Kabuki TheatreEssay Preview: Kabuki TheatreReport this essayJapans dances and dramas as they are seen today contain 1300 years of continuous uninterrupted history. This prodigious feat of conservation, theatrically speaking, makes Japan an extraordinary and unique country. In all of Asia, where tradition generally is sanctified and change eschewed, Japan stands as the only country whose theatre is its entirety has never suffered an eclipse nor undergone any drastic revivification or renovation. The most traditional form of Japanese theatre is kabuki. Its origin goes back to the latter part of the 16th century and, with extensive and continuous evolution, it has now been perfected into a state of classical refinement. Though not as flourishing as it once was, the kabuki theatre retains wide popularity among the people, and is in fact drawing quite large audiences even now.
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The following is an excerpt from the “Essay Preview: kabuki theatre-like history” (published October 23, 2003 and available online at: http://kabuki.co.jp/thekabuki/. Accessed April 30, 2012) by Shigeru Yasuda in the form of an excerpt, excerpted from The Kabuki Theatre from Japan, Vol. 12. pp. 85-93. ISBN 00-813-2548-9. [Link to the PDF version from the book’s publisher]
- The Kabuki theater is the oldest of all kabukusa theatres with its long history of production, play, and theatrical production. The theatre’s history dates from the 1st century AD to the beginning of the 17th century. The theatre started, as an open assembly hall, as an open market, and first appeared on the streets of Kyoto and Shigeru Yasuda. As early as 1250, a famous actress, Kana, became the official patron character of the Kabuki theatre.
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For the following, some readers who haven’t seen the first Kabuki theatres, it will not be as hard as it seemed. The only reason you will come across this is because Kamukuni, a kabuki theater of the late Roman era in Japan, is an established but not exclusive to the west. It has the most traditional form of production. Although it has changed considerably over the years, like other classical kabuki theatres, it still has been the oldest and most varied form of theatre. The first kabuki theatres were constructed at the age of 2 or 3 or 4 from scratch at the Kabuki theatres in Shigeru Yasuda. During the years, they were sold extensively and started their play lives as kabuki plays only, often taking on roles other forms did not require.
The original Kabuki theatre was named after the Kabuki emperor, Haru Kanada, who was the first to appear on the stage. It will always be known as the Kabuki theatre.
The modern Kabuki theatre was not an exclusively classical theater. It is often characterized as a theater that has replaced a traditional or classical theatre by the new invention of the stage. Kabuki and kajikiri (literally: “white-skinned”) theatre are much more popular nowadays with young people than with non-Japanese. Their most popular role models are “Mimi and Koihei”: the actors who play the role of the “mimi” in kabuki cinema (and sometimes that other role of Kizuki as kajikiri). Kajikiri is a particular type of actress whose plays have become familiar to people. The most commonly played characters are often mibou (people born in 1793?), which is an ottomi (in which the ukiyans are the only members left) and kokuharu (as a kind of kabuki role actor). To play a traditional kabuki theatre is different from practicing a kazuki (an opera, a movie like any other). It is a lot more interesting to
During the period generally referred to as the Edo Era, during which much of the development of kabuki took place, distinctions between the warrior class and the commoners was more rigidly observed than at any other time in Japans history. Mainly the merchants cultivated the art of kabuki in those days. They had become increasingly powerful economically, but had to remain socially inferior as they belonged to the commoner class. To them kabuki was most significant as the artistic means by which to express their emotions under the prevailing conditions. Thus, the fundamental themes of kabuki plays are conflicts between humanity and the feudalistic system. It is largely due to this humanistic quality of the art that it gained such an enduring popularity among the general public of those days and remains this way today.
A unique feature of the kabuki art, and possibly the most significant detail and in keeping with the kabuki spirit of unusualness, is the fact that it has no actresses whatsoever (Bowers 325). Male impersonators known as onnagata play all female parts. The players of the kabuki drama in its primitive stage were principally women, and with the increasing popularity of kabuki, many of the actresses began to attract undue attention from male admirers. The authorities felt that this would lead to a serious demoralization of the public and in 1629 the theatrical appearance of women was officially banned.
