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Noh

Noh (, , derived from the Sino-Japanese word for "skill" or "talent") is a major form of classical Japanese dance-drama that has been performed since the 14th century. Developed by Kan'ami and his son Zeami, it is the oldest major theater art that is still regularly performed today.[1] Although the terms Noh and nōgaku are sometimes used interchangeably, nōgaku encompasses both Noh and kyōgen. Traditionally, a full nōgaku program included several Noh plays with comedic kyōgen plays in between; an abbreviated program of two Noh plays with one kyōgen piece has become common today. Optionally, the ritual performance Okina may be presented in the very beginning of nōgaku presentation.

Nōgaku Theater
Noh performance at Itsukushima Shrine
CountryJapan
DomainsPerforming arts
Reference12
RegionAsia and the Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription2008 (3rd session)
ListRepresentative

Noh is often based on tales from traditional literature with a supernatural being transformed into human form as a hero narrating a story. Noh integrates masks, costumes and various props in a dance-based performance, requiring highly trained actors and musicians. Emotions are primarily conveyed by stylized conventional gestures while the iconic masks represent the roles such as ghosts, women, deities, and demons. Written in late middle Japanese, the text "vividly describes the ordinary people of the twelfth to sixteenth centuries".[attribution needed][2] Having a strong emphasis on tradition rather than innovation, Noh is extremely codified and regulated by the iemoto system.

History edit

 
World's oldest Noh stage at Miyajima
 
Karaori garment, Edo period, 18th century, bamboo and chrysanthemum design on red and white checkered ground

Origins edit

The kanji for Noh () means "skill", "craft", or "talent", particularly in the field of performing arts in this context. The word Noh may be used alone or with gaku (; entertainment, music) to form the word nōgaku. Noh is a classical tradition that is highly valued by many today. When used alone, Noh refers to the historical genre of theatre that originated from sarugaku in the mid 14th century and continues to be performed today.[3]

One of the oldest forerunners of Noh and kyōgen is sangaku [ja], which was introduced to Japan from China in the 8th century. At the time, the term sangaku referred to various types of performance featuring acrobats, song and dance as well as comic sketches. Its subsequent adaptation to Japanese society led to its assimilation of other traditional art forms."[2] Various performing art elements in sangaku as well as elements of dengaku (rural celebrations performed in connection with rice planting), sarugaku (popular entertainment including acrobatics, juggling, and pantomime), shirabyōshi (traditional dances performed by female dancers in the Imperial Court in the 12th century), gagaku (music and dance performed in the Imperial Court beginning in the 7th century), and kagura (ancient Shinto dances in folk tales) evolved into Noh and kyōgen.[1]

Studies on the genealogy of the Noh actors in 14th century indicate they were members of families specializing in the performing arts. According to legend, the Konparu School, which is considered to be the oldest tradition of Noh, was founded by Hata no Kawakatsu in the 6th century. However, the founder of the Konparu school, which is widely accepted among historians, was Bishaō Gon no Kami (Komparu Gonnokami) during Nanboku-chō period in the 14th century. According to the genealogical chart of the Konparu school, Bishaō Gon no Kami is a descendant after 53 generations of Hata no Kawakatsu. The Konparu school was descended from the sarugaku troupe which had played active roles in Kasuga-taisha and Kofuku-ji in Yamato Province.[4][5][6]

Another theory, by Shinhachirō Matsumoto, suggests Noh originated from outcastes struggling to claim higher social status by catering to those in power, namely the new ruling samurai class of the time. The transfer of the shogunate from Kamakura to Kyoto at the beginning of Muromachi period marked the increasing power of the samurai class and strengthened the relationship between the shogunate and the court. As Noh became the shōgun's favorite art form, Noh was able to become a courtly art form through this newly formed relationship. In 14th century, with strong support and patronage from shōgun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, Zeami was able to establish Noh as the most prominent theatre art form of the time.[3]

The establishment of Noh by Kan'ami and Zeami edit

In the 14th century, during the Muromachi period (1336 to 1573), Kan'ami Kiyotsugu and his son Zeami Motokiyo reinterpreted various traditional performing arts and completed Noh in a significantly different form from the traditional one, essentially bringing Noh to the present form.[7] Kan'ami was a renowned actor with great versatility playing roles from graceful women and 12-year-old boys to strong men. When Kan'ami first presented his work to the 17-year-old Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, Zeami was a child actor in his play, around age 12. Yoshimitsu fell in love with Zeami and his position of favor at court caused Noh to be performed frequently for Yoshimitsu thereafter.[3]

Konparu Zenchiku, who was the great-grandson of Bishaō Gon no Kami, the founder of the Konparu school, and the husband of Zeami's daughter, incorporated elements of waka (poetry) into Zeami's Noh and further developed it.[8][6]

By this period, among the five major schools of Noh, four were established: the Kanze school, established by Kan'ami and Zeami; the Hōshō school established by Kan'ami's eldest brother; the Konparu school; and the Kongō school. All of these schools were descendants of the sarugaku troupe from Yamato Province. The Ashikaga Shogunate supported only the Kanze school among the four schools.[5][9]

Tokugawa era edit

During the Edo period, Noh continued to be an aristocratic art form supported by the shōgun, the feudal lords (daimyōs), as well as wealthy and sophisticated commoners. While kabuki and joruri popular to the middle class focused on new and experimental entertainment, Noh strived to preserve its established high standards and historic authenticity and remained mostly unchanged throughout the era. To capture the essence of performances given by great masters, every detail in movements and positions was reproduced by others, generally resulting in an increasingly slow, ceremonial tempo over time.[3]

In this era, the Tokugawa shogunate appointed Kanze school as the head of the four schools. Kita Shichidayū (Shichidayū Chōnō), a Noh actor of the Konparu school who served Tokugawa Hidetada, founded the Kita school, which was the last established of the five major schools.[5][9]

Modern Noh after Meiji era edit

 
In the Noh Theatre, 1891 by Ogata Gekkō

The fall of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1868 and the formation of a new, modernized government resulted in the end of financial support by the state, and the entire field of Noh experienced major financial crisis. Shortly after the Meiji Restoration both the number of Noh performers and Noh stages greatly diminished. The support from the imperial government was eventually regained partly due to Noh's appeal to foreign diplomats. The companies that remained active throughout the Meiji era also significantly broadened Noh's reach by catering to the general public, performing at theatres in major cities such as Tokyo and Osaka.[10]

In 1957 the Japanese Government designated nōgaku as an Important Intangible Cultural Property, which affords a degree of legal protection to the tradition as well as its most accomplished practitioners. The National Noh Theatre founded by the government in 1983 stages regular performances and organizes courses to train actors in the leading roles of nōgaku. Noh was inscribed in 2008 on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO as Nōgaku theatre.[2]

Although the terms nōgaku and Noh are sometimes used interchangeably, the Japanese government's definition of "nōgaku" theatre encompasses both Noh plays and kyōgen plays.[11] Kyōgen is performed in between Noh plays in the same space. Compared to Noh, "kyōgen relies less on the use of masks and is derived from the humorous plays of the sangaku, as reflected in its comic dialogue."[2]

Women in Noh edit

During the Edo period, the guild system gradually tightened, which largely excluded women from Noh, except for some women (such as courtesans) performing songs in marginal situations.[12] Later, in the Meiji era, Noh performers taught wealthy people and nobles, and this led to more opportunities for female performers because women insisted on female teachers.[12] In the early 1900s, after women were allowed to join Tokyo Music School, the rules forbidding women from joining various schools and associations in Noh were relaxed.[12] In 1948, the first women joined the Nohgaku Performers' Association.[12][13] In 2004, the first women joined the Association for Japanese Noh Plays.[13] In 2007, the National Noh Theatre began to annually present regular programs by female performers.[13] In 2009, there were about 1200 male and 200 female professional Noh performers.[14]

Jo-ha-kyū edit

The concept of jo-ha-kyū dictates virtually every element of Noh including compiling of a program of plays, structuring of each play, songs and dances within plays, and the basic rhythms within each Noh performance. Jo means beginning, ha means breaking, and kyū means rapid or urgent. The term originated in gagaku, ancient courtly music, to indicate gradually increasing tempo and was adopted in various Japanese traditions including Noh, tea ceremony, poetry, and flower arrangement.[15]

Jo-ha-kyū is incorporated in the traditional five-play program of Noh. The first play is jo, the second, third, and fourth plays are ha, and the fifth play is kyū. In fact, the five categories discussed below were created so that the program would represent jo-ha-kyū when one play from each category is selected and performed in order. Each play can be broken into three parts, the introduction, the development, and the conclusion. A play starts out in a slow tempo at jo, gets slightly faster at ha, then culminates in kyū.[16]

Performers and roles edit

 
Kanze Sakon [ja] (1895–1939), head (sōke) of Kanze school

Actors begin their training as young children, traditionally at the age of three.

Training edit

Zeami isolated nine levels or types of Noh acting from lower degrees which put emphasis on movement and violence to higher degrees which represent the opening of a flower and spiritual prowess.[17]

In 2012, there are five extant schools of Noh acting called Kanze (観世), Hōshō (宝生), Komparu (金春), Kongō (金剛), and Kita (喜多) schools that train shite actors. Each school has its own iemoto family that carries the name of the school and is considered the most important. The iemoto holds the power to create new plays or modify lyrics and performance modes.[18] Waki actors are trained in the schools Takayasu (高安), Fukuou (福王), and Hōshō (宝生). There are two schools that train kyōgen, Ōkura (大蔵) and Izumi (和泉). Eleven schools train instrumentalists, each school specializing in one to three instruments.[19]

The Nohgaku Performers' Association (Nōgaku Kyōkai), to which all professionals are registered, strictly protects the traditions passed down from their ancestors (see iemoto). However, several secret documents of the Kanze school written by Zeami, as well as materials by Konparu Zenchiku, have been diffused throughout the community of scholars of Japanese theatre.[19]

Roles edit

 
Noh stage. Center: shite; front right: waki; right: eight-member jiutai (chorus); rear center: four hayashi-kata (musicians); rear left: two kōken (stage hands)

There are four major categories of Noh performers: shite, waki, kyōgen, and hayashi.[5][20][21]

  1. Shite (仕手, シテ). Shite is the main protagonist, or the leading role in plays. In plays where the shite appears first as a human and then as a ghost, the first role is known as the mae-shite and the later as the nochi-shite.
    • Shitetsure (仕手連れ, シテヅレ). The shite's companion. Sometimes shitetsure is abbreviated to tsure (連れ, ツレ), although this term refers to both the shitetsure and the wakitsure.
    • Kōken (後見) are stage hands, usually one to three people.
    • Jiutai (地謡) is the chorus, usually comprising six to eight people.
  2. Waki (脇, ワキ) performs the role that is the counterpart or foil of the shite.
    • Wakitsure (脇連れ, ワキヅレ) or Waki-tsure is the companion of the waki.
  3. Kyōgen (狂言) perform the aikyōgen (間狂言), which are interludes during plays. Kyōgen actors also perform in separate plays between individual Noh plays.
  4. Hayashi (囃子) or hayashi-kata (囃子方) are the instrumentalists who play the four instruments used in Noh theatre: the transverse flute (, fue), hip drum (大鼓, ōtsuzumi) or ōkawa (大皮), the shoulder-drum (小鼓, kotsuzumi), and the stick-drum (太鼓, taiko). The flute used for Noh is specifically called nōkan or nohkan (能管).

