Noh Theater
Noh or Nogaku—derived
from the Sino-Japanese word
for "skill" or "talent"—is a major form of classical
Japanese musical drama that has been performed since
the 14th century. Many characters are masked, with men playing male and female
roles. Traditionally, a Noh "performance day" lasts all day and
consists of five Noh plays interspersed with shorter, humorous kyōgen pieces.
However, present-day Noh performances often consist of two Noh plays with one
Kyōgen play in between.
While the field of Noh performance is extremely
codified, and regulated by the iemoto system,
with an emphasis on tradition rather than innovation, some performers do
compose new plays or revive historical ones that are not a part of the standard
repertoire. Works blending Noh with other theatrical traditions have also been
produced.
Noh theater, compared to kabuki, is the more refined, aristocratic form
of Japanese theater. Paul Binnie, the author of this article lived in Tokyo for
more than five years and became an expert and afficionado for Japanese theater.
The Origins of
Japanese Noh Theater
The history of the whole of Japanese theater might have been
entirely different if, in 1375 at Kasuge Temple near Nara, two adolescent boys
had not formed a passionate friendship, a special relationship that would cause
a unique and ultimately influential art form to come into being.
The elder of the young men was Ashikaga Yoshimitsu, aged 17,
the powerful dynastic shogun and ruler of all Japan, and he had experienced an
early form of Noh performed by Kanami Kiyotsugu and his twelve year old son
Zeami Motokiyo.
It is due to Yoshimitsu's patronage and interest in early
Noh that this dramatic form was able to develop into the highly refined, serene
theater which we can see today.
Zeami - the Father of
Noh Theater
The early origins of Noh theater were mostly folk-type forms
of rustic entertainment; Sarugaku,
which was connected to Shinto rituals, Dengaku, a kind of acrobatics with juggling, which later
developed into a type of song-and-dance, Chinese-derived dances, and
recited and chanted ballads which formed part of the oral tradition of the
people.
By the middle of the fourteenth century, these various
sources seem to have been combined into a form of theater recognizable to
modern audiences as Noh, although just what those early plays were like is hard
to say. There are plays believed by scholars to be by Kanami (1333-1385), but
they seem to have been heavily revised by his son Zeami (1363-1443), and
no surviving play can be securely dated to before their era.
Zeami is the prime figure in Noh, having written a vast
quantity of plays for his troupe to perform, many of which are still regularly
performed to this day. He also wrote a very famous treatise in 1423 on the
skills and methods necessary for a Noh actor, and that document is still valid
study for young actors.
What Zeami, inspired by his father, managed to create, was a
theater of the Muromachi period (1336-1573), written in the upper-class
language of the fourteenth century, but which looked back to the supposed
Golden Age of the Heian Period (794-1185), by basing plays on people, events
and even poetry of that era creating texts of astonishing richness and opacity.
The Refined Beauty
Noh exists today in a form almost unchanged since Zeami's
day, and while the repertoire may have shrunk from the over one thousand plays
in the Muromachi period, there have been several plays written over
the years, at least one of which, "Kusu no Tsuyu", written in the
late nineteenth century, is often performed.
One reason for this is that there is a grandeur and beauty
in the plays not to be found elsewhere. Indeed, the wordyuugen, meaning that which lies below the surface, with
connotations of nobility, reserved elegance and classical refinement is often
used about Noh, and it especially applies to several plays about the Heian
period poetess and great beauty Ono
no Komachi in old age, when she has lost her looks and her court
position, but still appears dressed in silks and satins of restrained hue.
There is also a kind of abstraction in Noh which was
centuries more advanced than in the west, and indeed it is discouraged to appear
to imitate the external forms of people and objects too closely,
concentrating rather on the essence or soul which the actor will attempt to
recreate.
The Meaning of Masks in Noh
One of the most striking aspects of the Noh is that
the shite, the main actor,
may wear a mask, as may his companions, or tsure. This occurs when the main character is an old man, a
youth, a woman, or a supernatural character. Tsure accompany the shite in certain plays, and if they represent one of these
groups, they will also be masked, but the shite will not wear a mask if his character is an adult
male.
Kokata, or boy actors, never wear masks, nor do waki, the secondary characters who
appear first on stage to set the scene, and meet the main actor. Masks are
carved from wood, often cedar, which is then gessoed and painted, and include
some of the most moving works of sculptural art in Japan, and, since there
are so many different types, it takes a certain familiarity with them to
recognize specific types.
The other ubiquitous prop is the fan, which in a symbolic
theater such as Noh, can represent all manner of other objects, such as
bottles, swords, pipes, letters walking sticks and so on.
The Noh Stage
The play will be performed on a stage open on three sides,
and with a painted backboard representing a pine tree behind. A sort of
walkway, called the hashigakari leads
onto the stage right position from an entrance doorway at right angles to the
backboard. Along the hashigakari are three small pine trees, and these define
areas where the actor may pause to deliver lines, before arriving on the main
roofed stage, which is about six metres square.
Ranged along in front of the backboard is a group of
musicians whose instruments include a flute, a shoulder drum, a hip drum
and sometimes a stick drum. The musicians are responsible for the
otherworldly, strange music which accompanies dance and recitation alike.
Again at right angles to the backboard, at extreme stage left, there is the
chorus of eight to twelve chanters arranged in two rows and it is their job to
take over the narration of the story, or the lines of the main character if he
is engaged in a dance.
These elements all contribute to a cohesive whole which
creates a richly textured background against which the play is enacted, and
since no scenery, few props and only a small cast appears, the imagination of
the audience is left to roam freely.
Noh Theater - a Living Art Form
In general, Japanese Noh plays are not very dramatic, although they are
beautiful, since the text is full of poetical allusions and the dances, though
slow, are extremely elegant. It is this very beauty which makes Noh a living
art form still, over six hundred years after it developed, and which has caused
all subsequent Japanese theatrical forms to draw on aspects of Noh. Kabuki,
for example, has lifted complete Noh plays into its vernacular, as well as
deriving many of its technical aspects of performance from Noh.
The Japanese Noh also antedates many developments in contemporary
theater, such as no scenery, symbolic use of props and the appearance of
non-actors on the stage.
The Noh theater still speaks to audiences today, as evinced by the
crowds which still rush to buy tickets for performances at the National Noh
Theater, and at the five theaters belonging to the five troupes of Noh. It is a
truely timeless artform, which speaks to modern audiences as it did to the
noblemen and women of the Muromachi period.
Noh play at Ikebana Festival, Osaka
Walang komento:
Mag-post ng isang Komento