Kabukiza Theatre 19 September 2022 - September Program at the Kabukiza Theatre | GoComGo.com

September Program at the Kabukiza Theatre

Kabukiza Theatre, Tokyo, Japan
All photos (1)
Monday 19 September 2022
11 AM

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Important Info
Type: Show
City: Tokyo, Japan
Starts at: 11:00

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Overview

Part 1: 11:00 AM

Part 2: 2:40 PM

Part 3: 5:45 PM

Each month's program will consist of three parts. Between each part there will be an intermission.

Part 1:

HAKUROJŌ MONOGATARI ( 'Strange Rumour of the Himeji Castle' )

Honda Heihachirō Tadatoki plans to hold a moon viewing party for his newly wed wife Senhime. Her ladies-in-waiting prepare for the party in the castle but they are afraid of something. A specter is said to appear every night at the top floor of the castle tower, so Miyamoto Musashi, the greatest swordsman of Japan, is invited this evening to slay the specter. He climbs up to the top floor at night after the party and ...
This play was adapted from the history and legend of Miyamoto Musashi, arranged and directed by Nakamura Kichiemon II, and was first performed in 1999 at Himeji Castle.

SUGAWARA DENJU TENARAI KAGAMI. Terakoya ( 'The Village School' from 'Sugawara's Secrets of Calligraphy' )

Takebe Genzō was Kan Shōjō's most gifted disciple. Kan Shōjō has been exiled and his family are in grave danger. Genzō runs a small school in the country and shelters Kan Shōjō's son and heir, Kan Shūsai, whom they are trying to pass off as their own son. However, word has gotten out that Kan Shūsai is at their school and Genzō has been ordered to behead him. Moreover, the retainer Matsuōmaru who knows Kan Shūsai's face is to come to inspect the head. Genzō's only hope is to kill one of the other students as a substitute. On that day, a new student named Kotarō who has a refined bearing arrives. Genzō takes the terrible decision to kill him in place of his lord's son.

Part 2:

MATSUURA NO TAIKO ( 'Lord Matsuura and the Drum of Chūshingura' )

This play describes events that took place at the same time as the revenge of the forty-seven loyal retainers that was made famous by the play "Chūshingura". Lord Matsuura is disgusted because the loyal retainers do not seem to be interested in avenging the death of their lord. Moreover, he learns from a haiku teacher that Ōtaka Gengo, one of the retainers, is forgetting his loyalty toward his former lord, which makes Lord Matsuura furious. However, then his haiku teacher shows him the poem that Ōtaka Gengo had left. As Lord Matsuura is thinking over the meaning of the poem, the sound of the drum is heard in the distance, signalling that the attack has begun. Finally, Ōtaka Gengo comes to Lord Matsuura's mansion to report the success of the revenge.

AGEHACHŌ TSUZURE NO OMOKAGE
Kagotsurube Sato no Eizame / Suzugamori / Kumagai Jin'ya / Harimagata Danmari

( 'Extracts of Plays featuring the Successful Roles of Nakamura Kichiemon II' in 'The Courtesan Yatsuhashi and Sano Jirozaemon,' 'The Suzugamori Execution Ground,' 'Kumagai's Battle Camp' and 'Danmari on the Harima Tideland')

This is a play woven together from several of Nakamura Kichiemon II's most successful roles: Sano Jirozaemon in 'The Courtesan Yatsuhashi and Sano Jirozaemon,' in which a courtesans' parade in the Yoshiwara Pleasure Quarters where cherry blossoms are in full bloom is impressive, Banzui'in Chōbē in 'The Suzugamori Execution Ground,' a stylized masterpiece by Tsuruya Nanboku, as well as Kumagai Naozane in the tragic history play 'Kumagai's Battle Camp' in which the theme of transience in the warring world is touching.

