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kabuki kids

A recent story on National Public Radio told the story of the kabuki festival of Damine, Japan. For over three centuries this small mountain village has had an unbroken yearly tradition of having their children perform to please the mountain gods.

“Legend has it that hundreds of years ago, the mountain village was jeopardized when someone accidentally chopped down one of the shogun’s trees,” says Hina Takeshita, the 12-year-old star of the closing kabuki play [of the festival].

As news spread that the shogun, a feudal commander, was coming to investigate, the villagers prayed to the gods. They promised to perform kabuki every year if the goddess of mercy could make it snow. A rare June blizzard arrived, thwarting the visit by the shogun’s samurai and saving the village from punishment.

“So we’ve been playing kabuki ever since then,” Hina says.

You can read more about Damine’s festival in this article from National Public Radio. It’s mostly about the growing hardship of staging the festival as the village population shrinks because so many people have migrated to the cities. There are only 10 children left between the ages of 6 and 12.

Here’s a video of one of their performances:

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (lilith)

I heard on NPR yesterday morning that they’re doing a new version of Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia on Broadway.  It opened yesterday, I believe.  Hearing the actors going through their lines, the discussion of the play, put me into a fervent reverie.  I can’t express how much I love this play—my favorite by Stoppard, maybe one of my favorites ever.  I loved it so much back in the 90s when they staged in at the Mark Taper Forum that I went to see it twice.  This was back in the day when theater tickets were a rare treat for me because I was astonishingly broke.  And I bought a copy of the play so I could read through it when I felt the need.

Why did I love it so?  As I said in my notebooks back on December 14, 1997:

I love this play.  It’s all about losing and finding, discovery and rediscovery, but most of all, about living in the precise moment.  It’s also about chaos theory.

But that’s not all of it.  There’s the beauty of the language, too, but layers and layers of things speak to me.  Too much to say and I have no time right now to say it, what with going and coming and coming and going, and losing and gaining and gaining and losing.  All I can say is that it has echoed through my heart over and over in the years since I first saw it.  It turns out, I guess, that bittersweet is my favorite flavor.

Since I have no time for more than that, I’ll leave you with the rest of that notebook entry, which wisely relies for the most part on the play to make its case:

From Arcadia by Tom Stoppard, Act I, Scene III

Lady Thomasina, aged 13 and precociously brilliant in an age that does not respect the brilliance of women (1809) is talking to her tutor, Septimus, aged 22, who very much respects the brilliance of Thomasina.

Thomasina: But instead, the Egyptian noodle [Cleopatra] made carnal embrace with the enemy who burned the great library of Alexandria without so much as a fine for all that is overdue.  Oh, Septimus!—can you bear it?  All the lost plays of the Athenians! Two hundred at least by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides—thousands of poems—Aristotle’s own library brought to Egypt by the noodle’s ancestors!  How can we sleep for grief?

Septimus: By counting our stock.  Seven plays from Aeschylus, seven from Sophocles, nineteen from Euripides, my lady!  You should no more grieve for the rest than for a buckle lost from your first shoe, or for your lesson book which will be lost when you are old.  We shed as we pick up, like travellers who must carry everything in their arms, and what we let fall will be picked up by those behind.  The procession is very long and life is very short.  We die on the march. But there is nothing outside the march so nothing can be lost to it. The missing plays of Sophocles will turn up piece by piece, or be written again in another language.  Ancient cures for diseases will reveal themselves once more.  Mathematical discoveries glimpsed and lost to view will have their time again.  You do not suppose, my lady, that if all of Archimedes had been hiding in the great library of Alexandria, we would be at a loss for a corkscrew?

[Then the bit about why I loved it, then this bit:]

And here’s something from old Ezra Pound, that crock, that echoes through my mind when I think of that passage above:

From Pisan Canto LXXXI:

What thou lovest well remains,
the rest is dross
What thou lov’st well shall not be reft from thee
What thou lov’st well is thy true heritage
Whose world, or mine or theirs
or is it of none?
First came the seen, then thus the palpable
Elysium, though it were in the halls of hell,
What thou lovest well is thy true heritage
What thou lov’st well shall not be reft from thee

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)
I'm so tired. Today I hope to curl up with Sandra McDonald's The Stars Blue Yonder, her finale to the trilogy begun with The Outback Stars. I have loved this series with much loveness and so far (about halfway through) I'm loving this book.

Last night we went to see Shakespeare in the park: As You Like It, Point Fermin in San Pedro, right on the ocean with dramatic cliffs stage right. We had a picnic of ham and onion quiche, spinach and mushroom quiche, salad with mandarin oranges and almonds, and an exquisite mix of exquisite cookies from a Pasadena bakery.

And champagne! Yes, champagne. The other picnickers were envious, one woman even walking by to say, "Champagne? I like your style." We didn't tell her that the three of us were celebrating survival (all of us have had a brush with it lately) and enduring friendship (probably one of the most precious commodities in the world).

The cast was young and exuberant and the play was great fun, but the proximity to the ocean means the park is colder than a well digger's... That's okay, we came equipped with several layers of clothing and warm blankets. Still, it was colder than last year and we had to bundle up earlier. Still fun.

I hope Shakespeare by the Sea (the group who put the play on) can continue next year. They have staged free performances in parks all across the Southland from June to August for twelve years now—bare bones but very creative productions. The downturn has hit them hard, as it has every arts organization. They ended the year $30,000 in debt. Last year, they ended $17,000 but managed to scratch it up somewhere and enough to put on this season. I'm not sure they'll be able to overcome this deficit, but I sincerely hope they do. It would be a shame to lose this.

I will hoist another glass of champagne to their survival, if they make it.
pjthompson: (Default)
I went to a free outdoor performance of A Midsummer's Night Dream last night, put on by
these folks:

Photobucket

What a fun time! I can't tell you how nice it was to be watching Shakespeare from a lawn chair in beautiful surroundings and fresh air while having a picnic. The performers were mostly young, very enthusiastic, and most were top notch performers. And they got over 1100 people there last night! So gratifying that they had such a good audience on their last performance. They were psyched.

It took place at Point Fermin Park. I could wish the Chamber of Commerce had provided a better picture. This misses the whole vista of the sea which sits a few yards from the picture they've used. The park sits up on the bluffs of Palos Verdes peninsula, right on the tip, and so looks down on a gentle cove there. I'll not soon forget the sight of the fourth quarter moonlight (half, waning) on the dark water, and the pale phosphorescence of the waves gently breaking on the beach. Exquisite. Beyond words or even the best photography. Experience of the natural world is the greatest treasure, can't be reproduced.

ETA: I forgot to mention the gigantic, ancient fig trees surrounding the stage and throughout the park. Perfect for Midsummer's Night.

Hmm. The moon may have been waning, but I appear to be waxing, so I'll move back to the central premise of this post.

They do warn people that even if it's hot inland it gets rather cold at night right on the sea. I've lived semi-near the sea all my life so I know this can be so, but if it's hot enough it can even be rather balmy by the sea. It was definitely hot yesterday, and because of that at least two of us didn't take the temperature warning seriously enough, so I and one of my companions wound up at the concessions booth buying one of these, and in addition I bought one of these.

I didn't mind at all, since the sweatshirt is pretty, well-made, and half price (last night of the season) and the money goes to a good cause. SBTS puts on free performances all over Southern California from June to August on what they can scrape together from grants and donations. They ended the year $60,000 in debt so I will probably be tithing to them whenever I can. I hope others do, too. I want to do this again next year!

Oh, and we dined on homemade veggie pizza (delish, if I do say so myself), salad, fancy cheeses, and vanilla pudding with fresh fruit. Yum!

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