Friendly Reminders 1)No Class Meeting on Wednesday (2 April 2014) 2)Test # 2 to be announced later this week (Friday)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Noh Theater The Art of Theater spreads across the planet. Japan is one of the many places where theatre is a predominant art in culture. An art of great.
Advertisements

Gion Matsuri.
Japanese Theatre Noh Bunraku Kabuki. Noh Drama  Emerged in the 14th c.  Frozen in the 17th c.  Invention attributed to Kanami Kiyotsugu ( )
Traditional Asian TheaterAsian. China Peking Opera Beijing The Peking Opera House.
NOH. Noh In the early fourteenth century, acting troupes in a variety of centuries-old theatrical traditions were touring and performing at temples, shrines.
May 2005 Lisa Doolittle Japanese Theatre and Dance.
Japanese Theatre Noh.
Early Asian Theater From India, China, and Japan.
Music of Japan.
Japanese Theatre: History of Bunraku By Klajdi Selimaj.
Early Modern Japanese Literature (Volume D)
Instruments, Culture. The following instruments are used in gagaku, which is Japanese imperial court music. It is considered part of Japanese Classical.
Lesson 1: Japanese Music
Asian Theatre History Theatre 1-2 Christy Moss Fall 2011.
The Land of the Rising Sun. Capital: Tokyo Language: Japanese -is also known as “The Land of the Rising Sun”
MUSI 207 Japan Chapter 5. The Music of Japan Update: Chapter Presentation Self Reflection (bonus) Different Cultural Values Musical/Theatrical Genres.
Bunraku Theatre What is Bunraku? A Japanese puppet theater, founded in the 17 th century (1600s).
JAPANESE THEATRE NOH THEATRE KABUKI THEATRE
Japanese Theatre Bunraku NohKabuki Noh Drama  Emerged in the 14th c.  Frozen in the 17th c.  Invention attributed to Kanami Kiyotsugu ( )
Japenese Theater and Music
What is Bunraku?. Bunraku This is a Japanese form of puppet theater used to depict Japanese culture. It is the most developed puppetry in the world. Considered.
Chapter 19, Sections 3,4 Japan and the World and Literature and the Arts.
Japanese Theatre.
MUSI 207 Japan Chapter 5. The Music of Japan Chapter Presentation Different Cultural Values Musical/Theatrical Genres and Social Values Gender Issues.
Japan’s Feudal Age World History Ms. Costas. Japan Falls into a Time of Trouble  Towards the end of the Heian period, Japan fell into political turmoil.
Remember Theater is the foundation art of all drama Theater creates a relationship between performer and audience Live Personal Immediate (unmediated)
Japan Part 3.
Japanese Literature: Noh, Kabuki, and Haiku
UNIT 3: MUSIC FROM CHINA & JAPAN om/watch?v=chwADno FDng.
Japanese Puppetry BUNRAKU.
Eastern Theatre.  One of the immediately visible appeals of any form of theatre is the lure of the sound and the color  Easter theatre seems to have.
By: Stephanie M. & Austin J. THE ART OF THE GEISHA.
Friendly Alert: Test # 2, next Friday (11 April 14) covers Indonesia and Japan.
BORJA SANCHEZ 3ºB SITUATION ON MAP Situated continent, the Japanese archipelago is bounded on the N by the Sea of Okhotsk, on the E and S by the Pacific.
Traditional Music “maximum effect from minimal materials” YouTube - Shamisen, koto e shakuhachi YouTube - Japanese traditional music YouTube - Traditional.
Japanese Theatre Theatre History.
Assessment, Music, Technology and You!!
Unit 3: Music from China and Japan Traditional Japanese Theater: Noh, Bunraku, Kabuki.
Kabuki!. Influenced by Noh In terms of the singing style and movement of the performers Kabuki is heavily influenced by Noh. However, Kabuki is much more.
Japanese Theater Late 1500’s-early 1600’s.
THEATER IN JAPAN By: Kelly and Maddy. KABUKI  Most Elaborate, Popular  Pretty decorations, costumes otos/canadagood/
Japanese Theater Kabuki – Traditional Theater (popular) Exs. Kabuki – YouTube (a good introduction) Centre Stage: Kabuki – YouTube (overview)Kabuki – YouTubeCentre.
BUNRAKU ..
Noh Theatre Japan. Japanese History During 6 th century A.D. Buddism arrived in Japan from India and China  written language 7 th century-new emperor.
Japan Overview Region=East Asia Consists of 3,000 islands, capital=Tokyo Constitutional monarchy with prime minister History traces back to 660 BC Emperor.
Retrieved from: Retrieved from: Retrieved from:
Chinese and Japanese Theatre. Chinese Theatre  Mongols invaded in 1280 A.D.  Influced Chinese theatre by adding:  Action  Acrobatics  Songs  Dance.
Japanese Theatre Kabuki and Puppet Theatre and Noh Drama.
Literature of Ancient Japan. Historical Highlights (488-9) Heian Period –High Point of imperial rule –Highly cultured court develops. Those of.
Japanese Noh Theatre
Japanese Theater Noh Kabuki.
Japanese Culture.
Unit 3 Japanese Performing Arts
Bunraku Puppet Theatre
Bunraku Puppet theater used to depict Japanese culture
Japanese Music.
Japan Tara Abner.
What is Bunraku?.
Asian Theatre An overview of the Japanese Theatrical forms of Noh Drama. Bunraku puppet theatre, Kabuki, and Chinese Drama.
Later Drama in Europe and Asia
Have you ever experience feelings of jealousy, regret, or rage?
Kabuki Theater.
Japanese puppet theater
Japanese Theater.
Year 8 Drama ILC You need to create a PowerPoint or a poster presentation for the world theatre genre you have chosen. Deadline: Your second lesson back.
It’s a real thing and it’s really awesome.
Literature of Ancient Japan
Ikuta Adaptation How to write a Noh Play
The Art of Bunraku and the Changes of Puppetry
Kabuki.
Presentation transcript:

