 and Sakata Tojuro1, Kabuki was in its heyday. Performances achieved a perfect balance acting, scripts and stage techniques, with several theatres in all large cities. By 1673 Ichikawa Danjuro 1(1660-1704) had made his debut on the stage of the Nakamura-za in Edo. He created the aragoto plays which always featured courageous heroes who displayed superhuman powers in overcoming evildoers. Danjuro 1’s portrayal of these bold, masculine characters helped define and establish the basic taste for these plays possessed by the towns people of Edo; the capital of the Tokugawa military government. When the Genroku era began, the major division of Kabuki into Jidai mono (historical plays), Sewamono (domestic plays), and Shosagoto (dance plays), Shosagoto was already established. From 1781 to 1850, era is regarded by some as Kabuki’s golden age, by others as the begging of its decadence. The fusion of symbolic puppets and realistic actors had created a unique style, ornate, magical and fantastic. Edo was now the acknowledged Kabuki centre. The spectacular success of Kabuki in the Kyoto- Osaka area during the late 17th century was soon followed by a period of comparative inactivity. It lasted until the middle of the next century. The immediate cause for the doldrums was the rising influence of the puppet theatre. With the issuing of licenses permitting the constructions of permanent theatres, the building became gradually more substantial. The meet fence was replaced by solid board walls, and a row of boxes (sajiki) was built along the two sides of the parquet (doma) for spectators who required more comfort and privacy. The Nakamura-za first used the wheeling crane (maizuru) design. The Ichimuraza chose a rounded crane within an octagon. The early theatres had only one entrance, located in the centre of the building under the drum tower. It was a small opening with a high threshold which the 5 customer had to step over while ducking under a low overhead, aptly called the mouse entrance (nezumi kido). The stoop entrance was abandoned and a short curtain (noren) hung across the top of the doorway.17 Dressing rooms located directly behind the stage, were built in two stories by the 1670s. Before the end of the century the Morita-za in Edo added a third level. A passageway leading to the dressing room section was constructed behind the boxes. Though intended for use by actors to gain access to the end of the path of the flower (hanamichi), it was soon travelled by actors summoned to boxes or patrons visiting dressing rooms. The usual arrangement called for baths and quarters for musicians, writers, and wakashu on the first floor, onnagata on the second, and players of men’s roles on the third. A large rehearsal area also occupied the third level. Leading players had individual dressing room, although partitions had not received official sanction. Some features of the Noh stage were gradually modified in the Kabuki theatre, although it is surprisingly how long they persisted. The stage itself was only 19 feet square at the outset. At the beginning of the 18th century, the popularity of Kabuki was threatened by the puppet theatre. In the middle of the 16th century, puppeteers and minstrels began cooperating. These musicians, frequently blind, recited war tales and romantic stories to the accompaniment of the Japanese lute (biwa) and a fan struck rhythmically on a block. One of the most popular tales described the love story between Ushiwakamaru and Prince Joruri. Thereafter all narrative music became known as joruri. In the 1560’s the lute (biwa) was replaced by a more expressive three- stringed lute, the shamisen, introduced in Japan from the Ryuukyuu island (now Okinawa). Originally, a simple puppet was manipulated by a puppeteer hidden from sight. By the middle of the 18th century, puppets became more elaborate, with movable eyes and articulated fingers. Three puppeteers, now visible to the audience all the time, were required to manipulate these heavy puppets. One man dressed in official attire and standing on high clogs, handled the head and the right arm, a second man dressed in black clothing and wearing a hood, handled the left arm, and a third man, also dress in black, manipulated the legs. A chanter (tayuu), accompanied by a shamisen player narrated the sory.18 In 1684, the chanter, Takemoto Gidayu (1651-1715) founded the Takemoto puppet theatre in Osaka. When the great playwright Chikamatsu Monzaemon started to contribute his skills, the puppet theatre peaked. Some plays were so successful that they ran for more than a year. Several Kabuki masterpieces were originally written for the puppet theatre and some still have short scenes in which the actors mimic the movements of puppets as a tribute to the origins of the plays. Not only the texts but also music was copied. After enjoying immense popularity declined in the Kyoto-Osaka area and Kabuki recaptured the support of the town’s people. Finally, consequently, Kabuki became more stylized and less realistic. While Kabuki tried to recover from the threat posed by the popularity of the puppet theatre, problems were not yet over. In the first decades of the 18th century, Ichikawa Danjuro 1 and Sakata Tojuro 1, star actors of the Genroku period died, leaving behind an inexperienced group of young actors. By now, Kyoto and Osaka had lost their leading cultural position and Kabuki innovation shifted to Edo. New types of narrative music became popular and songs sung on the Kabuki stage could be heard all over Edo. Japan experienced a period of social unrest in the first half of the 19th century. Traditional Kabuki plays could no longer attract attention and the public demanded more sensational plays. Tsuruya Nanboku iv (1758-1829) was attuned to the changing social attitudes. For this purpose, he introduced a new genre of ‘raw’ contemporary plays called Kizewamono. Nanboku’s best known work was ‘A Ghost story at yotsuya on the Tokaido. The playwright Tsuruya Nanboku iv continually produced new plays for the Edo theatres. Danjuro was very interested in history plays (Jidaimono), but in contrast to the traditional plays in which historical facts were subordinate to the