Runningu
Mood:
cool
Running a marathon in under five hours seems like a daunting undertaking. I've been a bit discouraged with my times but today i gained a bit of hope when i ran a fairly easy 4 miles in 40 minutes. I think i can!
Sunday, Dec. 12th Saki and Takarazuka ReviewSaki is one of my first "favorite" students who i met after arriving in Japan. She is mature beyond her 14 years. We practiced endlessly together last year for her first try at the All Nishinomiya Speech and Recitation Contest. She did a recitation about Landmines that i felt was very good, but then i must admit a bit of a bias. Anyway, she didn't win last year. She came back as a 3rd grader and won 1st place this year. We are so very proud of her. Her speech this year was her dream of becoming a ballerina. I knew that she was enthralled with this dance troupe in Takarazuka (near Nishinomiya) so i asked her if she could get us tickets to see this spectacle and voila...Sunday we met and had a marvelous lunch together. We browsed through all the shops displaying endless photos, stickers and related paraphernalia on every single woman in these shows! And we got to experience the full Takarazuka Review which was 3 hours long.
This troupe is celebrating its 90th year. The first performance of the Takarazuka was in 1914. "Mon Paris", staged in 1927, heralded the arrival of the revue era. The all-female company has been offering delightful combinations of song, dance and drama while performing both male and female roles in contemporary and traditional productions. The troupe changed its name to The Takarazuka Revue Company in 1940, and divided into separate groups called "Flower", "Moon", "Snow", "Star", and "Special Course" which have performed predominantly at the home stage in Osaka at the Takarazuka Grand Theater.
We watched the Snow troupe perform a drama called "In Quest of the Blue Bird." It opens on the top floor of a New York skyscraper. A party is being held to announce an engagement of the actress Brenda Burton to Jake, the son and heir of the president of El Grande, the number one underwear manufacturer in the US. It is going to be a marriage of convenience only. She is a model and greedy for his big bucks, and he wants only to keep her as a "model" wife (great for press photos). A brother, Vincent, arrives who has denounced Jake's inhumane way of management. Vince has quit the business and is working as an Alpine rescuer. The plot thickens and there's something about a nun who has donated an organ to one of the men. The bluebird speaks to Jake and tells him that his fate lies in another woman named Gina who he spends most of the rest of the show trying to find. Good grief, it's a bit difficult to follow in all Japanese but the acting, costuming, dance and music are great. The story is so convoluted that it's pretty funny, i think.
The second half of the show is a Japanese version of a Las Vegas dance review including the requisite chorus line of long legged can-can girls. The women are fantastic in both male and female roles. The costuming is out of this world. The music ranges from Japanese classic to some tunes that sound vaguely familiar to some wild, electronic, jazz, fusion, heavy metal blends. The stage is more incredible than anything that i have ever seen - much more intricate than Cats or Les Miz. The rotating platform that takes up most of the stage includes at least 3 trap doors where performers can rise from below the stage on different levels. The sets are spectacular and razzle-dazzle. It was thoroughly enjoyable even though i couldn't understand a word that was said or sung. Check it out on the web:
Takurazuka ReviewPhotos to come later on my web page.
Posted by maryinjapan
at 9:35 AM
Updated: Thursday, 16 December 2004 2:32 PM