Title: Asian and African Theatre
1Asian and African Theatre
2Theatre in Japan
- At about the time religious cycles were
flourishing in Europe, a very different kind of
theatrical experience was being offered halfway
round the world in Japan. - There, Noh theatre was perfected and codified so
thoroughly that it is still performed today much
as it was five hundred years ago.
3Theatre in Japan
- To understand Noh theatre we need to look at the
political and cultural context out of which it
developed. - During the sixth century A.D. the Buddhist
religion arrived in Japan from India and China. - In the seventeenth century an emperor gained
power over Japan and took ownership of all land.
4Theatre in Japan
- In 1192 emperor ceded his secular authority to a
shogun (military dictator), although he retained
his status as a near-god in the religious realm. - The shogunate became hereditary, although new
families won possession of the title from time to
time.
5Theatre in Japan
- Japan was ruled in this manner until 1867, when
American intervention led to the downfall of the
shogunate and the return of power to the emperor. - Under shogunate Japan had strict social hierarchy
6Theatre in Japan
- In 1338 the Ashikaga family gained control of the
shogunate and retained it for the next two
hundred fifty years. - One of its goals was to eliminate foreign
cultural influences and develop native art forms.
7Noh Theatre
- The most significant developments in Noh theatre
began around 1375. At that time it was taken
under the patronage of shogun. - The major influence on Nohs view of the world
was Zen Buddhism, which reaches that ultimate
peace comes through union with all being, the
individual desire must be overcome, and that
nothing in earthly life is permanent.
8Noh Theatre
- Noh dramas are classified into five types,
according to the principal character god plays,
warrior plays, women plays, madness plays, and
demon plays. - Each Noh script is short and doesnt emphasize
storytelling.
9Noh Theatre
- The performers can be divided into three groups
actors, chorus, and musicians. - The actors are trained from childhood and expect
to devote twenty or more years to perfecting
their craft.
10Noh Theatre
- The chorus is composed of from six to ten
members. They sit at one side of the stage
throughout and sing or recite many of the shites
(main character and his or her followers) lines
or narrate events.
11Noh Theatre
- Each play requires two or three drummers and one
flute player. No other instruments are ever used. - The shite and his companion wear masks of painted
wood, many of them passed down for generations.
12Noh Theatre
- The Noh stage, standardized for almost four
hundred years, is raised about three feet. - The stage is divided into three areas, although
none is separated architecturally except for the
pillars. - The largest area, the main stage, is enclosed by
the four pillars and is about eighteen feet
square. - Back of the upstage pillars is the rear stage
(atoza), where the musicians and attendants sit. - To stage left of the main stage is the waki-za,
where the chorus kneels on the floor in two rows.
13Noh Theatre
- There are two entrances to the stage. The
principal one, the bridge, is a railed gangway
about six feet wide and forty feet long leading
from the mirror room, where the actors prepare
for their entrances.
14Noh Theatre
- The audience views the performance from two
sides in front of the main stage and facing the
stage from alongside the bridge. The theatres
used today hold three hundred to five hundred
people. - Every element of performance is strictly
controlled by conventions that have been
established for centuries. Rather than
encouraging innovation, Noh seeks to perfect and
preserve an art form.
15The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- The Shrine in the Fields is usually attributed to
Zeami. It belongs to the third category (woman
play) and is based on episodes from one of the
most famous of Japanese novels, The Tale of Genji.
16The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- Each Noh play is set in a specific season of the
year, named early in the drama, and the mood and
imagery of the entire play must be in keeping
with that season. - In The Shrine in the Fields the time is late
autumn, the seventh day of the ninth month, the
day in which Lord Genji visited Lady Rokujo at
Nonomiya.
17The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- As is typical in Noh drama, the introductory
scene compresses time and place An itinerant
priest ( the waki or secondary character) travels
almost instantaneously from the capital to
Nonomiya, where his curiosity is aroused by the
seemingly perfect preservation of the shrine
although it has long been abandoned.
18The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- When the ghost of Miyasudokoro (the shite)
appears in the guise of a village girl, he
questions her about the shrine and herself, and
gradually it becomes apparent that there is
something mysterious about both her and the
place.