plot, he wanted to stage performances rooted in fact. Later, Kawatake Mokuami (1816-1893) wrote several new history plays, but they generally foiled to attract large audiences. These living history plays (Katsurekigeki) were incomprehensible and dull with far too many dialogues. Kikugoro was a 6 versatile actor, excelling in naturalistic roles with psychological depth, and paid much attention to refined gestures, make up, and costumes. Mokuami wrote several contemporary plays (sewamono) for him based on daily life in the Meiji period. These plays were nicknamed ‘cropped-hair plays’ (zangirimono) because they reflected a civilized society. They are like Danjuro’s ‘living history plays’. However, these cropped-hair plays were not successful either. One of the greatest moments of Meiji Kabuki was undoubtedly when the leading actors were invited to perform for Emperor Meiji.19 The operating of Japan to foreign countries heralded the last days of the Tokugawa government. In the Meiji Era (1868-1912), Japan went through a period of rapid social political and technological modernization. The destruction of the old feudal class system left both Noh and Kyogen bereft of their daimyo and samurai patrons. Kabuki, however, remained as popular as ever, and its actors found new status and modern-day stardom. Edo period audiences had clamoured for new and exciting plays, and the theatre was an integral part of the lives of many men and women. While the established dances and dramas remained the principle bulk of the repertoire, new plays were also added with varying degrees of success. In the 20th century, first decade new drama called Shinpa was bloomed, did, however, make a significant contribution to the repertoire through the works of playwrights such as Tsubouchi Shoyo (1859-1935), Okamoto Kido (1872-1939),and Mayama Seika (1878-1948), but it lost momentum when in the 1910’s traditional Kabuki regained popularity. During the world war 11 many young Kabuki actors were drafted into the armed forces and attempts were made use Kabuki plays that focussed on loyalty and unquestioning self sacrifice for propaganda purposes. In last year of the war, Kabuki was suspended and in March 1945, bombing raids destroyed all theatres in Tokyo. After Japan surrendered, three-quarters of the most popular five hundreds plays were banned. Edo had been famous for its three great theatres known as the Edo sanza, Nakamura-za and Morita-za, all were destroyed. The Kabuki-za became the main Kabuki theatre. In 1951, the Kabuki-za bombed during the war, was rebuilt and reopened. Today, Kabuki is the part of Japan’s entertainments. Several Kabuki actors are celebrities and receive major attention from the media. The Kabuki flourishes in the performance of many fine actors. Reputed actor, Nakamura Ganjiro 11 has dedicated a major part of his carrier to performances and revivals of the classical works of Chikamatsu Monzaemon, and his theatre troupe operates in a variety of venues under the title of the Chikamatsu-za. At the other extreme, in 1986 the popular and renowned actor Ichikawa Ennosuke 111 launched his so-called Super Kabuki, which has had considerable success with people who are not usually attracted to classical theatre. These plays, mostly rewritings of traditional themes or stories, are all designed to highlight Ennosuke’s talents’ often in many different roles written the same play. They use elaborate costumes and modern recorded music, and are in a mixture of styles with heavy Chinese, Indian and other Asian influences. The first was ‘Yamato Takeru’. Yamato Takeru is an adventure of love and warfare. Ousu no Mikoto (later called Prince Takeru) was a son of Keiko Tenno, who ruled an area extending from Nara to Osaka and known as Yamato. A legendary figure, Takeru is believed to have lived during the fourth century, and is referred to in the Kojiki (The Chronicles of Ancient Japan) compiled in A.D. 712. His story was adapted for the stage by Takeshi Umehara, a philosopher and an authority on Japan’s ancient history, which used his vivid imagination to heighten the tale and fashion the role of the young hero to Ennosuke 111, then considered a rebel in the Kabuki Theatre. 7 With a script adapted by Koji Ishikawa, this new version of Yamato Takeru is performed amid extraordinary stage sets by Setsu Asakura and other designers, and includes exciting scenes using keren Kabuki tricks, such as a revolving stage. There are even some elements of the elaborate Kyageki( Chinese Theatre) used for a climactic fighting scene in Act 11. The musical accompaniment for Yamato Takeru also differs from the usual Kabuki music, replacing the live shamisen and drums with a taped orchestration of traditional string instruments (which includes the shamisen but also the koto and biwa), wind instruments such as the flute (fue) sho and shakuhachi, and various percussion instruments. And to match this entire spectacle is a veritable fashion show of elaborate costumes designed by Tamio Mori. Luxurious mixes of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Persian and South Asian styles and motifs, their array of colours, fabrics and textures could almost upstage the actors themselves. This is a beautiful and fantastic drama that is not only familiar to older generations, but through the enthusiasm and original efforts of Ennosuke, bright and energetic, makes a handsome Yamato Takerua splendid gift of a role from his uncle. Expect to see more from him, too, as he plans to work on updating and giving new life to other Super Kabuki plays with the help of his cousin Ichikawa Chusha ix (Teruyuki Kagawa) and the members of the Kabuki Circle for the 21st century, who was also trained by Ennosukeii. Yamato Takeru may be a warrior endowed with superhuman powers, but he is also a lonely man who is essentially misunderstood by his father, the head of the Yamato court (here played by Ichikawa Chusha ix). After accidentally killing his own brother, Takeru, under the instruction of his grieving father, leads dangerous expeditions accompanied by a warrior named Takehiko (played by Ichikawa Ukon). They are sent to subdue the kumaso tribe of southern Kyusu, and the Ezo people of