Friendly Reminders 1)No Class Meeting on Wednesday (2 April 2014) 2)Test # 2 to be announced later this week (Friday)

Japanese Theater Kabuki – Traditional Theater (popular) Exs. Kabuki – YouTube (a good introduction) Centre Stage: Kabuki – YouTube (overview)Kabuki – YouTubeCentre Stage: Kabuki – YouTube Bunraku – Puppet Theater Ex. YouTube - Bunraku theater in OsakaYouTube - Bunraku theater in Osaka Noh – Traditional Theater (elitist) Ex. Noh Theatre - YouTubeNoh Theatre - YouTube

National Bunraku Theater (Osaka)

Bunraku Oldest theater tradition (roots in Heian period) Originates in late 17 th century (joins 2 traditions) - traveling story-tellers w/ Biwa accompaniment - traveling puppeteers 1 st Bunraku theater – 1684 in Osaka Plays about “ordinary” people - stories of merchant class (Osaka - merchant city) - stories of Shinju (“love suicides”, often factual) Audience – traditionally middle-class Life-like puppets and “realistic” stories

Bunraku Music (“Chobo”) Visible at side of stage Narrator (“Tayu”) - “speaker” in pitched tones Shamisen

Bunraku (Japanese Puppet Theater)

Bunraku Puppets

Bunraku Stage (w/ puppets & puppeters)

Bunraku (w/ multiple puppets and puppeteers)

Bunraku Puppet (w/ puppeteers in traditional black)

Bunraku (w/ master puppeteers [Omozukai] visible)

Bunraku Puppeteers

Bunraku on YouTube YouTube - Bunraku - Classical Japanese puppet art - Screener YouTube - Bunraku Demonstration Male Head YouTube - Bunraku Gion Corner YouTube - Japanese Bunraku puppets YouTube - Bunraku theater in Osaka YouTube - Bunraku at the Gion Corner

Noh Most elite and stylized Japanese theater Associated primarily w/ Warrior class (samuri) Developed c (Kamakura period) Formalized c. 1300s (Kannami Kiyotsugu) - intended to make popular forms more serious Strong Buddhist element - denial of self ends suffering (transcendence) - ritual focuses attention

Noh (2) Minimalist aesthetic (less is more) Very stylized acting technique - not naturalistic - small motions signify major events Use of masks (course web site for examples) Music – Hayashi (fixed Noh ensemble) - 3 drums - flute

Kotsuzumi

Otsuzumi

Noh Drum (Taiko)

Nohkan

Noh Theater on YouTube Noh - YouTube YouTube - Noh Theatre YouTube - Noh Play - Osaka, Japan - July 2006YouTube - Noh Play - Osaka, Japan - July 2006 YouTube - Noh Play "Tamura“ Atsumori-the dance.mp4 - YouTube