19The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- As in all Noh plays, the climactic moment is
expressed in dance. - In Noh, a number of devices distance the
spectator from the play. - For The Shrine in the Fields the basic appearance
of the stage is altered only by the addition of a
stylized gate and brushwood fence, and the only
property of any significance is the sprig of
sakaki that Miyasudokoro places at the shrine
gate.
20The Shrine in the Fields (Nonomiya)
- The Shrine in the Fields does not seek to tell a
story or to develop character so much as to
capture a mood, to distill a powerful emotion,
and to express an attitude about the physical
world and human existence.
21Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Japan developed two other traditional theatre
forms doll theatre and Kabuki. - The doll theatre, in which large puppets
represent the characters, came to prominence in
the seventeenth century.
22Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Three handlers, who are visible to the audience
operate each puppet. One handler manipulates the
head and right arm, a second the left arm, and a
third the feet. - A narrator is accompanied by a samisen ( a
three-stringed instrument with a skin-covered
base that can be both struck and plucked) and
other instruments of lesser importance.
23Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- The major writer of plays for doll theatre was
Chikamatsu Monzaemon (1653-1724), Japans
greatest playwright.
24Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- He wrote many kinds of plays but is best known
for his five-act history plays and his three-act
plays on contemporary life. - He was admired above all for his plays about the
double suicides of lovers, his sensitive
characterizations, and beautiful language.
25Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Kabuki, long the most popular of the traditional
forms, also first appeared in the seventeenth
century. - More open to change than the other forms, it has
borrowed many of its plays and conventions from
Noh and Bunraku but has adapted them to its own
needs.
26Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Unlike Noh, Kabuki uses a great deal of scenery,
although the settings are not meant to be fully
illusionistic. White floor mats are used to
represent snow, blue mats to indicate water, and
gray mats the ground.
27Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Most Kabuki plays are divided into several acts
made up of loosely connected episodes that
emphasize highly emotional incidents. - The climactic moment in many scenes is reached in
a highly stylized pose (the mie) struck and held
by the principal character.
28Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Song and narration are important to Kabuki.
- The orchestra often includes flutes, drums,
bells, gongs, cymbals, and strings, although the
most essential instrument is the samisen.
29Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Kabuki acting is a combination of stylized
speaking and dancing. - Kabuki actors do not wear masks, but some roles
use boldly patterned makeup to exaggerate the
musculature of face or body.
30Other Japanese Theatre Forms
- Although Kabuki is highly conventionalized, it
includes many elements that resemble, though in
exaggerated form, Western usages, perhaps most
notably in scenery and lighting, melodramatic
stories, and emotional acting. - Of all Japanese forms, Noh remains the least
understood in the West.
31Theatre in Africa
- Europeans and Americans remained largely ignorant
of African performance traditions until the end
of the nineteenth century. - Nevertheless, African performance activities had
through the centuries been numerous religious
rituals, festivals, ceremonies, storytelling, and
various kinds of celebrations and had been
woven into daily life.
32Theatre in Africa
- The combination of the colonialist heritage and
indigenous forms created a wide spectrum of
performance in Africa. - There are more than eight hundred local languages
in use, and many local traditions do not
necessarily travel well from one part of Africa
to another.
33Theatre in Africa
- During the late nineteenth century, European
countries divided up most of Africa among
themselves and thereafter sought to impose their
languages and ideas of theatre, including
proscenium-arch structures, on the territories
they controlled.
34Theatre in Africa
- In indigenous performance, words are often the
least important element. Other languages,
especially drumming and dance, often communicate
more to African audiences than words do. - Direct audience participation is expected.
- Dancing and music are important in most
performances.
35Theatre in Africa
- It would be impossible to treat theatrical
performance in every country on the African
continent, since there are close to fifty
separate states. - Whereas Arab languages and customs dominate the
states in North Africa, those south of the Sahara
desert are highly diverse.
36Theatre in Africa
- Most countries have been unable to rid themselves
of their colonial past and, consequently, their
theatrical customs include both European and
African conventions.