A typical Noh play always involves the chorus, the orchestra, and at least one shite and one waki actor.[22]

Performance elements edit

Noh performance combines a variety of elements into a stylistic whole, with each particular element the product of generations of refinement according to the central Buddhist, Shinto, and minimalist aspects of Noh's aesthetic principles.

Masks edit

 
masks. Right: Drunken spirit (shōjō). Made of red and black lacquered wood, with red silk tying cord, by Himi Munetada (氷見宗忠). Edo period, 19th century. Left: Nakizo, representing a female deity or woman of high rank, associated with Nō plays such as Hagoromo and Ohara Miyuki. Made of lacquered and painted wood by Norinari (憲成), designed by Zoami (増阿弥). 18th–19th century.
 
Three pictures of the same female mask showing how the expression changes with a tilting of the head. This mask expresses different moods. In these pictures, the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting, and only the camera moved.

Noh masks (能面 nō-men or 面 omote) are carved from blocks of Japanese cypress (檜 "hinoki"), and painted with natural pigments on a neutral base of glue and crushed seashell. There are approximately 450 different masks mostly based on sixty types,[23]: 14  all of which have distinctive names. Some masks are representative and frequently used in many different plays, while some are very specific and may only be used in one or two plays. Noh masks signify the characters' gender, age, and social ranking, and by wearing masks the actors may portray youngsters, old men, female, or nonhuman (divine or demonic) characters.[23]: 13  Only the shite, the main actor, wears a mask in most plays, although the tsure may also wear a mask in some plays.[23]: 13, 260 

Even though the mask covers an actor's facial expressions, the use of the mask in Noh is not an abandonment of facial expressions altogether. Rather, its intent is to stylize and codify the facial expressions through the use of the mask and to stimulate the imagination of the audience. By using masks, actors are able to convey emotions in a more controlled manner through movements and body language. Some masks utilize lighting effect to convey different emotions through slight tilting of the head. Facing slightly upward, or "brightening" the mask, will let the mask to capture more light, revealing more features that appear laughing or smiling. Facing downward, or "clouding" it, will cause the mask to appear sad or mad.[16]

Noh masks are treasured by Noh families and institutions, and the powerful Noh schools hold the oldest and most valuable Noh masks in their private collections, rarely seen by the public. The most ancient mask is supposedly kept as a hidden treasure by the oldest school, the Konparu. According to the current head of the Konparu school, the mask was carved by the legendary regent Prince Shōtoku (572–622) over a thousand years ago. While the historical accuracy of the legend of Prince Shōtoku's mask may be contested, the legend itself is ancient as it is first recorded in Zeami's Style and the Flower written in the 14th century.[23]: 11  Some of the masks of the Konparu school belong to the Tokyo National Museum, and are exhibited there frequently.[24]

Stage edit

 
A modern Noh theatre with indoor roofed structure
 
1: hashigakari. 2: kyōgen spot. 3: stage attendants. 4: stick drum. 5: hip drum. 6: shoulder drum. 7: flute. 8: chorus. 9: waki seat. 10: waki spot. 11: shite spot. 12: shite-bashira. 13: metsuke-bashira. 14: waki-bashira. 15: fue-bashira

The traditional Noh stage (butai) has complete openness that provides a shared experience between the performers and the audience throughout the performance. Without any proscenium or curtains to obstruct the view, the audience sees each actor even during the moments before they enter (and after they exit) the central "stage" (honbutai, "main stage"). The theatre itself is considered symbolic and treated with reverence both by the performers and the audience.[16]

One of the most recognizable characteristic of Noh stage is its independent roof that hangs over the stage even in indoor theatres. Supported by four columns, the roof symbolizes the sanctity of the stage, with its architectural design derived from the worship pavilion (haiden) or sacred dance pavilion (kagura-den) of Shinto shrines. The roof also unifies the theatre space and defines the stage as an architectural entity.[16]

The pillars supporting the roof are named shitebashira (principal character's pillar), metsukebashira (gazing pillar), wakibashira (secondary character's pillar), and fuebashira (flute pillar), clockwise from upstage right respectively. Each pillar is associated with the performers and their actions.[25]

The stage is made entirely of unfinished hinoki, Japanese cypress, with almost no decorative elements. The poet and novelist Tōson Shimazaki writes that "on the stage of the Noh theatre there are no sets that change with each piece. Neither is there a curtain. There is only a simple panel (kagami-ita) with a painting of a green pine tree. This creates the impression that anything that could provide any shading has been banished. To break such monotony and make something happen is no easy thing."[16]

Another unique feature of the stage is the hashigakari, a narrow bridge at upstage right used by actors to enter the stage. Hashigakari means "suspension bridge", signifying something aerial that connects two separate worlds on a same level. The bridge symbolizes the mythic nature of Noh plays in which otherworldly ghosts and spirits frequently appear. In contrast, hanamichi in Kabuki theatres is literally a path (michi) that connects two spaces in a single world, thus has a completely different significance.[16]

Costumes edit

 
Noh Costume (Kariginu) with Checks and Conch Shells. Edo period, 18th century, Tokyo National Museum

Noh actors wear silk costumes called shozoku (robes) along with wigs, hats, and props such as the fan. With striking colors, elaborate texture, and intricate weave and embroidery, Noh robes are truly works of art in their own right. Costumes for the shite in particular are extravagant, shimmering silk brocades, but are progressively less sumptuous for the tsure, the wakizure, and the aikyōgen.[16]

For centuries, in accordance with the vision of Zeami, Noh costumes emulated the clothing that the characters would genuinely wear, such as the formal robes for a courtier and the street clothing for a peasant or commoner. But in the late sixteenth century, the costumes became stylized with certain symbolic and stylistic conventions. During the Edo (Tokugawa) period, the elaborate robes given to actors by noblemen and samurai in the Muromachi period were developed as costumes.[26]

The musicians and chorus typically wear formal montsuki kimono (black and adorned with five family crests) accompanied by either hakama (a skirt-like garment) or kami-shimo, a combination of hakama and a waist-coat with exaggerated shoulders. Finally, the stage attendants are garbed in virtually unadorned black garments, much in the same way as stagehands in contemporary Western theatre.[10]

Props edit

The use of props in Noh is minimalistic and stylized. The most commonly used prop in Noh is the fan, as it is carried by all performers regardless of role. Chorus singers and musicians may carry their fan in hand when entering the stage, or carry it tucked into the obi (the sash). The fan is usually placed at the performer's side when he or she takes position, and is often not taken up again until leaving the stage. During dance sequences, the fan is typically used to represent any and all hand-held props, such as a sword, wine jug, flute, or writing brush. The fan may represent various objects over the course of a single play.[16]

When hand props other than fans are used, they are usually introduced or retrieved by kuroko who fulfill a similar role to stage crew in contemporary theatre. Like their Western counterparts, stage attendants for Noh traditionally dress in black, but unlike in Western theatre they may appear on stage during a scene, or may remain on stage during an entire performance, in both cases in plain view of the audience. The all-black costume of kuroko implies they are not part of the action on stage and are effectively invisible.[10]

Set pieces in Noh such as the boats, wells, altars, and bells, are typically carried onto the stage before the beginning of the act in which they are needed. These props normally are only outlines to suggest actual objects, although the great bell, a perennial exception to most Noh rules for props, is designed to conceal the actor and to allow a costume change during the kyōgen interlude.[23][page needed]

Chant and music edit

 
Hayashi-kata (noh musicians). Left to right: taiko, ōtsuzumi (hip drum), kotsuzumi (shoulder drum), flute

Noh theatre is accompanied by a chorus and a hayashi ensemble (Noh-bayashi 能囃子). Noh is a chanted drama, and a few commentators have dubbed it "Japanese opera". However, the singing in Noh involves a limited tonal range, with lengthy, repetitive passages in a narrow dynamic range. Texts are poetic, relying heavily on the Japanese seven-five rhythm common to nearly all forms of Japanese poetry, with an economy of expression, and an abundance of allusion. The singing parts of Noh are called "Utai" and the speaking parts "Kataru".[27] The music has many blank spaces (ma) in between the actual sounds, and these negative blank spaces are in fact considered the heart of the music. In addition to utai, Noh hayashi ensemble consists of four musicians, also known as the "hayashi-kata", including three drummers, which play the shime-daiko, ōtsuzumi (hip drum), and kotsuzumi (shoulder drum) respectively, and a nohkan flutist.[16]

The chant is not always performed "in character"; that is, sometimes the actor will speak lines or describe events from the perspective of another character or even a disinterested narrator. Far from breaking the rhythm of the performance, this is actually in keeping with the otherworldly feel of many Noh plays, especially in those characterized as mugen.

Plays edit

Of the roughly 2000 plays created for Noh that are known today, about 240 make up the current repertoire performed by the five existing Noh schools. The current repertoire is heavily influenced by the taste of aristocratic class in Tokugawa period and does not necessarily reflect popularity among the commoners.[3] There are several ways to classify Noh plays.

Subject edit

All Noh plays can be classified into three broad categories.[10]

  • Genzai Noh (現在能, "present Noh") features human characters and events unfold according to a linear timeline within the play.
  • Mugen Noh (夢幻能, "supernatural Noh") involves supernatural worlds, featuring gods, spirits, ghosts, or phantasms in the shite role. Time is often depicted as passing in a non-linear fashion, and action may switch between two or more timeframes from moment to moment, including flashbacks.
  • Ryōkake Noh (両掛能, "mixed Noh"), though somewhat uncommon, is a hybrid of the above with the first act being Genzai Noh and the second act Mugen Noh.

While Genzai Noh utilizes internal and external conflicts to drive storylines and bring out emotions, Mugen Noh focuses on utilizing flashbacks of the past and the deceased to invoke emotions.[10]

Performance style edit

Additionally, all Noh plays may be categorized by their style.