However, since the public already accepted kabuki, men immediately took over and have continued performing to the present. The ban on actresses was in effect for about 250 years. In the mean time kabuki brought to perfection the art of the onnagata. As a result, there was no room for actresses in kabuki when the ban was lifted. Moreover, the art of onnagata had become such an integral part of kabuki that, if deprived of this element, the traditional quality of kabuki could be lost forever.
Another important characteristic of kabuki is that it is a wide-ranging and accumulative theatre (Hsu, 73). Born at the turn of the 16th century, it incorporated parts of all the preceding theatre forms of Japan. Among the traditional arts from which kabuki has drawn from, stage techniques and repertoire are the noh drama and the kyogen play. The kyogen plays are the comic interludes presented between the noh performances. Today, the number of Japanese who appreciate noh proper is far smaller than that of those who favor kabuki, but those kabuki plays adapted from or inspired by noh plays enjoy a wide popularity and constitute an essential portion of the entire kabuki repertoire (Mackerras, 132).
Another area from which kabuki has borrowed elements is the puppet theatre, often referred to as bunraku. The development of bunraku roughly paralleled that of earlier kabuki. In kabuki, the primary importance has always been placed on the actor rather than on any other aspect of the art, such as literary value of a play. During the early 17th century, some of the great writers, including Monzaemon Chikamatsu, often called the “Shakespeare of Japan”, left kabuki with its actors domination and turned to the puppet theatre where their creative genius was more or less unrestricted. As a result, there was a period when puppets overshadowed actors and the puppet theatre was more popular than kabuki. To meet this competition, kabuki adopted virtually all the puppet plays. Thus, today more than half of the conventional kabuki plays except for a group of dance-dramas is of bunraku origin. A final example of kabukis all-embracing acquisitiveness came at the end of the 19th century, which added an element of literary realism to the art (Bowers, 330).
There are about 300 plays in the conventional kabuki repertoire. Previously, the playwrights of the kabuki theatre itself supplied the plays almost exclusively. There is a group of plays in the repertoire designated as shosa-goto, or dance-drama, which is primarily and almost entirely dance. In the dance-drama, actors dance to the full accompaniment of vocal and instrumental music. Many plays tell a complete story, while others are scarcely more than partial dance pieces. Many of them have their origin in the noh drama and the kyogen plays. Kanjincho (The Temple Offering List),Musume Dojoji (Maiden of the Dojoji Temple), Migawari Zazen (The Substitute), and Takatsuki (The Clog Dance) are examples of the dance-drama(Mackerras, 140).
The remainder of the kabuki plays may be divided into two categories from the standpoint of theme and dramatic persona. Historical dramas, known as jidai monos, depict historical facts or present dramatized accounts of warriors or nobles. Many of them are heavy tragedies relieved only by momentary flashes of comedy. Some of the texts come from the puppet plays and they often call upon the hero to make the greatest possible sacrifices. For example, Chushingura, one of the most celebrated kabuki adaptations of a bunraku play, tells the famous story of the forty-seven lordless knights. These men avenged the enforced self-sacrifice of their master after years of patient waiting and plotting, and, for this act, they also were compelled to commit suicide.
The second category of kabuki plays is domestic dramas. These plays, also known as sewa mono, invariably depict the life of the plebian class. The center of attention is focused upon the commoner. Kagotsurube (The Courtesan) and Tsubosaka-Dera (Miracle at Tsubosaka) are representatives of this group of plays. The domestic drama is essentially a realistic story. Nevertheless, it is not infrequent that plays of this type have scenes where the acting and staging become unrealistic, with emphasis placed upon such superficial aspects as elocution and splendid colors rather than upon internal elements like the logical consistency of the plot (Bowers, 330).
In terms of origin, kabuki plays can be classified into the three groups. The first is plays adapted from noh and kyogen dramas. A substantial number of comic