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Kabuki Theatre and Geisha Imagery in High and Popular Western Culture

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Presentation on theme: "Kabuki Theatre and Geisha Imagery in High and Popular Western Culture"— Presentation transcript:

1 Kabuki Theatre and Geisha Imagery in High and Popular Western Culture
Eisenstein’s grotesques; Memoirs of the Geisha

2 Kabuki Theatre

3 Kabuki Theatre Classical Japanese theatre, dance drama.
Dates back to early 17th century. First was all female, then became all-male theatre (onnagata, cross-dressed actors). Late 17th-mid 19th century – the “Golden age” of Kabuki: elaborate costumes and makeup, artful performance, accent on drama; specially written plays in place of improvisation.

4 Kabuki Theatre Mask-like make-up, wigs Exaggerated body language
Codified make-up and performance Plays based on history and legends Traditionalism in dance and music Special effects: revolving stage: trap doors, footbridge to the audience Popular subject for ukiyo-e prints.

5 Make-up conveys emotions

6 Kabuki Actors

7 Expressiveness

8 “Masks,” grotesque in Ivan The Terrible (1944) by Sergei Eisenstein

9 Love, Heroism, Moral Codes

10 Dramatic Plots

11 Kabuki Theatre

12 Ivan the Terrible Dancing scene Emotions through make-up and lighting

13 Eonnagata (2009) by Robert Lepage
Based on the life of an 18th-cent. French cross-dressing diplomat and spy Chevalier d'Éon. The plot and emotions are shown through costumes, make-up, and dance. Drum music, japanese-looking props (swords, fans, etc.)

14 Memoirs of a Geisha (dir. Rob Marshall, 2005)
Based on a 1997 historical novel by Arthur Golden. Academy awards for: best costumes, art direction, cinematography. Controversy: Casting; Disrespect for geishas and maiko; stereotyping; Inaccuracies in costumes, dances, cultural facts, and daily life details.


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