  • Geki Noh (劇能) is a drama piece based around the advancement of plot and the narration of action.
  • Furyū Noh (風流能) is little more than a dance piece characterized by elaborate stage action, often involving acrobatics, stage properties, and multiple characters.[3]

Theme edit

 
Okina hōnō (dedication of Noh play A Venerable Old Man) on New Year's Day

All Noh plays are divided by their themes into the following five categories. This classification is considered the most practical, and is still used in formal programming choices today.[3] Traditionally, a formal 5-play program is composed of a selection from each of the groups.[10]

  1. Kami mono (神物, god plays) or waki Noh (脇能) typically feature the shite in the role of a deity to tell the mythic story of a shrine or praise a particular god. Many of them structured in two acts, the deity takes a human form in disguise in the first act and reveals the real self in the second act. (e.g. Takasago, Chikubushima)[3][10]
  2. Shura mono (修羅物, warrior plays) or ashura Noh (阿修羅能) takes its name from the Buddhist underworld. The protagonist appearing as a ghost of a famous samurai pleads to a monk for salvation and the drama culminates in a glorious re-enactment of the scene of his death in a full war costume. (e.g. Tamura, Atsumori)[3][10]
  3. Katsura mono (鬘物, wig plays) or onna mono (女物, woman plays) depict the shite in a female role and feature some of the most refined songs and dances in all of Noh, reflecting the smooth and flowing movements representing female characters. (e.g. Basho, Matsukaze)[3][10]
  4. There are about 94 "miscellaneous" plays traditionally performed in the fourth place in a five-play program. These plays include subcategories kyōran mono (狂乱物, madness plays), onryō mono (怨霊物, vengeful ghost plays), genzai mono (現在物, present plays), as well as others. (e.g. Aya no tsuzumi, Kinuta)[3][10]
  5. Kiri Noh (切り能, final plays) or oni mono (鬼物, demon plays) usually feature the shite in the role of monsters, goblins, or demons, and are often selected for their bright colors and fast-paced, tense finale movements. Kiri Noh is performed the last in a five-play program.[3] There are roughly 30 plays in this category, most of which are shorter than the plays in the other categories.[10]

In addition to the above five, Okina (翁) (or Kamiuta) is frequently performed at the very beginning of the program, especially at New Year, holidays, and other special occasions.[28] Combining dance with Shinto ritual, it is considered the oldest type of Noh play.[10]

Famous plays edit

The following categorization is that of the Kanze school.[18]

Name Kanji Meaning Category
Aoi no Ue 葵上 Lady Aoi 4 (misc.)
Aya no Tsuzumi 綾鼓 The Damask Drum 4 (misc.)
Dōjōji 道成寺 Dōjō Temple 4 (misc.)
Hagoromo 羽衣 The Feather Mantle 3 (woman)
Izutsu 井筒 The Well Cradle 3 (woman)
Matsukaze 松風 The Wind in the Pines 3 (woman)
Sekidera Komachi 関寺小町 Komachi at Seki Temple 3 (woman)
Shōjō 猩々 The Tippling Elf 5 (demon)
Sotoba Komachi 卒都婆小町 Komachi at the Gravepost 3 (woman)
Takasago 高砂 At Takasago 1 (deity)
Yorimasa 頼政 Yorimasa 2 (warrior)

Influence in the West edit

Many Western artists have been influenced by Noh.

Theatre practitioners edit

  • Eugenio Barba – Between 1966 and 1972, Japanese Noh Masters Hideo Kanze and Hisao Kanze gave seminars on Noh at Barba's Theater Laboratory of Holstebro. Barba primarily studied the physical aspects of Noh.[29]
  • Samuel Beckett[29] – Yoshihiko Ikegami considers Beckett's Waiting for Godot a parody of Noh, particularly Kami Noh, in which a god or a spirit appears before a secondary character as the protagonist. Ikegami argues that "the dramatic conflict which was much in evidence in Yeats is so completely discarded that Beckett's theatre (where 'nothing happens') comes to look even closer to Noh than Yeats's did."[30]
  • Bertolt Brecht – According to Maria P. Alter, Brecht began reading Japanese plays during the middle twenties and have read at least 20 Noh plays translated into German by 1929. Brecht's Der Jasager is an adaptation of a Noh play Taniko. Brecht himself identified Die Massnahme as an adaptation of Noh play.[31]
  • Peter Brook – Yoshi Oida, a Japanese actor with training in Noh, began working with Brook in their production of The Tempest in 1968. Oida later joined Brook's company.[32]
  • Paul Claudel[29] – According to John Willett, Paul Claudel learned about Noh during the time he served as French Ambassador to Japan. Claudel's opera Christophe Colomb shows an unmistakable influence of the Noh.[33]
  • Jacques Copeau – In 1923, Copeau worked on a Noh play, Kantan, along with Suzanne Bing at Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier, without ever having seen a Noh play. Thomas Leabhart states that "Jacques Copeau was drawn instinctively by taste and tendency to a restrained theatre which was based in spirituality." Copeau praised Noh theatre in writing when he finally saw a production in 1930.[34]
  • Guillaume Gallienne - Deguchinashi (Huis-Clos) by Jean-Paul Sartre, a Noh version of Sartre's play directed by Guillaume Gallienne at the Noh Tessenkai theatre, Tokyo in 2006.[35]
  • Jacques Lecoq[29] – Physical theatre taught at L'École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq founded by Lecoq is influenced by Noh.
  • Eugene O'Neill[29] – O'Neill's plays The Iceman Cometh, Long Day's Journey into Night, and Hughie have various similarities to Noh plays.[36]
  • Thornton Wilder[29][37] – Wilder himself expressed his interest in Noh in his "Preface” to Three Plays and his sister Isabel Wilder also confirmed his interests. Wilder's work Our Town incorporates various elements of Noh such as lack of plot, representative characters, and use of ghosts.[38]

Composers edit

  • William Henry Bell – An English composer Bell wrote music for modern presentation of several Noh plays, including Komachi (1925), Tsuneyo of the Three Trees (1926), Hatsuyuki (1934), The Pillow of Kantan (1935), and Kageyiko (1936).[39]
  • Benjamin Britten[29] – Britten visited Japan in 1956 and saw for the first time Japanese Noh plays, which he called "some of the most wonderful drama I have ever seen."[40] The influences were seen and heard in his ballet The Prince of the Pagodas (1957) and later in two of the three semi-operatic "Parables for Church Performance": Curlew River (1964) and The Prodigal Son (1968).[41]
  • David Byrne – Byrne encountered Noh when he was on tour in Japan with Talking Heads and he was inspired by the highly stylized practices of Noh, completely different from its Western counterparts that focus on naturalism.[42] According to Josh Kun, "Japanese Noh theatre inspired him to design the oversize business suit that became a visual staple of Talking Heads live shows."[43]
  • Alan Watts – 20th century philosopher, the liner notes from his third song off the 1962 album 'This is IT' state "Watts in a Japanese no-noh."
  • Harry Partch – Partch called his work Delusion of the Fury "a ritualistic web". Kate Molleson wrote for 'The Guardian that "the narrative is a bleary mix of Japanese Noh theatre, Ethiopian folk mythology, Greek drama and his own wacky imagination".[44] Will Salmon cites Partch himself writing, "Noh has been for centuries a fine art, one of the most sophisticated the world has known." Delusion of the Fury incorporates two Noh plays, Atsumori by Zeami and Ikuta by Zenbō Motoyasu, into its story.[45]
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen – The essentially plotless libretto of Stockhausen's grand operatic cycle Licht ("Light") is based on "a mythology drawing on multiple cultural traditions, from Japanese Noh theatre to German folklore".[46]
  • Iannis Xenakis – Xenakis "admired Noh, the venerable theatrical form known for its ritualistic formality and gestural complexity."[47] Electronic Music Foundation presented Xenakis & Japan in March 2010, "a dance/music event highlighting Xenakis' lifelong interest in Japanese music and theatre". The event featured a female Noh performer, Ryoko Aoki.[48]

Classicists edit

  • Scholar Akiko Kiso collaborated with Mae J. Smethurst, writing and translating several works that compared compared the Greek tragedy form of theatre with noh.[49][50]

Poets edit

  • W. B. Yeats[29][51] – Yeats wrote an essay on Noh titled "Certain Noble Plays of Japan" in 1916. As much as he tried to learn Noh, there were limited resources available in England at the time. The lack of complete understanding of Noh led him to create innovative works guided by his own imagination and what he fantasized Noh to be.[52] Yeats wrote four plays heavily influenced by Noh, using ghosts or supernatural beings as the central dramatis personae for the first time. The plays are At the Hawk's Well, The Dreaming of the Bones, The Words upon the Window-Fane, and Purgatory.[30]

Aesthetic terminology edit

Zeami and Zenchiku describe a number of distinct qualities that are thought to be essential to the proper understanding of Noh as an art form.

  • Hana (花, flower): In the Kadensho (Instructions on the Posture of the Flower), Zeami describes hana saying "after you master the secrets of all things and exhaust the possibilities of every device, the hana that never vanishes still remains."[16] The true Noh performer seeks to cultivate a rarefied relationship with his audience similar to the way that one cultivates flowers. What is notable about hana is that, like a flower, it is meant to be appreciated by any audience, no matter how lofty or how coarse his upbringing. Hana comes in two forms. Individual hana is the beauty of the flower of youth, which passes with time, while "true hana" is the flower of creating and sharing perfect beauty through performance.
  • Yūgen (幽玄, profound sublimity): Yūgen is a concept valued in various forms of art throughout Japanese culture. Originally used to mean elegance or grace representing the perfect beauty in waka, yūgen is invisible beauty that is felt rather than seen in a work of art. The term is used specifically in relation to Noh to mean the profound beauty of the transcendental world, including mournful beauty involved in sadness and loss.[16]
  • Rōjaku (老弱): means old, and jaku means tranquil and quiet. Rōjaku is the final stage of performance development of the Noh actor, in which he eliminates all unnecessary action or sound in the performance, leaving only the true essence of the scene or action being imitated.[16]
  • Kokoro or shin (both 心): Defined as "heart," "mind," or both. The kokoro of noh is that which Zeami speaks of in his teachings, and is more easily defined as "mind." To develop hana the actor must enter a state of no-mind, or mushin.
  • Myō (妙): the "charm" of an actor who performs flawlessly and without any sense of imitation; he effectively becomes his role.
  • Monomane (物真似, imitation or mimesis): the intent of a Noh actor to accurately depict the motions of his role, as opposed to purely aesthetic reasons for abstraction or embellishment. Monomane is sometimes contrasted with yūgen, although the two represent endpoints of a continuum rather than being completely separate.
  • Kabu-isshin (歌舞一心, "song-dance-one heart"): the theory that the song (including poetry) and dance are two halves of the same whole, and that the Noh actor strives to perform both with total unity of heart and mind.

