Video: Bunraku: Puppet Theater of Japan
Format: Video, 30 minutes
Available from:
Japan Information Center
Consulate General of Japan*
299 Park Avenue, 18th floor
New York, New York 10171
* Offices also in: Anchorage, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago,
Guam, Honolulu, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, New Orleans,
Portland (Oregon), San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington D.C.
Rental Fee: Free
The Japanese puppet theater, bunraku, flourished, like kabuki, during
the Tokugawa Period (1603-1868), and appealed most to the people of the
newly rising merchant class and other commoners. Its plays either concerned
the conflicts in the daily lives of townspeople or presented the most
exciting aspects of samurai life in historical dramas. Unlike Noh, with
its subtle literary allusions and somber Buddhist undertones, bunraku
expressed the Confucian values which were fundamental to the daily lives
of its audience.
These three traditional dramatic forms, however, all share one major characteristic:
their final form in performance represents a fusion of several different
arts. The three main components of bunraku are the narrative, the music,
and the puppets, and it takes a group of artists to bring them to life:
the narrators, the musicians (who play the guitar-like shamisen),
and the puppet manipulators. In addition, there are the craftsmen who
create the actual puppets. The beauty of a bunraku performance depends
on the absolute coordination of its component parts.
Exercises
1)
The
puppets
as we
see
them
in the
theater
today
are
two-thirds
life-size,
and
require
three
men
to manipulate
them
properly.
The
puppeteers,
in the
black
outfits,
are
considered
invisible,
even
though
they
do not
hide
themselves
as in
Western
puppet-plays.
They
are
said
to represent
"the
living
spirit"
of the
dolls.
(In
fact,
if a
puppeteer
operates
without
wearing
the
black
hood,
it indicates
his
special
skill
and
is a
mark
of respect
for
his
artistry.)
Why
don't
the
Japanese
think
that
hiding
the
puppeteers
- making
the
puppets
appear
to be
moving
as if
by magic
- is
very
important?
Do you
think
that
the
presence
of men
in black
in the
background
makes
the
dolls
seem
any
less
"realistic"?
2) A disadvantage of puppets is that their faces, of course, do
not have the mobility or expressive qualities of a human face. How do
the design of the puppets and the manipulations of the puppeteers
serve to make bunraku puppets more "realistic" and expressive than
puppets used in other dramatic traditions?
3)
The
narrator
of a
bunraku
play
recites
the
lines
of all
the
characters
- changing
his
voice
as he
reads
different
parts-
as well
as all
the
descriptive
portions
of the
play.
List
the
various
jobs
in a
Western
play,
such
as director,
actor,
and
so on.
What
functions
does
the
narrator
in Bunraku
share
with
each?
How
do you
think
this
influences
the
performance?
4) In the West, puppet plays, like "Punch and Judy," are usually
comedies; a puppet play about a tragedy would be considered rather
strange. Why do you think the Japanese had little difficulty in
imagining puppet-plays as serious drama?
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