northern Japan. Successful in his missions, on his final expedition to conquer a group of demons living on mount Ibuki between Shiga and Gifu Prefectures, Takeru is attacked by a giant white boar (the manifestation of the head of the demons). He kills the boar but is cursed by a female demon and falls ill. On his return trip, as he reaches Nobuno in Mie Prefecture, Takeru dies while lamenting his long separation from and his longing for his wife Tachibana-hime (played by Ichikawa Emiya), and young son Wakatakeru (Ichikawa Danko). This whole tragic chain of events begins when Takeru loses a magic sword that was entrusted to him by his aunt Yamato hime (Ichikawa Emisaburo) , and was supposed to protect him. In the final act of the play, Takeru transforms himself into a gigantic white bird, and emerges from his tomb to glide, in mid air, over the audience, before disappearing into ‘heaven’. Famous leading onnagata actor, Bando Tamasaburo V has also shown him receptive to foreign influences, both traditional theatre and new theatre. While preparing for the modern play Gensho to Yokihi, staged at the shinbashi Enbujou Theatre in 1987, Tamasaburo travelled to China to study female role acting of Peking Opera from the specialist of female role, Mei Baojin who taught him the well known role of Yokihi. More recently, the playwright and director Noda Hideki, has also achieved great popular success with his adaptations of Kabuki plays. The Evolution of Kabuki: At the beginning Kabuki was staged in the open air and sometimes used the temporary wooden structures in the Kamo riverbed. But later, they decided to built permanent theatres in the near by 8 Shijo area. By 1617, the authorities in Kyoto were issuing licences for it. When the constructions of the early Kabuki theatre, which were influenced by the Noh theatre. The main acting stage (hon butai) located slightly off-centre to the audience’s right, was an elevated wooden structure measuring about 8 metres square. The main stage was attached to the dressing room on the audience’s left by a roofed passageway (hashigakari) used for entrances, exits and as an auxiliary performing area. By the middle of the 17th century, a forestage was added that extended beyond the roof into the auditorium. Around 1664, when plays with several acts were first performed, a stage curtain (hikimaku) was introduced. A raised wooden walkway traversed the auditorium at an oblique angle, connecting the main stage to a curtained exit (agemaku) at the left, behind the auditorium. This raised walkway, known as the Hanamichi (flower path), soon became a common extension of the main stage in all the theatres.20 The Hanamichi was divided lengthwise into ten sections. By the end of the 18th century, small Hanamichi was built on the right side of the audience. It was called Kari Hanamichi and also used for actor’s entrances and exits. In the beginning of the 18th century, large theatre could have accommodated about 800 spectators. In the second half of the 18th century, the Kabuki stage was equipped with several technical innovations, such as a revolving stage (mawaributai), introduced by the creative Osaka playwright Namiki Shozo (1730-1773) in 1758.Large stage properties, such as boats, were fitted with hidden wheels so that they could be moved over the stage without the audience seeing how it was done. At the back of the theatre, the dressing rooms (gakuya) for actors and other assistants were remained. However, the modernization o f the Meiji period, Kabuki lost much of its former intimacy and cosiness. The plots of Kabuki: Kabuki has a repertoire more than five hundred plays exclusive of new works (shin Kabuki).The masterpieces nearly all belong to the 18th century. Kabuki falls into three major classifications: Historical plays (Jidaimono), Plays of contemporary domestic life (Sewamono) and Dance plays (Shosagoto). Historical plays (Jidaimono): Jidaimono is the general name for Kabuki plays with historical backgrounds. Most of these plays are those of puppet-play origin. Historical plays are period plays set in real or legendary past of Japan prior to the Edo period (1600-1868). The great plays of the Bunraku and Kabuki repertoires all fall into this category. A full-length jidaimono play usually consisted of five acts and took the greater part of a day to perform in its entirety.21 Historical plays generally dealt with warriors and aristocrats from the pre-Tokugawa period, but many so-called history plays were based on actual conflicts and power struggles between members of the ruling Tokugawa clan. In the Tokugawa period referring to political leaders or actual incidents was forbidden. To evade this, names of characters were changed slightly and action occurred in a different historical setting. Many Historical plays are set in the Heian or Kamakura periods. The atmosphere of these early periods is emphasized by using spectacular scenic backdrops and splendid costumes. With respects to the contents of Historical plays, playwrights were more concerned with dramatic effect than historical accuracy. Historical plays did not appear in the Kabuki repertoire until many years after Domestic plays (sewamono) like the prostitute-buying and love –suicide pieces. Eventually they fell into two different categories, the earlier of which oiemono, or ‘feudal house’ plays- seen likely to have developed from the use of imitate to disguise contemporary scandals in samurai families.22 Historical plays set and costumes are generally colourful and sometimes spectacular, which the acting style is less realistic and more stylized. Unlike the spoken language used in Domestic plays, which is basically that of the time in which it was written, the spoken language of Historical plays is more classical and formal. What particularly appeared to 9 the Kyoto audience seems to have been the contrast between the delicate wagoto style of acting and the more active samurai scenes, even though these did not yet employ the exaggerated aragoto style. Particularly bravura style of acting was reserved for the other kind of history play- the ‘court history’ or odaimono. These were often set in the world of the ancient Heian