Existing Noh theatres edit

Noh is still regularly performed today in public theatres as well as private theatres mostly located in major cities. There are more than 70 Noh theatres throughout Japan, presenting both professional and amateur productions.[53]

Public theatres include National Noh Theatre (Tokyo), Nagoya Noh Theater, Osaka Noh Theater, and Fukuoka Noh Theater. Each Noh school has its own permanent theatre, such as Kanze Noh Theater (Tokyo), Hosho Noh Theater (Tokyo), Kongo Noh Theater (Kyoto), Nara Komparu Noh Theater (Nara), and Taka no Kai (Fukuoka). Additionally, there are various prefectural and municipal theatres located throughout Japan that present touring professional companies and local amateur companies. In some regions, unique regional Noh such as Ogisai Kurokawa Noh have developed to form schools independent from five traditional schools.[16]

Audience etiquette edit

Audience etiquette is generally similar to formal western theatre—the audience quietly watches. Surtitles are not used, but some audience members follow along in the libretto. Because there are no curtains on the stage, the performance begins with the actors entering the stage and ends with their leaving the stage. The house lights are usually kept on during the performances, creating an intimate feel that provides a shared experience between the performers and the audience.[10]

At the end of the play, the actors file out slowly (most important first, with gaps between actors), and while they are on the bridge (hashigakari), the audience claps restrainedly. Between actors, clapping ceases, then begins again as the next actor leaves. Unlike in western theatre, there is no bowing, nor do the actors return to the stage after having left. A play may end with the shite character leaving the stage as part of the story (as in Kokaji, for instance)—rather than ending with all characters on stage—in which case one claps as the character exits.[18]

During the interval, tea, coffee, and wagashi (Japanese sweets) may be served in the lobby. In the Edo period, when Noh was a day-long affair, more substantial makunouchi' bentō (幕の内弁当, "between-acts lunchbox") were served. On special occasions, when the performance is over, お神酒 (o-miki, ceremonial sake) may be served in the lobby on the way out, as it happens in Shinto rituals.

The audience is seated in front of the stage, to the left side of the stage, and in the corner front-left of stage; these are in order of decreasing desirability. While the metsuke-bashira pillar obstructs the view of the stage, the actors are primarily at the corners, not the center, and thus the two aisles are located where the views of the two main actors would be obscured, ensuring a generally clear view regardless of seating.[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Bowers, Faubion (1974). Japanese Theatre. Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle Co. ISBN 9780804811316.
  2. ^ a b c d "Nôgaku theatre". The Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. UNESCO. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ortolani, Benito (1995). The Japanese theatre: from shamanistic ritual to contemporary pluralism. Princeton University Press. p. 132. ISBN 0-691-04333-7.
  4. ^ The Noh.com
  5. ^ a b c d The Noh.com
  6. ^ a b The Asahi Shimbun
  7. ^ Watanabe, Takeshi (2009). Breaking Down Barriers: A History of Chanoyu. Yale Art Gallery. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-300-14692-9.
  8. ^ The Asahi Shimbun
  9. ^ a b Wagokoro.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ishii, Rinko (2009). 能・狂言の基礎知識 [The Fundamentals of Noh and Kyogen]. Tokyo: Kadokawa.
  11. ^ "Nôgaku" 能楽. National Cultural Heritage Database (in Japanese). The Agency for Cultural Affairs, Japan. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d Whatley, Katherine (24 March 2018). "Living and Breathing History, Through Noh". The Theatre Times. Retrieved 25 January 2023.
  13. ^ a b c "TRIVIA of Noh : Q25 : Can a woman become a Noh performer?". www.the-noh.com.
  14. ^ Suzumura, Yusuke (Mar 8, 2013). "Players, Performances and Existence of Women's Noh: Focusing on the Articles Run in the Japanese General Newspapers". Journal of International Japan-Studies. Retrieved Nov 8, 2014.
  15. ^ Tsuchiya, Keiichirō (2014). 能、世阿弥の「現在」 [The "Present" of Noh and Zeami] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Kadokawa.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Komparu, Kunio (1983). The Noh Theater: Principles and Perspectives. New York / Tokyo: John Weatherhill. ISBN 0-8348-1529-X.
  17. ^ Eckersley, M., ed. (2009). Drama from the Rim. Melbourne: Drama Victoria. p. 32.
  18. ^ a b c Hayashi, Kazutoshi (2012). 能・狂言を学ぶ人のために [For Those Learning Noh and Kyogen]. Tokyo: Sekai Shisou Sha.
  19. ^ a b "About the Nohgaku Performers' Association". The Nohgaku Performers' Association. Retrieved Nov 8, 2014.
  20. ^ The Noh.com
  21. ^ "Enjoying Noh and Kyōgen" (PDF). The Nohgaku performers' association. p. 3.[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ Eckersley 2009, p. 47.
  23. ^ a b c d e Rath, Eric C. (2004). The Ethos of Noh – Actors and Their Art. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 0-674-01397-2. p11, p14
  24. ^ "Noh masks formerly owned by Konparu Sōke". Tokyo National Museum. Retrieved 2018-01-18.
  25. ^ Brockett, Oscar G.; Hildy, Franklin J. (2007). History of the Theatre (Foundation ed.). Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon. ISBN 978-0-205-47360-1.
  26. ^ Morse, Anne Nishimura, et al. MFA Highlights: Arts of Japan. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts Publications, 2008. p109.
  27. ^ Pound, Ezra; Fenollosa, Ernest (1959). The Classic Noh Theatre of Japan. New York: New Directions Publishing.[page needed]
  28. ^ "Introduction to Noh and Kyogen – Plays and Characters". the Japan Arts Council. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h Dr. Sky (2014). Therapeutic Noh Theater: Sohkido Pathway VII of the Seven Pathways of Transpersonal Creativity. Two Harbors Press. ISBN 978-1626528222.
  30. ^ a b Takahashi, Yasunari; Ikegami, Yoshihiko (1991). "The Ghost Trio: Beckett, Yeats, and Noh". The Empire of Signs: Semiotic Essays on Japanese Culture. Foundations of Semiotics. 8: 257–267. doi:10.1075/fos.8.12tak. ISBN 978-90-272-3278-6.
  31. ^ Alter, Maria P. (Summer 1968). "Bertolt Brecht and the Noh Drama". Modern Drama. 11 (2): 122–131. doi:10.3138/md.11.2.122. S2CID 194031745.
  32. ^ (PDF). Education Scotland. UK government. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  33. ^ Willett, John (1959). The Theater of Bertolt Brecht: A Study from Eight Aspects. London: Methuen & Co. pp. 116–117.
  34. ^ Leabhart, Thomas (2004). "Jacques Copeau, Etienne Decroux, and the 'Flower of Noh'". New Theatre Quarterly. 20 (4): 315–330. doi:10.1017/S0266464X04000211. S2CID 193218129.
  35. ^ Collasse, R. Dictionnaire amoureux du Japon, Paris, Plon 2021.
  36. ^ Hori, Mariko (1994). "Aspects of Noh Theatre in Three Late O'Neill Plays". Eugene O'Neill Review. 18 (1/2): 143.
  37. ^ Londraville, Richard (1999). Blank, Martin; Brunauer, Dalma Hunyadi; Izzo, David Garrett (eds.). Thornton Wilder: New Essays. West Cornwall, Connecticut: Locust Hill. pp. 365–378.
  38. ^ Ashida, Ruri (June 2009). (PDF). The Bulletin of the International Society for Harmony & Combination of Cultures. 13: 18–31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  39. ^ "William Henry Bell 1873-1946: Music for Japanese no plays". Unsung Composers. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  40. ^ Britten, Benjamin (2008). Letters from a Life: The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten, Volume IV, 1952–1957. London: The Boydell Press. ISBN 9781843833826.
  41. ^ Carpenter, Humphrey (1992). Benjamin Britten: A Biography. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0571143245.
  42. ^ "Interview: David Byrne, musician, author". The Scotsman. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  43. ^ Kun, Josh (October 2012). "CSI: David Byrne". The American Prospect. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  44. ^ Molleson, Kate (29 August 2014). "Harry Partch – how Heiner Goebbels bought Delusion of the Fury to Edinburgh". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 December 2014.
  45. ^ Salmon, Will (1983). "The Influence of Noh on Harry Partch's Delusion of the Fury". Perspectives of New Music. 22 (1/2): 233–245. doi:10.2307/832944. JSTOR 832944.
  46. ^ Robin, William (6 May 2011). "An Operatic Conundrum Untangled". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 December 2014.
  47. ^ Anderson, Jack (26 February 2010). "The Week Ahead Feb. 28 – March 6". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 December 2014.
  48. ^ . Electronic Music Foundation. Archived from the original on 2015-09-05. Retrieved 14 December 2014.
  49. ^ "Remembering Mae J. Smethurst | University of Pittsburgh Japan Studies". www.japanstudies.pitt.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  50. ^ Smethurst, Mae J. (2013). Dramatic Action in Greek Tragedy and Noh: Reading with and Beyond Aristotle. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. ix. ISBN 978-0-7391-7242-1.
  51. ^ Sekine, Masaru; Murray, Christopher (1990). Yeats and the Noh: A Comparative Study. Rl Innactive Titles.
  52. ^ Albright, Daniel (1985). "Pound, Yeats, and the Noh Theater". The Iowa Review. 15 (2): 34–50. doi:10.17077/0021-065X.3210.
  53. ^ "Noh Theater Search". The Nohgaku Performers Association. Retrieved 14 December 2014.

