Tags: Edo
Edo Kabuki Theater
By Muza-chan on Jan 27, 2010 | In Japan travel | 11 feedbacks »
Do you like Kabuki theater? About two years ago, I had the rare opportunity to enjoy a stunning performance by the Heisei Nakamura-za, led by Nakamura Kanzaburō XVIII. I fell in love with Kabuki…
So, when I visited the Edo Tokyo Museum, the first attraction I headed to was the reconstruction of the Nakamura-za Kabuki Theater, an accurate replica of the theater as it was in 1809, built at the 5th floor of the Edo Tokyo Museum.
Would you care for a little history?
În 1624, Saruwaka Kanzaburo received from the Shogunate the license to produce theater shows and founded the Kabuki theater Saruwaka-za (Nakamura-za).
The first theater was built in today’s Nihonbashi and in 1632 was moved to Ningyo-cho. After a fire in 1641, the theater was again relocated in Sakai-cho…. and the theater burned down countless times since then, but was always reconstructed on the same place.
You can read the detailed history of Nakamura-za at Kabuki 21.
Inside the museum I had an uncanny feeling, caused probably by the fact that I was in a building located… inside another building and I couldn’t see the sky.
The whole floor is scarcely illuminated and the red lanterns lighting the building, combined with the dark “sky", gave me the impression that the night was falling, even if it was still morning…
It great to walk around the building, admiring the old posters with famous Kabuki actors…
… then I went inside the theater, took a seat and admired the expressive mannequins displayed on stage, sumptuously dressed…
A small diorama is powered every 15 minutes and a volunteer carefully explained to me the old-style Kabuki theater special effects. The diorama reproduces a scene from the Tokaido Yotsuya Ghost Story, a Kabuki play that premiered in 1852 at the Nakamura-za Theater.
What is great is that these techniques haven’t changed much over the time, the traps used for appearance and disappearance and the light tricks are still very much enjoyable.
I have never seen a Kabuki play, here are some glimpses from the play I enjoyed, “Summer Festival: A Mirror from Osaka":
A Japan Photo per Day - Drying Laundry in Edo
By Muza-chan on Dec 11, 2009 | In A Japan Photo per Day | 11 feedbacks »
Info:
Nikon D80 | |
Lens: VR 18-55mm F/3.5-5.6G | |
Focal Length: 18mm | |
Aperture: F/5.6 | |
Shutter Speed: 1/40s | |
ISO Sensitivity: ISO 100 |
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