court. Danjuro 1 created a sensation when he entered the stage wearing bold black and red kumadori-make up rampaged up the side of a mountain and single handily demolished eight or ten opponents. Domestic or Contemporary plays (Sewamono): In 1703 Chikamatsu Monzaemon wrote the first Sewamono or Domestic play called Sonezaki Shinju for Bunraku Drama. The plots of double suicide plays, like the events themselves are all basically similar. They usually involve a young man of good family who has fallen in love with a prostitute but leaks the means to buy her out of her profession. In such a situation the two lovers decide to die together. This is a kind of romantic love over the harsh realities of life. This kind of love-suicide plays were simply a tragic variation of the prostitute play. It was set at the time of writing and dealt with a true incident from the everyday life of town people of feudal Japan. While some earlier 17 th century Kabuki plays set in the pleasure quarters could also be called Sewamono. They depict nothing of the more difficult sides of real life and were only concerned with the floating world of the pleasure quarters. Depending on the subject matters Domestic or Contemporary plays may be further divided into subcategories; such as plays of the lover’s double suicide and plays about thieves and bandits. Some plays about everyday life can be considered as the realistic plays, in which depicts common people’s life activities, customs and some kind of abstract activities.23 In this kind of plays, were created and developed by the actors who were living in the Osaka area, using simple realistic settings and costumes, and had special talents and skill for performing them. The Tokugawa Shogunate was not prepared to accept this kind of dramas any longer and banned all of them with the word Shinju in 1722. This banning was strictly enforced for many years and it severely undermined the Kabuki theatres in Osaka and Kyoto, where love-suicide plays had formed a major part of the repertory. Dance Plays (Shosagoto): The dramatists in Edo began to create a new style of dramatic dance plays in 1770s, called a buyo geki, in which it was possible to handle plots and conflicts. Dance scenes were soon being added to all the standard pieces in the Kabuki repertory and one or two of the older plays were almost completely reworked in terms of dance. One play of this kind was ‘A Letter from the Licensed Quarter’, first staged in 1780, which was a dance adaptation of the well-known Yugiri-Izaemon story from the Genroku Period. Most of them, though, derived either directly or indirectly from the Noh.24Other kind of dance play used the general pattern of the Nohgaku, which consisted of two narrative sections, borrowing from it indirectly. In the first act, the main actor who dances, appears as a normal human being although often suggests that he is really some kind of spirit or animal. He appears as his true self, a serpent or a fox spirit in the second act. Dance plays of this kind can be varied striking in the second part the actor appears as the lord of the jungle himself and dances sensational sequence. This kind of dance requires a strong and well-tied mask. Although the dramatic contents of these dance plays are always interesting. Their principal aim is to delight the audience with beautiful singing and music, elegant costumes and attractive styles of acting. Most Kabuki actors commence learning dance before the age of ten and continue to take lessons until they are nature. During the time they will come across nearly every work in the vast repertoire, and it is arguable whether a Kabuki actor trained in this way is ever completely free from the influence of dance movement. Specially dancing is very important part of the male act female role (onnagata role), and all the talented actors have to get experience in practice as much as possible.25 10 True-to- life Domestic plays (Kizewamono): The plays written and presented in Edo at the beginning of the 19th century are called true-to- life plays or Sewamono. After two hundred years, what had happened to the Tokugawa feudal society reflected by those plays? At that time many powerful Samurai families were in debt to the merchant classes who are powerful and well-to do. They had always despised and could no longer afford to support their retainers. Because of this situation the number of people who were no jobs became dangerously large and many of them turned to crime. Bribery and corruption were to be seen everywhere and traditional loyalty seemed to have died the death. Based on this background, Tsuruya Namboku commenced writing ‘true-to-life’ plays. He who wrote plays of all kinds for thirty years was considered as the originator of this kind of Kabuki and he had great practical experiences. At the age of fifty three, he achieved the rank of chief playwright in 1807 finally. 26 The Meiji restoration of 1868 opened up Japan to the west shortly after Namboku’s death. Because of western influences new trends introduced into Japan and his works were ignored and forgotten. Acting of Kabuki: Acting of Kabuki comes in a variety of styles. Two main styles of acting can be distinguished generally; a bombastic rough (Aragoto) style that originated in Edo, and a gentle (Wagoto) style initiated in the kamigata area (Kyoto and Osaka). Aragoto Style: This style was introduced in about 1673 by the first Ichikawa Danjuro (1660-1704). It is said that he based this exaggerated style of acting on kinpira, a violent heroic character from the puppet theatre and it was also called wild warrior style of acting. Kinpira, a puppet character, whose violent antics was very popular; considered as dangerous, among common people. He adopted some of the fearsome poses when playing aragoto characters which were almost certainly also influenced by Buddhist statuary like the frightening deity, Fudoomyoo. Danjuro used the style to portray superheroes and villains, and he made his whole performance costume, makeup, vocal delivery, and acting style larger than life. Typically, aragoto characters paint their faces with broad lines of makeup called kumadori to increase their fearsome appearances, and some wear outlandishly large padded costumes and fantastic wigs. At the same time, Danjuro also invented wildly exaggerated modes of acting such as the glaring, stop-motion poses called ‘mie’ in Japanese, and the dramatic, swaggering entrances and exits called roppoo. The Kabuki play, Shibaraku can be considered as one of the greatest plays in the aragoto style. In this play central character, now called Kamakura Gongoroo and other character Kagemasa is considered one of the most fantastic. Kabuki Eighteen plays (Kabuki Juuhachiban) selected by the veteran actor Danjuro vii in the 17th century; include aragoto style of plays mostly. 