Further reading edit

  • Brandon, James R. (ed.) (1997). Nō and kyōgen in the contemporary world. (Foreword by Ricardo D. Trimillos) Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press.
  • Brazell, Karen (1998). Traditional Japanese Theater: An Anthology of Plays. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Ortolani, Benito; Leiter, Samuel L. (eds) (1998). Zeami and the Nō Theatre in the World. New York: Center for Advanced Study in Theatre Arts, CUNY.
  • Tyler, Royall (ed. & trans.) (1992). Japanese Nō Dramas. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-044539-0.
  • Waley, Arthur (2009). Noh plays of Japan. Tuttle Shokai Inc. ISBN 4-8053-1033-2, ISBN 978-4-8053-1033-5.
  • Yasuda, Noboru (2021). Noh as Living Art: Inside Japan's Oldest Theatrical Tradition (First English ed.). Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture. ISBN 978-4-86658-178-1.
  • Zeami Motokiyo (1984). On the Art of the Nō Drama: The Major Treatises of Zeami. Trans. J. Thomas Rimer. Ed. Masakazu Yamazaki. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

External links edit

  • THE NOHGAKU PERFORMERS' ASSOCIATION THE NOHGAKU PERFORMERS' ASSOCIATION
  • "Noh & Kyogen". Japan Arts Council.
  • Noh Stories in English Ohtsuki Noh Theatre Foundation
  • Japanese Text Initiative, University of Virginia Library
  • Page on the variable expressions of Noh masks
  • Noh plays Photo Story and Story Paper the-Noh.com: Comprehensive Site on Noh
  • "Hachi-No-Ki, A Perspective"
  • nohmask.jp Photos of Noh-masks carved by Ichyuu Terai in Kyoto Japan.
  • How to enjoy Noh
  • Momoyama, Japanese Art in the Age of Grandeur, an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Noh
  • Buddhism in Noh by Royall Tyler
  • Howard B. Hamilton Japanese Theater Papers at the Amherst College Archives & Special Collections

