Warsaw’s Theatre Museum is honoured to present Jo ha kyū. Singing, dance and rhythm in nō theatre. Jo ha kyū is a principle of composition applied in all elements of traditional Japanese nō drama. Following the rule, the performance, the musical score, and the actors’ gestures are divided into three parts. Consequently, a nō play begins with a slow part – jo, gains momentum in the middle part – ha, when the characters tell their stories, and reaches its climax in kyū, the finale.
The evening’s programme includes excerpts of two nō plays: Hagoromo (The Feather Mantle) and Sumidagawa (Sumida River), a Jo no Mai dance performed according to the ashirai convention, a fragment of the play Tenko (A Celestial Drum) presented according to the convention of the itchō recital, and talks by actors explaining the composition of a noh play.
26 May 2017, 5:30 pm, Redutowe Rooms, Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera
Featuring:
Kanji Shimizu – shite kata actor, Kanze school, Tessenkai Theatre
Toriyama Naoya – hayashi kata musician, Kanze Kotsuzumi school
and Jadwiga Rodowicz-Czechowska, Yoko Fujii Karpoluk, Jakub Karpoluk, Polish Nō Theatre Training Group
Ticket price: 1 zł
Inquiries: Theatre Museum, tel. +48 22 69 20 211
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Pictured: Toriyama Naoya and Kanji Shimizu
Jakub Karpoluk, Tessenkai Theatre