27 Other actors of the Danjuro line further refined the aragoto style, which became a speciality of the family. The aragoto style is exemplified by exaggerated posturing, extravagant speech, exotic costumes and distinctive makeup. Onnagata (women roles played by males) Acting: The lack of realism in the acting style of the onnagata was not a deficiency in the eyes of a Tokugawa audience. One of the more popular styles of male acting, aragoto, which was characterized by the exaggerated movement and bombastic language appropriate to the superhuman prowess of 11 warrior heroes, was equally unnatural. Some players of women’s roles even after they reached onnagata status and were no longer indentured, continued to have homosexual relationships. If they were prominent actors, they would of course be selective. In as much as they were trained and experienced homosexual partners and since their stage roles as onnagata depended on assumed femininity, it was their practice to lead rather feminine lives, to live their art. The many stories concerning the practices of onnagata in the Tokugawa period include accounts that they dressed like women when off the stage. The appeal of onnagata was not merely to the men of the audience. They were admired by the ladies for the elegance of their gestures and the gentleness of their dispositions since they played women in an idealized manner. Occasionally they became involved in love affairs with ladies of higher status. The prominent players of male roles were also admired for their sexuality and were more openly idolized than the onnagata. Sakata Tojuro (1647-1709) specialized in playing the part of the great lover and big spender in the prostitute quarters. He was called the ‘Original master of love scenes’ and ‘the first in the line of the engagers of prostitutes’. His contemporary, actor from Osaka, Arashi San’emon (1635-1690), held a similar title; ‘pioneer of lovemaking in the west’. His biological sketch in a critical booklet states, “There is not a prostitute with whom he is not intimate. Ikushima Shingoro was much admired by the ladies for the way he played love scenes. The god of Izumo sends a shower which causes him to enjoy love scenes on the stage, pleasing the ladies of the audience. Actors set fashion in some sectors of society. Another actor, Matsumoto Koshiro iv is seated in his shop which offered a special wafer, writing a poem on a fan for a young woman. Some shops are still associated with the name of famous actors, for example, Takashimaya for Ichikawa Sadanji and his disciples. Edo’s first great actor, Ichikawa Danjuro, a hero was referred to as ‘The Flower of Edo.’ Excitement shot up to a high pitch when a great star made his entrance on the passage way (hanamichi), paused, and slowly turned his face toward the audience; ‘One glance, a thousand ryo- kikunojo on the passage way. Wagoto Style This kind of acting is more realistic and gentle. The popular actor from the areas of Kyoto and Osaka (Kamigata), Sakata Toojuuroo 1 (1647-1709) is eradicated for this more sophisticated type of acting that suited the tastes of the theatre audiences in the commercial (Osaka) and cultural (Kyoto) centres of Japan. Wagoto roles usually feature somewhat silly young lovers under difficult circumstances, torn between social obligations and heart rending emotions.28 ‘The Soga Brothers’ Revenge’ where the role of the young passionate Goro is performed in Aragoto style and that of the more sensitive elder brother Juro in Wagoto style. Besides those two styles of acting, another style of acting was inspired by the puppet theatre. The text for puppet plays was always set to music and the puppets were manipulated in accordance with the narrative music. Kabuki actors quickly found out that they better adapt their acting to the character and the shamisen player. In this way, they followed the movements of the puppets. Gradually Kabuki actors became subordinate to the script and music. Actors spoke most of the dialogues themselves, but the narrator directed the acting. The aragoto and wagoto acting styles lacked these additional functions because there was no narrator. Another quite peculiar form of acting was a five to ten minute pantomime in which several characters appeared on stage in succession and struggled in slow motion and complete silence for a precious object. Dancing is also an essential part of Kabuki. In the early days, Okuni and her companions were more occupied with dancing than acting. By contrast to the stately no dances (mai) 12 with slow circling foot movements made without lifting the heel, most Kabuki dances more resemble lively folk-dances (odori), with rapid energetic vertical movements and jumps. The acting and Scripting: A type of Japanese dance called furi influenced a lot for originating the Art of theatre, Kabuki. Dancer of furi mimes the actions described in a ballad or song. And it has always been involved with storytelling. It uses movements that are closely based upon the actions of real life. However, the dancer strongly emphasises the rhythmical quality of those movements. The Kabuki actors use the selective and highly-stylised movements which are elegant and effective. They form a generally accepted ‘code’ by means of which the action and feeling of the story can be easily and clearly communicated to the members of the audience. Kabuki play breaks down into a number of separate sequences of action, each of which involves a gradual acceleration of both the movement and the vocal delivery. On the other hand, Kabuki is a very