this, article, about, classical, japanese, dance, theatre, other, uses, disambiguation, derived, from, sino, japanese, word, skill, talent, major, form, classical, japanese, dance, drama, that, been, performed, since, 14th, century, developed, zeami, oldest, m. This article is about the classical Japanese dance theatre For other uses see Noh disambiguation Noh 能 Nō derived from the Sino Japanese word for skill or talent is a major form of classical Japanese dance drama that has been performed since the 14th century Developed by Kan ami and his son Zeami it is the oldest major theater art that is still regularly performed today 1 Although the terms Noh and nōgaku are sometimes used interchangeably nōgaku encompasses both Noh and kyōgen Traditionally a full nōgaku program included several Noh plays with comedic kyōgen plays in between an abbreviated program of two Noh plays with one kyōgen piece has become common today Optionally the ritual performance Okina may be presented in the very beginning of nōgaku presentation Nōgaku TheaterUNESCO Intangible Cultural HeritageNoh performance at Itsukushima ShrineCountryJapanDomainsPerforming artsReference12RegionAsia and the PacificInscription historyInscription2008 3rd session ListRepresentativeNoh is often based on tales from traditional literature with a supernatural being transformed into human form as a hero narrating a story Noh integrates masks costumes and various props in a dance based performance requiring highly trained actors and musicians Emotions are primarily conveyed by stylized conventional gestures while the iconic masks represent the roles such as ghosts women deities and demons Written in late middle Japanese the text vividly describes the ordinary people of the twelfth to sixteenth centuries attribution needed 2 Having a strong emphasis on tradition rather than innovation Noh is extremely codified and regulated by the iemoto system Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 The establishment of Noh by Kan ami and Zeami 1 3 Tokugawa era 1 4 Modern Noh after Meiji era 1 5 Women in Noh 2 Jo ha kyu 3 Performers and roles 3 1 Training 3 2 Roles 4 Performance elements 4 1 Masks 4 2 Stage 4 3 Costumes 4 4 Props 4 5 Chant and music 5 Plays 5 1 Subject 5 2 Performance style 5 3 Theme 5 4 Famous plays 6 Influence in the West 6 1 Theatre practitioners 6 2 Composers 6 3 Classicists 6 4 Poets 7 Aesthetic terminology 8 Existing Noh theatres 9 Audience etiquette 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp World s oldest Noh stage at Miyajima nbsp Karaori garment Edo period 18th century bamboo and chrysanthemum design on red and white checkered groundOrigins edit The kanji for Noh 能 means skill craft or talent particularly in the field of performing arts in this context The word Noh may be used alone or with gaku 楽 entertainment music to form the word nōgaku Noh is a classical tradition that is highly valued by many today When used alone Noh refers to the historical genre of theatre that originated from sarugaku in the mid 14th century and continues to be performed today 3 One of the oldest forerunners of Noh and kyōgen is sangaku ja which was introduced to Japan from China in the 8th century At the time the term sangaku referred to various types of performance featuring acrobats song and dance as well as comic sketches Its subsequent adaptation to Japanese society led to its assimilation of other traditional art forms 2 Various performing art elements in sangaku as well as elements of dengaku rural celebrations performed in connection with rice planting sarugaku popular entertainment including acrobatics juggling and pantomime shirabyōshi traditional dances performed by female dancers in the Imperial Court in the 12th century gagaku music and dance performed in the Imperial Court beginning in the 7th century and kagura ancient Shinto dances in folk tales evolved into Noh and kyōgen 1 Studies on the genealogy of the Noh actors in 14th century indicate they were members of families specializing in the performing arts According to legend the Konparu School which is considered to be the oldest tradition of Noh was founded by Hata no Kawakatsu in the 6th century However the founder of the Konparu school which is widely accepted among historians was Bishaō Gon no Kami Komparu Gonnokami during Nanboku chō period in the 14th century According to the genealogical chart of the Konparu school Bishaō Gon no Kami is a descendant after 53 generations of Hata no Kawakatsu The Konparu school was descended from the sarugaku troupe which had played active roles in Kasuga taisha and Kofuku ji in Yamato Province 4 5 6 Another theory by Shinhachirō Matsumoto suggests Noh originated from outcastes struggling to claim higher social status by catering to those in power namely the new ruling samurai class of the time The transfer of the shogunate from Kamakura to Kyoto at the beginning of Muromachi period marked the increasing power of the samurai class and strengthened the relationship between the shogunate and the court As Noh became the shōgun s favorite art form Noh was able to become a courtly art form through this newly formed relationship In 14th century with strong support and patronage from shōgun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu Zeami was able to establish Noh as the most prominent theatre art form of the time 3 The establishment of Noh by Kan ami and Zeami edit Main articles Zeami Motokiyo and Kan ami In the 14th century during the Muromachi period 1336 to 1573 Kan ami Kiyotsugu and his son Zeami Motokiyo reinterpreted various traditional performing arts and completed Noh in a significantly different form from the traditional one essentially bringing Noh to the present form 7 Kan ami was a renowned actor with great versatility playing roles from graceful women and 12 year old boys to strong men When Kan ami first presented his work to the 17 year old Ashikaga Yoshimitsu Zeami was a child actor in his play around age 12 Yoshimitsu fell in love with Zeami and his position of favor at court caused Noh to be performed frequently for Yoshimitsu thereafter 3 Konparu Zenchiku who was the great grandson of Bishaō Gon no Kami the founder of the Konparu school and the husband of Zeami s daughter incorporated elements of waka poetry into Zeami s Noh and further developed it 8 6 By this period among the five major schools of Noh four were established the Kanze school established by Kan ami and Zeami the Hōshō school established by Kan ami s eldest brother the Konparu school and the Kongō school All of these schools were descendants of the sarugaku troupe from Yamato Province The Ashikaga Shogunate supported only the Kanze school among the four schools 5 9 Tokugawa era edit During the Edo period Noh continued to be an aristocratic art form supported by the shōgun the feudal lords daimyōs as well as wealthy and sophisticated commoners While kabuki and joruri popular to the middle class focused on new and experimental entertainment Noh strived to preserve its established high standards and historic authenticity and remained mostly unchanged throughout the era To capture the essence of performances given by great masters every detail in movements and positions was reproduced by others generally resulting in an increasingly slow ceremonial tempo over time 3 In this era the Tokugawa shogunate appointed Kanze school as the head of the four schools Kita Shichidayu Shichidayu Chōnō a Noh actor of the Konparu school who served Tokugawa Hidetada founded the Kita school which was the last established of the five major schools 5 9 Modern Noh after Meiji era edit nbsp In the Noh Theatre 1891 by Ogata GekkōThe fall of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1868 and the formation of a new modernized government resulted in the end of financial support by the state and the entire field of Noh experienced major financial crisis Shortly after the Meiji Restoration both the number of Noh performers and Noh stages greatly diminished The support from the imperial government was eventually regained partly due to Noh s appeal to foreign diplomats The companies that remained active throughout the Meiji era also significantly broadened Noh s reach by catering to the general public performing at theatres in major cities such as Tokyo and Osaka 10 In 1957 the Japanese Government designated nōgaku as an Important Intangible Cultural Property which affords a degree of legal protection to the tradition as well as its most accomplished practitioners The National Noh Theatre founded by the government in 1983 stages regular performances and organizes courses to train actors in the leading roles of nōgaku Noh was inscribed in 2008 on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO as Nōgaku theatre 2 Although the terms nōgaku and Noh are sometimes used interchangeably the Japanese government s definition of nōgaku theatre encompasses both Noh plays and kyōgen plays 11 Kyōgen is performed in between Noh plays in the same space Compared to Noh kyōgen relies less on the use of masks and is derived from the humorous plays of the sangaku as reflected in its comic dialogue 2 Women in Noh edit During the Edo period the guild system gradually tightened which largely excluded women from Noh except for some women such as courtesans performing songs in marginal situations 12 Later in the Meiji era Noh performers taught wealthy people and nobles and this led to more opportunities for female performers because women insisted on female teachers 12 In the early 1900s after women were allowed to join Tokyo Music School the rules forbidding women from joining various schools and associations in Noh were relaxed 12 In 1948 the first women joined the Nohgaku Performers Association 12 13 In 2004 the first women joined the Association for Japanese Noh Plays 13 In 2007 the National Noh Theatre began to annually present regular programs by female performers 13 In 2009 there were about 1200 male and 200 female professional Noh performers 14 Jo ha kyu editMain article Jo ha kyu The concept of jo ha kyu dictates virtually every element of Noh including compiling of a program of plays structuring of each play songs and dances within plays and the basic rhythms within each Noh performance Jo means beginning ha means breaking and kyu means rapid or urgent The term originated in gagaku ancient courtly music to indicate gradually increasing tempo and was adopted in various Japanese traditions including Noh tea ceremony poetry and flower arrangement 15 Jo ha kyu is incorporated in the traditional five play program of Noh The first play is jo the second third and fourth plays are ha and the fifth play is kyu In fact the five categories discussed below were created so that the program would represent jo ha kyu when one play from each category is selected and performed in order Each play can be broken into three parts the introduction the development and the conclusion A play starts out in a slow tempo at jo gets slightly faster at ha then culminates in kyu 16 Performers and roles edit nbsp Kanze Sakon ja 1895 1939 head sōke of Kanze schoolActors begin their training as young children traditionally at the age of three Training edit Zeami isolated nine levels or types of Noh acting from lower degrees which put emphasis on movement and violence to higher degrees which represent the opening of a flower and spiritual prowess 17 In 2012 there are five extant schools of Noh acting called Kanze 観世 Hōshō 宝生 Komparu 金春 Kongō 金剛 and Kita 喜多 schools that train shite actors Each school has its own iemoto family that carries the name of the school and is considered the most important The iemoto holds the power to create new plays or modify lyrics and performance modes 18 Waki actors are trained in the schools Takayasu 高安 Fukuou 福王 and Hōshō 宝生 There are two schools that train kyōgen Ōkura 大蔵 and Izumi 和泉 Eleven schools train instrumentalists each school specializing in one to three instruments 19 The Nohgaku Performers Association Nōgaku Kyōkai to which all professionals are registered strictly protects the traditions passed down from their ancestors see iemoto However several secret documents of the Kanze school written by Zeami as well as materials by Konparu Zenchiku have been diffused throughout the community of scholars of Japanese theatre 19 Roles edit nbsp Noh stage Center shite front right waki right eight member jiutai chorus rear center four hayashi kata musicians rear left two kōken stage hands There are four major categories of Noh performers shite waki kyōgen and hayashi 5 20 21 Shite 仕手 シテ Shite is the main protagonist or the leading role in plays In plays where the shite appears first as a human and then as a ghost the first role is known as the mae shite and the later as the nochi shite Shitetsure 仕手連れ シテヅレ The shite s companion Sometimes shitetsure is abbreviated to tsure 連れ ツレ although this term refers to both the shitetsure and the wakitsure Kōken 後見 are stage hands usually one to three people Jiutai 地謡 is the chorus usually comprising six to eight people Waki 脇 ワキ performs the role that is the counterpart or foil of the shite Wakitsure 脇連れ ワキヅレ or Waki tsure is the companion of the waki Kyōgen 狂言 perform the aikyōgen 間狂言 which are interludes during plays Kyōgen actors also perform in separate plays between individual Noh plays Hayashi 囃子 or hayashi kata 囃子方 are the instrumentalists who play the four instruments used in Noh theatre the transverse flute 笛 fue hip drum 大鼓 ōtsuzumi or ōkawa 大皮 the shoulder drum 小鼓 kotsuzumi and the stick drum 太鼓 taiko The flute used for Noh is specifically called nōkan or nohkan 能管 A typical Noh play always involves the chorus the orchestra and at least one shite and one waki actor 22 Performance elements editNoh performance combines a variety of elements into a stylistic whole with each particular element the product of generations of refinement according to the central Buddhist Shinto and minimalist aspects of Noh s aesthetic principles Masks edit nbsp Nō masks Right Drunken spirit shōjō Made of red and black lacquered wood with red silk tying cord by Himi Munetada 氷見宗忠 Edo period 19th century Left Nakizo representing a female deity or woman of high rank associated with Nō plays such as Hagoromo and Ohara Miyuki Made of lacquered and painted wood by Norinari 憲成 designed by Zoami 増阿弥 18th 19th century nbsp Three pictures of the same female mask showing how the expression changes with a tilting of the head This mask expresses different moods In these pictures the mask was affixed to a wall with constant lighting and only the camera moved Noh masks 能面 nō men or 面 omote are carved from blocks of Japanese cypress 檜 hinoki and painted with natural pigments on a neutral base of glue and crushed seashell There are approximately 450 different masks mostly based on sixty types 23 14 all of which have distinctive names Some masks are representative and frequently used in many different plays while some are very specific and may only be used in one or two plays Noh masks signify the characters gender age and social ranking and by wearing masks the actors may portray youngsters old men female or nonhuman divine or demonic characters 23 13 Only the shite the main actor wears a mask in most plays although the tsure may also wear a mask in some plays 23 13 260 Even though the mask covers an actor s facial expressions the use of the mask in Noh is not an abandonment of facial expressions altogether Rather its intent is to stylize and codify the facial expressions through the use of the mask and to stimulate the imagination of the audience By using