Part 3:

KANADEHON CHŪSHINGURA. Gion Ichirikijaya ( 'The Ichiriki Teahouse in Gion' from 'The Treasury of Loyal Retainers' )

'Chūshingura' is one of the most popular plays in the repertoire. It is adapted from a historical incident in which forty-seven masterless samurai avenged the death of their lord, Asano Takuminokami (in this play, called En'ya Hangan) by killing his enemy. Yuranosuke spends his days and nights in the Pleasure quarters of Kyōto in an effort to make their lord’s enemy believe he has given up any thought of a vendetta. One night, he notices Okaru, a courtesan at the Ichiriki Teahouse, reading a secret letter that was sent to Yuranosuke, and which indicates his true intentions, so he thinks he must kill her. However, she is related to the En’ya household....

Noboru Ryū Wakare no Setouchi. FUJITO ( 'Fujito' )

Sasaki Moritsuna has arrived in Bizen Province as the new lord after the war between the Genji and the Heike clan. A year ago, he had heartlessly killed a fisherman who told him where he could get across the shoal to the enemy’s camp. The fisherman’s mother Fujinami appears and demands in tears that Moritsuna give her son back to her. Moritsuna apologizes sincerely for his unjust action and holds a memorial service for her son to appease his spirit. However, the spirit’s grudge turns it into an evil dragon, which shows up in front of Moritsuna.

A kabuki program is usually made up of several different plays and dances, but at the Kabukiza Theatre, 'Single Act Seats' are available so that you can watch just one of the acts.

Single Act Tickets will be sold on the day of the performance (they cannot be reserved or purchased in advance). Reserved seats for Part 1 are sold out on the 8th (Thu), 9th (Fri), 13th (Tue), 14th (Wed) and 15th (Thu).

Tea will not be offered at the Box Seats. Please refrain from eating at seats as well.

Venue Info

Kabukiza Theatre - Tokyo
Location   4 Chome-12-15 Ginza, Chuo City

Kabuki-za in Ginza is the principal theater in Tokyo for the traditional kabuki drama form.

The Kabuki-za was originally opened by a Meiji era journalist, Fukuchi Gen'ichirō. Fukuchi wrote kabuki dramas in which Ichikawa Danjūrō IX and others starred; upon Danjūrō's death in 1903, Fukuchi retired from the management of the theater. 

The original Kabuki-za was a wooden structure, built in 1889 on land which had been either the Tokyo residence of the Hosokawa clan of Kumamoto, or that of Matsudaira clan of Izu.

The building was destroyed on October 30, 1921, by an electrical fire. The reconstruction, which commenced in 1922, was designed to "be fireproof, yet carry traditional Japanese architectural styles", while using Western building materials and lighting equipment. Reconstruction had not been completed when it again burned down during the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. Rebuilding was finally completed in 1924.

The theater was destroyed once again by Allied bombing during World War II. It was restored in 1950 preserving the style of 1924 reconstruction, and was until recently one of Tokyo's more dramatic and traditional buildings.

The 1950 structure was demolished in the spring of 2010, and rebuilt over the ensuing three years. Reasons cited for the reconstruction include concerns over the building's ability to survive earthquakes, as well as accessibility issues. A series of farewell performances, entitled Kabuki-za Sayonara Kōen 
 were held from January through April 2010, after which kabuki performances took place at the nearby Shinbashi Enbujō and elsewhere until the opening of the new theatre complex, which took place on March 28, 2013.

The style in 1924 was in a baroque Japanese revivalist style, meant to evoke the architectural details of Japanese castles, as well as temples of pre-Edo period. This style was kept after the post-war reconstruction and again after the 2013 reconstruction.

Inside, with the latest reconstruction the theatre was outfitted with four new front curtains called doncho. These are by renowned Japanese artists in the Nihonga style and reflect the different seasons.

Performances are exclusively run by Shochiku, in which the Kabuki-za Theatrical Corporation is the largest shareholder. They are nearly every day, and tickets are sold for individual acts as well as for each play in its entirety. As is the case for most kabuki venues, programs are organized monthly: each month there is a given set of plays and dances that make up the afternoon performance, and a different set comprising the evening show. These are repeated on a nearly daily schedule for three to four weeks, with the new month bringing a new program.

Important Info
Type: Show
City: Tokyo, Japan
Starts at: 11:00
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