physical and visual kind of theatre, which moves from pose to pose. This term is used for Kabuki dance pieces, Shosagoto- dance drama. Kabuki actor is consciously playing his role and capable of commenting on it by the style of his performance. It is significant that he has borrowed the Noh practice of sitting in front of a mirror for some time before making his entry. In order to concentrate on the outward appearance of the character he is about to present and thus absorb its inner nature. Each of the Kabuki actors will specialise in a particular type of role, for instance that of leading man called ‘tachiyaku’, leading woman called tateoyama, elderly woman named kashagata, villain named katakiyaku, comedian introduced dokeyaku, adolescent boy called wakashugata, fighter named yoten and so on. When the actor plays a leading male-role, he is introduced as tachiyaku, it may be written in a wagoto (gentle) style, an aragoto (rough) style, or a jitsugoto (realistic) style, and so on. The actor is merely a tool that is used to present the narrative, but he seeks to be as efficient a tool as he can make himself. His fitness is very important for some roles. In aragoto roles, he needs to create an impression of sheer muscularity. But in most of his roles he is more in need of delicate and subtle muscular control and the crucial test of his art is his ability to handle properties with grace and ease. The greatest Kabuki actors all exhibit great skill in painting and calligraphy, because their hands and fingers are so supple. Kabuki actor is basically a dancer; this expressive skill needs to extend to every part of his body. The mie ( mee-ay) is seen as an opportunity for the actor to impress himself on the audience with all the resources at his command. It can be undertaken while he is sitting but it is considered much more effective when he is standing. From the audience’s point of view, however, this is a high point of the actor’s performance and the pose is welcomed with the ecstatic cries of his supporters (yago).Onnagata playing female roles may also ‘cut a mie’, but the rolling of the head is much reduced and they never glare and cross their eyes, which would be inelegant for a woman. Their poses are called ‘kimari’. The ‘mie’ is, of course, in no sense realistic, it is expressionistic. In the Genroku mie, this is said to have been invented by Ichikawa Danjuro for using in aragoto pieces. The position of the legs in this mie is similar to their position in the separated feet ‘mie’. Stage The important contribution of Genroku to present day Kabuki is the special stage and its several related mechanical devices.29 Okuni started in a river bed of Kyoto and progressed from there to lawns and finally to Noh stage. At the beginning Kabuki was mainly performed on the Noh stage. But later 13 it was developed through Onna and Wakashu Kabuki so, too, became developments in the performance space, moving gradually away from the Noh model. On stage right and stage- left it is approximately six feet wide, sharply angled in toward the centre of the stage. It is extending upward to the height of the outer proscenium, which in most theatres is about twenty feet high. These two vertical sections are joined at the upstage edge at the top by a horizontal piece about three feet wide and parallel to the front of the stage. The whole is of wood and is painted a flat black. The vertical sections on either side of the stage consist of two stories each. On the stage-right side, the lower story is the geza, or as it is sometimes called Hayashibeya (orchestra room) which is occupied by musicians and sound affects men. The upstage edge of this structure is called the metsukebashira. But in the performance of certain plays a platform six feet wide, three feet high and three feet deep is placed against this structure on the stage level, on this platform is seated samisen player and a narrator-singer. In the upper surface of the platform is a small revolving stage. It helps a new pair of performers to appear during the course of a long play without undue delay. The invention of the revolving stage (mawari-butai) is also credited to Namiki Shozo. The Shosabutai (dance stage) which is used both for pieces which are purely dance and also for those which although they are not pure dance, contain considerable dance movement. The shosabutai consists of platforms about five inches high made of highly polished Japanese Cypress which are laid down the permanent stage floor and on the Hanamichi completely covering both areas. In 1687 walkway called Hanamichi or Flower path introduced, set at ninety degrees to the main stage. It was set up at the left side of the main stage. In fact the hanamichi fulfils a very similar function to the hashigakari of the Noh theatre. Hanamichi is about five feet wide, along which most of the actors make their exits and entrances. This runs from the back of the theatre on the left-hand side and joins the stage at right- angles. In this walkway is used by the actor particularly reveals his skill. The hanamich came to be used for entrances and exits and at the same time it was used for selfintroduction or a dramatic roppo exit. Sometimes a second narrower hanamichi was erected parallel to the main one and attached to the right side of the stage. This was called Kari-Hanamichi. It enabled actors to walk around the main part of the audience. The Kari- Hanamichi was used, for instance, to allow the members of two rival clans to line up on opposite sides and exchange insults and challenges over the heads of the audience. The hanamichi always brings the actor as close as possible to his audience, which is very appropriate for the Kabuki. The hanamichi, ran from the rear stage-right side of the doma, where the entrance to it was hung with a curtain and joined the front edge of the stage at an obtuse angle of about 110 degrees. From about 1772 on another passage way through the pit to the stage, was used by the actor. This was the ayumi ita, a raised wood passage way at right angles to the front of the stage. This was little lower than the level of the stage- flooring. This is called above mentioned Kari-hanamichi or right