masks actors are able to convey emotions in a more controlled manner through movements and body language Some masks utilize lighting effect to convey different emotions through slight tilting of the head Facing slightly upward or brightening the mask will let the mask to capture more light revealing more features that appear laughing or smiling Facing downward or clouding it will cause the mask to appear sad or mad 16 Noh masks are treasured by Noh families and institutions and the powerful Noh schools hold the oldest and most valuable Noh masks in their private collections rarely seen by the public The most ancient mask is supposedly kept as a hidden treasure by the oldest school the Konparu According to the current head of the Konparu school the mask was carved by the legendary regent Prince Shōtoku 572 622 over a thousand years ago While the historical accuracy of the legend of Prince Shōtoku s mask may be contested the legend itself is ancient as it is first recorded in Zeami s Style and the Flower written in the 14th century 23 11 Some of the masks of the Konparu school belong to the Tokyo National Museum and are exhibited there frequently 24 nbsp Noh mask of the hannya type 17th or 18th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the akobujō type 16th or 17th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the ayahashi type 17th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the chorei beshimi type 17th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the hakushiki jō type 15th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the shōjō type 15th or 16th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the shikami type 17th or 18th century nbsp Noh mask of the uba type 16th century Deemed Important Cultural Property nbsp Noh mask of the wakaotoko type 16th or 17th century nbsp Inro with Noh masks front and back early 19th century Stage edit nbsp A modern Noh theatre with indoor roofed structure nbsp 1 hashigakari 2 kyōgen spot 3 stage attendants 4 stick drum 5 hip drum 6 shoulder drum 7 flute 8 chorus 9 waki seat 10 waki spot 11 shite spot 12 shite bashira 13 metsuke bashira 14 waki bashira 15 fue bashiraThe traditional Noh stage butai has complete openness that provides a shared experience between the performers and the audience throughout the performance Without any proscenium or curtains to obstruct the view the audience sees each actor even during the moments before they enter and after they exit the central stage honbutai main stage The theatre itself is considered symbolic and treated with reverence both by the performers and the audience 16 One of the most recognizable characteristic of Noh stage is its independent roof that hangs over the stage even in indoor theatres Supported by four columns the roof symbolizes the sanctity of the stage with its architectural design derived from the worship pavilion haiden or sacred dance pavilion kagura den of Shinto shrines The roof also unifies the theatre space and defines the stage as an architectural entity 16 The pillars supporting the roof are named shitebashira principal character s pillar metsukebashira gazing pillar wakibashira secondary character s pillar and fuebashira flute pillar clockwise from upstage right respectively Each pillar is associated with the performers and their actions 25 The stage is made entirely of unfinished hinoki Japanese cypress with almost no decorative elements The poet and novelist Tōson Shimazaki writes that on the stage of the Noh theatre there are no sets that change with each piece Neither is there a curtain There is only a simple panel kagami ita with a painting of a green pine tree This creates the impression that anything that could provide any shading has been banished To break such monotony and make something happen is no easy thing 16 Another unique feature of the stage is the hashigakari a narrow bridge at upstage right used by actors to enter the stage Hashigakari means suspension bridge signifying something aerial that connects two separate worlds on a same level The bridge symbolizes the mythic nature of Noh plays in which otherworldly ghosts and spirits frequently appear In contrast hanamichi in Kabuki theatres is literally a path michi that connects two spaces in a single world thus has a completely different significance 16 Costumes edit nbsp Noh Costume Kariginu with Checks and Conch Shells Edo period 18th century Tokyo National MuseumNoh actors wear silk costumes called shozoku robes along with wigs hats and props such as the fan With striking colors elaborate texture and intricate weave and embroidery Noh robes are truly works of art in their own right Costumes for the shite in particular are extravagant shimmering silk brocades but are progressively less sumptuous for the tsure the wakizure and the aikyōgen 16 For centuries in accordance with the vision of Zeami Noh costumes emulated the clothing that the characters would genuinely wear such as the formal robes for a courtier and the street clothing for a peasant or commoner But in the late sixteenth century the costumes became stylized with certain symbolic and stylistic conventions During the Edo Tokugawa period the elaborate robes given to actors by noblemen and samurai in the Muromachi period were developed as costumes 26 The musicians and chorus typically wear formal montsuki kimono black and adorned with five family crests accompanied by either hakama a skirt like garment or kami shimo a combination of hakama and a waist coat with exaggerated shoulders Finally the stage attendants are garbed in virtually unadorned black garments much in the same way as stagehands in contemporary Western theatre 10 Props edit The use of props in Noh is minimalistic and stylized The most commonly used prop in Noh is the fan as it is carried by all performers regardless of role Chorus singers and musicians may carry their fan in hand when entering the stage or carry it tucked into the obi the sash The fan is usually placed at the performer s side when he or she takes position and is often not taken up again until leaving the stage During dance sequences the fan is typically used to represent any and all hand held props such as a sword wine jug flute or writing brush The fan may represent various objects over the course of a single play 16 When hand props other than fans are used they are usually introduced or retrieved by kuroko who fulfill a similar role to stage crew in contemporary theatre Like their Western counterparts stage attendants for Noh traditionally dress in black but unlike in Western theatre they may appear on stage during a scene or may remain on stage during an entire performance in both cases in plain view of the audience The all black costume of kuroko implies they are not part of the action on stage and are effectively invisible 10 Set pieces in Noh such as the boats wells altars and bells are typically carried onto the stage before the beginning of the act in which they are needed These props normally are only outlines to suggest actual objects although the great bell a perennial exception to most Noh rules for props is designed to conceal the actor and to allow a costume change during the kyōgen interlude 23 page needed Chant and music edit nbsp Hayashi kata noh musicians Left to right taiko ōtsuzumi hip drum kotsuzumi shoulder drum fluteNoh theatre is accompanied by a chorus and a hayashi ensemble Noh bayashi 能囃子 Noh is a chanted drama and a few commentators have dubbed it Japanese opera However the singing in Noh involves a limited tonal range with lengthy repetitive passages in a narrow dynamic range Texts are poetic relying heavily on the Japanese seven five rhythm common to nearly all forms of Japanese poetry with an economy of expression and an abundance of allusion The singing parts of Noh are called Utai and the speaking parts Kataru 27 The music has many blank spaces ma in between the actual sounds and these negative blank spaces are in fact considered the heart of the music In addition to utai Noh hayashi ensemble consists of four musicians also known as the hayashi kata including three drummers which play the shime daiko ōtsuzumi hip drum and kotsuzumi shoulder drum respectively and a nohkan flutist 16 The chant is not always performed in character that is sometimes the actor will speak lines or describe events from the perspective of another character or even a disinterested narrator Far from breaking the rhythm of the performance this is actually in keeping with the otherworldly feel of many Noh plays especially in those characterized as mugen Plays editOf the roughly 2000 plays created for Noh that are known today about 240 make up the current repertoire performed by the five existing Noh schools The current repertoire is heavily influenced by the taste of aristocratic class in Tokugawa period and does not necessarily reflect popularity among the commoners 3 There are several ways to classify Noh plays Subject edit All Noh plays can be classified into three broad categories 10 Genzai Noh 現在能 present Noh features human characters and events unfold according to a linear timeline within the play Mugen Noh 夢幻能 supernatural Noh involves supernatural worlds featuring gods spirits ghosts or phantasms in the shite role Time is often depicted as passing in a non linear fashion and action may switch between two or more timeframes from moment to moment including flashbacks Ryōkake Noh 両掛能 mixed Noh though somewhat uncommon is a hybrid of the above with the first act being Genzai Noh and the second act Mugen Noh While Genzai Noh utilizes internal and external conflicts to drive storylines and bring out emotions Mugen Noh focuses on utilizing flashbacks of the past and the deceased to invoke emotions 10 Performance style edit Additionally all Noh plays may be categorized by their style Geki Noh 劇能 is a drama piece based around the advancement of plot and the narration of action Furyu Noh 風流能 is little more than a dance piece characterized by elaborate stage action often involving acrobatics stage properties and multiple characters 3 Theme edit nbsp Okina hōnō dedication of Noh play A Venerable Old Man on New Year s DayAll Noh plays are divided by their themes into the following five categories This classification is considered the most practical and is still used in formal programming choices today 3 Traditionally a formal 5 play program is composed of a selection from each of the groups 10 Kami mono 神物 god plays or waki Noh 脇能 typically feature the shite in the role of a deity to tell the mythic story of a shrine or praise a particular god Many of them structured in two acts the deity takes a human form in disguise in the first act and reveals the real self in the second act e g Takasago Chikubushima 3 10 Shura mono 修羅物 warrior plays or ashura Noh 阿修羅能 takes its name from the Buddhist underworld The protagonist appearing as a ghost of a famous samurai pleads to a monk for salvation and the drama culminates in a glorious re enactment of the scene of his death in a full war costume e g Tamura Atsumori 3 10 Katsura mono 鬘物 wig plays or onna mono 女物 woman plays depict the shite in a female role and feature some of the most refined songs and dances in all of Noh reflecting the smooth and flowing movements representing female characters e g Basho Matsukaze 3 10 There are about 94 miscellaneous plays traditionally performed in the fourth place in a five play program These plays include subcategories kyōran mono 狂乱物 madness plays onryō mono 怨霊物 vengeful ghost plays genzai mono 現在物 present plays as well as others e g Aya no tsuzumi Kinuta 3 10 Kiri Noh 切り能 final plays or oni mono 鬼物 demon plays usually feature the shite in the role of monsters goblins or demons and are often selected for their bright colors and fast paced tense finale movements Kiri Noh is performed the last in a five play program 3 There are roughly 30 plays in this category most of which are shorter than the plays in the other categories 10 In addition to the above five Okina 翁 or Kamiuta is frequently performed at the very beginning of the program especially at New Year holidays and other special occasions 28 Combining dance with Shinto ritual it is considered the oldest type of Noh play 10 Famous plays edit For a more comprehensive list see List of Noh plays Plays with individual articles are listed in Category Noh plays The following categorization is that of the Kanze school 18 Name Kanji Meaning CategoryAoi no Ue 葵上 Lady Aoi 4 misc Aya no Tsuzumi 綾鼓 The Damask Drum 4 misc Dōjōji 道成寺 Dōjō Temple 4 misc Hagoromo 羽衣 The Feather Mantle 3 woman Izutsu 井筒 The Well Cradle 3 woman Matsukaze 松風 The Wind in the Pines 3 woman Sekidera Komachi 関寺小町 Komachi at Seki Temple 3 woman Shōjō 猩々 The Tippling Elf 5 demon Sotoba Komachi 卒都婆小町 Komachi at the Gravepost 3 woman Takasago 高砂 At Takasago 1 deity Yorimasa 頼政 Yorimasa 2 warrior Influence in the West editMany Western artists have been influenced by Noh Theatre practitioners edit Eugenio Barba Between 1966 and 1972 Japanese Noh Masters Hideo Kanze and Hisao Kanze gave seminars on Noh at Barba s Theater Laboratory of Holstebro Barba primarily studied the physical aspects of Noh 29 Samuel Beckett 29 Yoshihiko Ikegami considers Beckett s Waiting for Godot a parody of Noh particularly Kami Noh in which a god or a spirit appears before a secondary character as the protagonist Ikegami argues that the dramatic conflict which was much in evidence in Yeats is so completely discarded that Beckett s theatre where nothing happens comes to look even closer to Noh than Yeats s did 30 Bertolt Brecht According to Maria P Alter Brecht began reading Japanese plays during the middle twenties and have read at least 20 Noh plays translated into German by 1929 Brecht s Der Jasager is an adaptation of a Noh play Taniko Brecht himself identified Die Massnahme as an adaptation of Noh play 31 Peter Brook Yoshi Oida a Japanese actor with training in Noh began working with Brook in their production of The Tempest in 1968 Oida later joined Brook s company 32 Paul Claudel 29 According to John Willett Paul Claudel learned about Noh during the time he served as French Ambassador to Japan Claudel s opera Christophe Colomb shows an unmistakable influence of the Noh 33 Jacques Copeau In 1923 Copeau worked on a Noh play Kantan along with Suzanne Bing at Theatre du Vieux Colombier without ever having seen a Noh play Thomas Leabhart states that Jacques Copeau was drawn instinctively by taste and tendency to a restrained theatre which was based in spirituality Copeau praised Noh theatre in writing when he finally saw a production in 1930 34 Guillaume Gallienne Deguchinashi Huis Clos by Jean Paul Sartre a Noh version of Sartre s play directed by Guillaume Gallienne at the Noh Tessenkai theatre Tokyo in 2006 35 Jacques Lecoq 29 Physical theatre taught at L Ecole Internationale de Theatre Jacques Lecoq founded by Lecoq is influenced by Noh Eugene O Neill 29 O Neill s plays The Iceman Cometh Long Day s Journey into Night and Hughie have various similarities to Noh plays 36 Thornton Wilder 29 37 Wilder himself expressed his interest in Noh in his Preface to Three Plays and his sister Isabel Wilder also confirmed his interests Wilder s work Our Town incorporates various elements of Noh such as lack of plot representative characters and use of ghosts 38 Composers edit William Henry Bell An English composer Bell wrote music for modern presentation of several Noh plays including Komachi 1925 Tsuneyo of the Three Trees 1926 Hatsuyuki 1934 The Pillow of Kantan 1935 and Kageyiko 1936 39 Benjamin Britten 29 Britten visited Japan in 