37Performance in Nigeria
- Nigeria includes more than two hundred fifty
different ethnic groups, of which the most
populous are the Hausa, Yoruba, Ibo, and Fulani. - One of the major Yoruba festivals was the
egungen, in which sacrifices were offered and
petitions for blessing and prosperity were
addressed to the dead.
38Performance in Nigeria
- The most popular contemporary theatrical form in
Nigeria is Yoruba opera (now usually called
Yoruba Travelling Theatre). It was developed
primarily by Hubert Ogunde, who in 1946
established a professional company with which he
toured thereafter.
39Performance in Nigeria
- English-language plays also became popular from
around 1900, and drama was intoduced into schools
founded by the English colonial government or by
religious organizations that were seeking to
convert Nigerians to Christianity.
40Performance in Nigeria
- But the dominant playwright has been Wole Soyinka
(1934-), especially since 1986, when he won the
Noble Prize for Literature, the first African to
be so honored. - That has not kept him from being punished by a
government that has imprisoned him and threatened
him with death for his opposition to certain
government policies.
41The Strong Breed
- The staging conventions used in The Strong Breed
are much the same as those found in European and
American theatres. - The difference from European and American drama
lies primarily in the subject matter and its
treatment, which strongly reflects the egungen
traditions, but placed in a modern context.
42The Strong Breed
- In The Strong Breed, the dramatic action focuses
on a ritual that can be traced all the way back
to the Greeks the selection and expulsion of a
scapegoat who will take all the problems of the
village on himself and carry them away.
43The Strong Breed
- It is never made clear why Summa, who seems to be
in love with Eman, does not tell him of the
difference in customs here, not even when a girl
dragging an effigy appears and lures him into the
bush, where he can be captured and prepared for
the ritual.
44The Strong Breed
- In the action that follows, through a series of
flashbacks, we learn that Eman is a descendant of
a long line of carriers and that he has left his
own village because he has been devastated when
his wife died in childbirth. - As in Greek tragedy, Eman finds that he cannot
escape his destiny to be a carrier.
45The Strong Breed
- The Strong Breed develops a number of themes
common in Soyinkas plays the conflict between
the traditional and the modern the ongoing need
to save society from its tendency to follow
custom and mistaken beliefs unquestioningly the
special individual, who through dedication and
vision awakens the people and leads them toward
better ways, even though he may become a victim
of the society he seeks to benefit.
46The Strong Breed
- Soyinka may also be suggesting that one cannot
escape tradition and therefore must come to grips
with it. - Soyinkas plays form a bridge between traditional
and contemporary performance.
47Theatre Elsewhere in Africa
- Other African countries with extensively
developed performance traditions include Ghana,
Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Senegal, and Ivory
Coast. - But the county whose theatre is vest known in
Europe and America is South Africa, probably
because so many of its inhabitants are
descendants of white Europeans.
48Theatre Elsewhere in Africa
- South Africa also attracted much attention and
controversy over apartheid, under which the black
and white populations were kept apart from each
other as much as possible and under which blacks
were denied most of the rights granted to whites. - These conditions continued from the 1950s until
about 1990, when the restrictions were removed.
49Theatre Elsewhere in Africa
- The best-known South African playwright is Athol
Fugard, whose plays have been produced throughout
the world and have been especially popular in the
US. - His Master Harold and the Boys (1982) is grounded
in apartheid.
50Theatre Elsewhere in Africa
- A number of black playwrights have gained
international recognition, among them Mbogeni
Negema and Percy Mtwa. - Their play Woza Albert enacts what might happen
if Jesus were to come back to South Africa.
51Theatre Elsewhere in Africa
- It is clear that African theatre is handicapped
by colonialist heritage. Rather than comparing it
to European and American practices, it would be
best to admire its broad range of theatrical
activities, most of which, considering the
enormous number of ethnic and linguistic
divisions within Africa, are appropriately
directed to limited and local audiences.
52Epilogue
- The theatre is always in flux. It seems likely
that the versions with which we are now familiar
will change as conditions alter. - Changes are not always welcome, but they are
necessary, because theatre can remain vital only
by reflecting the dynamics of the culture within
which it exists.