hanamichi. The naka no ayumi’(centre passageway) was, in reality the wooden partition which separated the second class seats from the third class seats. The hanamichi is always lit when it is used. The lighting of the hanamichi is purely arbitrary and its only purpose is to illuminate the actor. When the hanamichi is not used, it ceases to exit theatrically and the stage becomes the only acting area.30 Important characters do not always enter the hanamichi alone. They are frequently accompanied by a retinue. Exits and entrances on the hanamichi have a similar feeling of filmic; fading-in and ‘fadingout’. Kabuki is commonly known as the shibai a term that may mean ‘play’ or ‘theatre’. In the early out-door Kabuki shibai referred to the broad, open space directly in front of the stage. Later it come to be identified with the theatre structure itself. Originally most spectators sat on carpets or mats spread on the ground. When it brained, the performance was cancelled. 14 The proscenium opening of the present Tokyo Kabuki-za is approximately ninety feet wide. The depth of the auditorium is about sixty feet. The shape of the auditorium is rectangular. The first and second balconies are built around three sides of the auditorium as they are in the European opera house. The spectator in the side sections of the balconies is seated not facing the stage, but facing the opposite side of the house.31 The present Kabuki curtain of alternating vertical bands of black, rust and green was not generally adopted by Kabuki theatres until after the Meiji period. The curtains behind the apron are the draw curtain (joshikimaku or hikimaku) and the scene curtain Kabuki stage certain.32. Large stage properties (odogu)include a special platform (yatari or nijubutai). For plays adapted from the puppet theatre, a chanter’s platform (choboyuka) for the musicians. The small stage properties (kodogu) are those held by the actors. A row of cherry blossoms strung from the ceiling is an odogu, whereas the cherry branch which can be broken is a kodogu. Among the many other small properties is the long, stiff wire (sashigane), that has a butterfly or bird on the end and is manipulated by the stage assistant (koken). Swords appear everywhere in Kabuki. Almost all male characters of any rank at all carry the customary pair of long and short swords at their waist 33. And nearly all Kabuki murders are committed with a sword. In the Kabuki ki or wooden clappers invariably accompany the pulling on and off the curtain. Ki or Hyoshigi are a pair of square shaped sticks made of hard kashi wood. The clapper is about three inches thick and about a foot long. Costume 34 wig and make up are carefully matched in a accord with the nature of a role. Kabuki costumes are not only dazzlingly colourful, but they also express the social status and the personality of the character they adorn. In general, the costumes in historical dramas are more stylized and elegant, befitting the members of the nobility and the feudal (samurai) class. By contrast the prevailing fashions of society at large during the Edo period are portrayed rather realistically in the Sewa-mono plays. The costumes appearing in the shosagoto dance pieces are especially noted for their colour /design and workmanship35.The costumes of Kabuki are of course one of its most attractive aspects. The patterns and colours for each role are set to the extent that a character can easily be recognized by his costume. The red princess roles all wear basically red robes with a ‘fan shaped’ silver tiara in their hair. Male servants dress in bright colours, with a loose thin overcoat. The acrobatic government officials who always appear in groups are normally dressed entirely in black, sometimes dressed in silver, in good or in red. Towns people both men and women normally wear plain coloured kimono. The colour and pattern indicates the age and social status of the character. The high class courtesans called keisei wear particularly luxurious costumes. . The wigs are divided into male and female. Further into subclasses according to age, historical period, social status, occupation and other considerations. Some wigs are made for special effects. As a part of their costume, all characters in Kabuki wear wigs. In contemporary plays (sewamono), the costumes worn onstage are close to the everyday wear of the lower and middle classes of the Tokugawa period. In palace scenes, high-ranking persons may wear long trailing trousers ( nagabakama). This is much longer than the legs and the garment, covering the feet, drags behind along the floor. During the long history of Kabuki costumes were designed that have become standard for specific roles. Theatre devotees have no problems recognizing a role from the costume alone. 15 ‘Make up’ in Kabuki is also treated as an important part of the colour aspect of spectacle. 36 In the Sewamono as a rule, the makeup is more realistic than the jidaimono. The onnagata wears, heavier make up in roles of young women, court ladies and courtesans. The roles of older women requiresless make up in both jidaimono and sewamono. The actors playing the roles of a young .man in a sewamono and a dashing military hero in a jidaimono are heavily made up the one to accentuate his handsome features the other to underscore the nobility and virtue of his character. When the Ichikawa Danjuro 1 introduced the rough style of acting (aragoto), perhaps inspired by the painted faces of the Chinese opera, he decorated his face with red and black stripes. This distinctive make up called kumadori deliberately enhances the facials muscles and thus the expressiveness of the face. Traditionally, red kumadori is associated with virtue and strength, blue with fear and evil. Stage sets and props (odogu) are important elements of Kabuki. Most theatres used a curtain made of vertical tripe. Sometimes, when the main curtain is opened, the scenery and the actors are partly concealed by an auxiliary curtain. In a contemporary play (sewamono) the scenery is quite simple. It shows for example the interior of a house or shop, placed on a raised platform with three steps leading from the stage proper to the front of the