1956 and saw for the first time Japanese Noh plays which he called some of the most wonderful drama I have ever seen 40 The influences were seen and heard in his ballet The Prince of the Pagodas 1957 and later in two of the three semi operatic Parables for Church Performance Curlew River 1964 and The Prodigal Son 1968 41 David Byrne Byrne encountered Noh when he was on tour in Japan with Talking Heads and he was inspired by the highly stylized practices of Noh completely different from its Western counterparts that focus on naturalism 42 According to Josh Kun Japanese Noh theatre inspired him to design the oversize business suit that became a visual staple of Talking Heads live shows 43 Alan Watts 20th century philosopher the liner notes from his third song off the 1962 album This is IT state Watts in a Japanese no noh Harry Partch Partch called his work Delusion of the Fury a ritualistic web Kate Molleson wrote for The Guardian that the narrative is a bleary mix of Japanese Noh theatre Ethiopian folk mythology Greek drama and his own wacky imagination 44 Will Salmon cites Partch himself writing Noh has been for centuries a fine art one of the most sophisticated the world has known Delusion of the Fury incorporates two Noh plays Atsumori by Zeami and Ikuta by Zenbō Motoyasu into its story 45 Karlheinz Stockhausen The essentially plotless libretto of Stockhausen s grand operatic cycle Licht Light is based on a mythology drawing on multiple cultural traditions from Japanese Noh theatre to German folklore 46 Iannis Xenakis Xenakis admired Noh the venerable theatrical form known for its ritualistic formality and gestural complexity 47 Electronic Music Foundation presented Xenakis amp Japan in March 2010 a dance music event highlighting Xenakis lifelong interest in Japanese music and theatre The event featured a female Noh performer Ryoko Aoki 48 Classicists edit Scholar Akiko Kiso collaborated with Mae J Smethurst writing and translating several works that compared compared the Greek tragedy form of theatre with noh 49 50 Poets edit W B Yeats 29 51 Yeats wrote an essay on Noh titled Certain Noble Plays of Japan in 1916 As much as he tried to learn Noh there were limited resources available in England at the time The lack of complete understanding of Noh led him to create innovative works guided by his own imagination and what he fantasized Noh to be 52 Yeats wrote four plays heavily influenced by Noh using ghosts or supernatural beings as the central dramatis personae for the first time The plays are At the Hawk s Well The Dreaming of the Bones The Words upon the Window Fane and Purgatory 30 Aesthetic terminology editZeami and Zenchiku describe a number of distinct qualities that are thought to be essential to the proper understanding of Noh as an art form Hana 花 flower In the Kadensho Instructions on the Posture of the Flower Zeami describes hana saying after you master the secrets of all things and exhaust the possibilities of every device the hana that never vanishes still remains 16 The true Noh performer seeks to cultivate a rarefied relationship with his audience similar to the way that one cultivates flowers What is notable about hana is that like a flower it is meant to be appreciated by any audience no matter how lofty or how coarse his upbringing Hana comes in two forms Individual hana is the beauty of the flower of youth which passes with time while true hana is the flower of creating and sharing perfect beauty through performance Yugen 幽玄 profound sublimity Yugen is a concept valued in various forms of art throughout Japanese culture Originally used to mean elegance or grace representing the perfect beauty in waka yugen is invisible beauty that is felt rather than seen in a work of art The term is used specifically in relation to Noh to mean the profound beauty of the transcendental world including mournful beauty involved in sadness and loss 16 Rōjaku 老弱 Rō means old and jaku means tranquil and quiet Rōjaku is the final stage of performance development of the Noh actor in which he eliminates all unnecessary action or sound in the performance leaving only the true essence of the scene or action being imitated 16 Kokoro or shin both 心 Defined as heart mind or both The kokoro of noh is that which Zeami speaks of in his teachings and is more easily defined as mind To develop hana the actor must enter a state of no mind or mushin Myō 妙 the charm of an actor who performs flawlessly and without any sense of imitation he effectively becomes his role Monomane 物真似 imitation or mimesis the intent of a Noh actor to accurately depict the motions of his role as opposed to purely aesthetic reasons for abstraction or embellishment Monomane is sometimes contrasted with yugen although the two represent endpoints of a continuum rather than being completely separate Kabu isshin 歌舞一心 song dance one heart the theory that the song including poetry and dance are two halves of the same whole and that the Noh actor strives to perform both with total unity of heart and mind Existing Noh theatres editNoh is still regularly performed today in public theatres as well as private theatres mostly located in major cities There are more than 70 Noh theatres throughout Japan presenting both professional and amateur productions 53 Public theatres include National Noh Theatre Tokyo Nagoya Noh Theater Osaka Noh Theater and Fukuoka Noh Theater Each Noh school has its own permanent theatre such as Kanze Noh Theater Tokyo Hosho Noh Theater Tokyo Kongo Noh Theater Kyoto Nara Komparu Noh Theater Nara and Taka no Kai Fukuoka Additionally there are various prefectural and municipal theatres located throughout Japan that present touring professional companies and local amateur companies In some regions unique regional Noh such as Ogisai Kurokawa Noh have developed to form schools independent from five traditional schools 16 Audience etiquette editAudience etiquette is generally similar to formal western theatre the audience quietly watches Surtitles are not used but some audience members follow along in the libretto Because there are no curtains on the stage the performance begins with the actors entering the stage and ends with their leaving the stage The house lights are usually kept on during the performances creating an intimate feel that provides a shared experience between the performers and the audience 10 At the end of the play the actors file out slowly most important first with gaps between actors and while they are on the bridge hashigakari the audience claps restrainedly Between actors clapping ceases then begins again as the next actor leaves Unlike in western theatre there is no bowing nor do the actors return to the stage after having left A play may end with the shite character leaving the stage as part of the story as in Kokaji for instance rather than ending with all characters on stage in which case one claps as the character exits 18 During the interval tea coffee and wagashi Japanese sweets may be served in the lobby In the Edo period when Noh was a day long affair more substantial makunouchi bentō 幕の内弁当 between acts lunchbox were served On special occasions when the performance is over お神酒 o miki ceremonial sake may be served in the lobby on the way out as it happens in Shinto rituals The audience is seated in front of the stage to the left side of the stage and in the corner front left of stage these are in order of decreasing desirability While the metsuke bashira pillar obstructs the view of the stage the actors are primarily at the corners not the center and thus the two aisles are located where the views of the two main actors would be obscured ensuring a generally clear view regardless of seating 10 See also editTheatre of Japan Higashiyama culture ShuhariReferences edit a b Bowers Faubion 1974 Japanese Theatre Rutland Vermont Charles E Tuttle Co ISBN 9780804811316 a b c d Nogaku theatre The Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity UNESCO Retrieved 21 November 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ortolani Benito 1995 The Japanese theatre from shamanistic ritual to contemporary pluralism Princeton University Press p 132 ISBN 0 691 04333 7 Konparu school The Noh com a b c d Shite kata The Noh com a b Kotobank Konparu school The Asahi Shimbun Watanabe Takeshi 2009 Breaking Down Barriers A History of Chanoyu Yale Art Gallery p 51 ISBN 978 0 300 14692 9 Kotobank Konparu Zenchiku The Asahi Shimbun a b Noh schools Wagokoro a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Ishii Rinko 2009 能 狂言の基礎知識 The Fundamentals of Noh and Kyogen Tokyo Kadokawa Nogaku 能楽 National Cultural Heritage Database in Japanese The Agency for Cultural Affairs Japan Retrieved 21 November 2019 a b c d Whatley Katherine 24 March 2018 Living and Breathing History Through Noh The Theatre Times Retrieved 25 January 2023 a b c TRIVIA of Noh Q25 Can a woman become a Noh performer www the noh com Suzumura Yusuke Mar 8 2013 Players Performances and Existence of Women s Noh Focusing on the Articles Run in the Japanese General Newspapers Journal of International Japan Studies Retrieved Nov 8 2014 Tsuchiya Keiichirō 2014 能 世阿弥の 現在 The Present of Noh and Zeami in Japanese Tokyo Kadokawa a b c d e f g h i j k l m Komparu Kunio 1983 The Noh Theater Principles and Perspectives New York Tokyo John Weatherhill ISBN 0 8348 1529 X Eckersley M ed 2009 Drama from the Rim Melbourne Drama Victoria p 32 a b c Hayashi Kazutoshi 2012 能 狂言を学ぶ人のために For Those Learning Noh and Kyogen Tokyo Sekai Shisou Sha a b About the Nohgaku Performers Association The Nohgaku Performers Association Retrieved Nov 8 2014 Other Roles The Noh com Enjoying Noh and Kyōgen PDF The Nohgaku performers association p 3 permanent dead link Eckersley 2009 p 47 a b c d e Rath Eric C 2004 The Ethos of Noh Actors and Their Art Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Asia Center ISBN 0 674 01397 2 p11 p14 Noh masks formerly owned by Konparu Sōke Tokyo National Museum Retrieved 2018 01 18 Brockett Oscar G Hildy Franklin J 2007 History of the Theatre Foundation ed Boston MA Allyn and Bacon ISBN 978 0 205 47360 1 Morse Anne Nishimura et al MFA Highlights Arts of Japan Boston Museum of Fine Arts Publications 2008 p109 Pound Ezra Fenollosa Ernest 1959 The Classic Noh Theatre of Japan New York New Directions Publishing page needed Introduction to Noh and Kyogen Plays and Characters the Japan Arts Council Retrieved 21 November 2019 a b c d e f g h Dr Sky 2014 Therapeutic Noh Theater Sohkido Pathway VII of the Seven Pathways of Transpersonal Creativity Two Harbors Press ISBN 978 1626528222 a b Takahashi Yasunari Ikegami Yoshihiko 1991 The Ghost Trio Beckett Yeats and Noh The Empire of Signs Semiotic Essays on Japanese Culture Foundations of Semiotics 8 257 267 doi 10 1075 fos 8 12tak ISBN 978 90 272 3278 6 Alter Maria P Summer 1968 Bertolt Brecht and the Noh Drama Modern Drama 11 2 122 131 doi 10 3138 md 11 2 122 S2CID 194031745 Drama Advanced Higher Twentieth Century Theatre Peter Brook Annotated Bibliography PDF Education Scotland UK government Archived from the original PDF on 24 July 2015 Retrieved 10 December 2014 Willett John 1959 The Theater of Bertolt Brecht A Study from Eight Aspects London Methuen amp Co pp 116 117 Leabhart Thomas 2004 Jacques Copeau Etienne Decroux and the Flower of Noh New Theatre Quarterly 20 4 315 330 doi 10 1017 S0266464X04000211 S2CID 193218129 Collasse R Dictionnaire amoureux du Japon Paris Plon 2021 Hori Mariko 1994 Aspects of Noh Theatre in Three Late O Neill Plays Eugene O Neill Review 18 1 2 143 Londraville Richard 1999 Blank Martin Brunauer Dalma Hunyadi Izzo David Garrett eds Thornton Wilder New Essays West Cornwall Connecticut Locust Hill pp 365 378 Ashida Ruri June 2009 Elements of Japanese Noh in Thornton Wilder s Our Town PDF The Bulletin of the International Society for Harmony amp Combination of Cultures 13 18 31 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 10 December 2014 William Henry Bell 1873 1946 Music for Japanese no plays Unsung Composers Retrieved 29 March 2015 Britten Benjamin 2008 Letters from a Life The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten Volume IV 1952 1957 London The Boydell Press ISBN 9781843833826 Carpenter Humphrey 1992 Benjamin Britten A Biography London Faber and Faber ISBN 0571143245 Interview David Byrne musician author The Scotsman Retrieved 13 December 2014 Kun Josh October 2012 CSI David Byrne The American Prospect Retrieved 13 December 2014 Molleson Kate 29 August 2014 Harry Partch how Heiner Goebbels bought Delusion of the Fury to Edinburgh The Guardian Retrieved 13 December 2014 Salmon Will 1983 The Influence of Noh on Harry Partch s Delusion of the Fury Perspectives of New Music 22 1 2 233 245 doi 10 2307 832944 JSTOR 832944 Robin William 6 May 2011 An Operatic Conundrum Untangled The New York Times Retrieved 14 December 2014 Anderson Jack 26 February 2010 The Week Ahead Feb 28 March 6 The New York Times Retrieved 14 December 2014 Xenakis amp Japan Electronic Music Foundation Archived from the original on 2015 09 05 Retrieved 14 December 2014 Remembering Mae J Smethurst University of Pittsburgh Japan Studies www japanstudies pitt edu Retrieved 2023 01 15 Smethurst Mae J 2013 Dramatic Action in Greek Tragedy and Noh Reading with and Beyond Aristotle Rowman amp Littlefield pp ix ISBN 978 0 7391 7242 1 Sekine Masaru Murray Christopher 1990 Yeats and the Noh A Comparative Study Rl Innactive Titles Albright Daniel 1985 Pound Yeats and the Noh Theater The Iowa Review 15 2 34 50 doi 10 17077 0021 065X 3210 Noh Theater Search The Nohgaku Performers Association Retrieved 14 December 2014 Further reading editBrandon James R ed 1997 Nō and kyōgen in the contemporary world Foreword by Ricardo D Trimillos Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press Brazell Karen 1998 Traditional Japanese Theater An Anthology of Plays New York Columbia University Press Ortolani Benito Leiter Samuel L eds 1998 Zeami and the Nō Theatre in the World New York Center for Advanced Study in Theatre Arts CUNY Tyler Royall ed amp trans 1992 Japanese Nō Dramas London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 044539 0 Waley Arthur 2009 Noh plays of Japan Tuttle Shokai Inc ISBN 4 8053 1033 2 ISBN 978 4 8053 1033 5 Yasuda Noboru 2021 Noh as Living Art Inside Japan s Oldest Theatrical Tradition First English ed Tokyo Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture ISBN 978 4 86658 178 1 Zeami Motokiyo 1984 On the Art of the Nō Drama The Major Treatises of Zeami Trans J Thomas Rimer Ed Masakazu Yamazaki Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nō THE NOHGAKU PERFORMERS ASSOCIATION THE NOHGAKU PERFORMERS ASSOCIATION Noh amp Kyogen Japan Arts Council Noh Stories in English Ohtsuki Noh Theatre Foundation Nō Plays Translations of thirteen Noh plays Japanese Text Initiative University of Virginia Library Virtual Reality and Virtual Irreality On Noh Plays and Icons Page on the variable expressions of Noh masks Noh plays Photo Story and Story Paper the Noh com Comprehensive Site on Noh Hachi No Ki A Perspective nohmask jp Photos of Noh masks carved by Ichyuu Terai in Kyoto Japan How to enjoy Noh Momoyama Japanese Art in the Age of Grandeur an exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art fully available online as PDF which contains material on Noh Buddhism in Noh by Royall Tyler Howard B Hamilton Japanese Theater Papers at the Amherst College Archives amp Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Noh amp oldid 1199670187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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