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Showing posts from August 21, 2022
Dangers of repeat informants: recycling what we know about noh (This is the beginning of a publication perhaps; I welcome feedback).  I have been ruminating on the dangers of going to the well too often when it comes to Japanese theatre research on noh performance in particular. Those "tried and true" actors who are able/willing to be interviewed, teach, and tour overseas for conferences or workshops are few and far between. Significantly, just three of them--Kongo school Udaka Michishige, Kita school Takabayashi Kouji, and Kita school Matsui Akira have been responsible for many of the articles, and dissertations, interviews, and international collaborations for over four decades. Why are these three Kansai-based performers (2 outside where iemoto and most performances take place, Tokyo), 2 first-generation actors who are relative outsiders to the main line of tradition, taken as "the gospel" of noh performance practice over multiple generations of scholars? Their p
 Candlelit Noh: Why the Blue?  Aug 16th Daimonji Noh Utoh Utoh is one of my favorite noh plays. An unusually vivid depiction by a Bird-Hunter Ghost of his double torment: inability to return or communicate with his wife and son, attacked merciless in the everlasting hell-fires of sinners. I had produced a version for Matsui Akira's Women in Circle one-man show that he toured to Europe and the U.S., using slides of Shiko Munakata's woodblock prints with translation of "Blood-birds", an early Wetherby work. Matui danced the climactic kuse powerfully, the iron claws of the giant Auk (seabird) and bloody, fatal tears of the mother shown with vigor and pathos. A laquered black sedge hat and pole his only properties, a feather-skirt and light white vest his ghostly garments. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH8lm40bilw&t=56s (with Richard Emmert's chorus on tour in UK) So, I was eager to see how the head of the Kongo school would perform the piece by candlelight in