room. The scenery is never intended to be realistic or naturalistic, but merely serves as a minimal background against which actors stand out more clearly. A white cloth on the stage indicates the presence of snow; a blue cloth changes the hanamichi into a river. The scenery is usually more elaborate in history plays, with splendid temple facades and impressive outdoor views of, for example, the Sumidagawa, Mount Fuji and Blossoming trees. In dance plays, adapted from Noh, the stage is empty, except for the musicians. The backdrop shows only a huge pine tree and the scenery is left to the imagination of the spectators. Revolving stages and other ingenious constructions enable continuous acting in a play with several scenes. Besides spectacular stage techniques, actor make extensive use of small hand props (kodoogu), such as fans, swords, hats and umbrellas. The actors for women role (onnagata) sometimes carry a wad of paper which they put in their mouth to suppress their cries at moment of great emotional stress. Actors who have to stand for long periods are given a stool to lean on. For plays where animals appear on stage, low ranking actors are dressed as horses, wild boars or rats. Small animals, such as birds or fluttering butterflies are represented by toys, attached to long flexible rods, manipulated by stage assistants. Music Some scholars categorize Kabuki as a Japanese form of opera, except that the actors do not sing. The variety and complexity of Kabuki music cannot easily be compared to any other known musical form. Music has always been at the heart of Kabuki. At the beginning of the 17th century, the Shamisen often in combination with other instruments, became the dominant accompaniment to actors on stage. Sounds and music are heard almost continuously throughout a performance. They may come from varied parts of the stage and the style of the music may be different. At the beginning and the end of a performance, the sounds mainly made by drums and wooden clappers, have a ceremonial function. Wooden clappers about twenty five centimetres long and five centimetres across are struck together to produce a clear, dry ‘clack.’ When the curtain is drawn aside, a stage assistant strikes the clappers with increasing speed. The same clappers also accompany the closing of the curtain. Other special sound effects are made offstage by musicians concealed from the audience in a small room with a latticed window. The offstage music uses a variety of instruments such as shamisen, drums, bells, gongs and flutes to create a whole range of mood, gentle falling snow to lapping waves. 16 Music known as debayashi is played onstage in view of the audience. The musicians are dressed in formal costumes and seated on a raised platform covered with red felt at the back or along one or both sides of the stage. Around 1740, a style of debayashi known as ‘long songs (nagauta) was introduced to accompany lengthy dances. The lyrical ‘long song’ is now the most common style and used in a great many plays and dances. Another style of debayashi is the joruri, a highly narrative style of music accompanied by the shamisen. It was first used in the puppet theatre and later, when puppet plays were adopted for the Kabuki stage, it became popular in the Kabuki theatre. Usually one or more chanters and one or more shamisen players sit on the stage in full view of the audience. Masterpieces of the Kabuki theatre The popular actor Ichikawa Danjuro vii selected eighteenth dramas as masterpieces in 1840 and they called in Japanese Kabuki Juuhachiban. The Kabuki called Kanjinchoo became the first of a collection that Danjuro based on the Ichikawa family’s acting traditions. They were to be representative of the ie no gei or ‘family art of the Ichikawa line. The most of the plays are in aragoto style and were first acted by Danjuro 1, 11, and 1V. They were Fuwa ( Fuwa Banzaemon), Fudo ( The deity Fudo), Gedatsu ( The release of Kagekiyo’s soul),Jayanagi ( The snake weeping willow) , Kagekiyo ( General Kagekiyo) Kamahige ( Scythe Beard), Kanjinchoo ( The Subcription Scroll), Kan’u ( eneral Kan’u), Kenuki ( The Tweezers), Nanatsu Men ( The Seven Masks), Narukami ( The thunder God), Oshimodoshi ( Devil pusher), Shibaraku ( Wait a Moment ), Sukeroku Yukari no Edo zakura( Sukeroku, Flower of Edo), Uiro Uri ( The Medicine Peddler), Uwanari ( Jealousy), Yanone ( The arrow head), and Zoohiki ( Pulling the Elephant Apart). Among them regularly performed are Kanjinchoo, Sukeroku, Shibaraku, Narukami, Uiroo uri and Yanone. Some of them were rewritten during the 20th century. References 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Bowers, Faubian (1984),Japanese Theatre, p.37, Tokyo, Japan. Ernst, Earle (1956), The Kabuki Theatre, p. 10, Oxford University Press, First Edition , UK. Shutaro, Miyake (1954), Kabuki Drama, p.7, Hosokawa Printing Company, Tokyo, Japan. –do- p.15, Modern Reference Encyclopaedia, (1956), p.25, Grolier Universal Encyclopaedia, USA. –do-p.24, J.T. p.xix, Arendie and Henk Herwig, (2004), Heroes of the Kabuki Stage, pp. 13,14,Hotei Publishing, Amsterdam, Netherlands. 9 –do- p.16, 10 Cavage Ronald, Griffith Paul, Senda Akihiko, (2004), Japanese Stage, p.25, Kodansha International Ltd. Japan. 11 Arnott Peter,(1969), The Theatres of Japan, pp.135,136, printed in Great Britain, UK. 12 Dunn, Charles J. Torigoe, Bunzo (1969), The Actor Analects, University of Tokyo, Japan. 13 Brandon James R., Malm William P., Shively Donald H. (1978), Studies in Kabuki, p.6, The University Press of Hawaii, USA. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 –do-p.7, –do-p.9, H.K.S p.20, S.K.p.12, S.K. p.21, H.K.S. p.27, 17 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 H.K.S. p.32, J.S. p.52, Harris John Wesley,(2006), The Traditional Theatre of Japan, p.170,The Edwin Mellen Press, USA. T.T.T.J. p. 169, ---do---p.174, J.S. p. 52, T.T.T.J. p.176, J.S. p.51, H.K.S. p.45 J.T.p.144 Ernst Earle (1956) The Kabuki Theatre, Oxford University Press, First Edition p.10. T.K.T p. 25, 26.. K.D.p.34, K p.119. ‘ It is a common place to say that the costumes of Japan’s Kabuki are the most lavish in the world.’ J.T. p.180. K.E.G.p.95 J.T.p.181, . 18