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kabuki
(redirected from Kabuki play)

   Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.03 sec.
kabuki (käb`kē): see Asian drama Asian drama, dramatic works produced in the East. Of the three major Asian dramas—Sanskrit, Chinese, Japanese—the oldest is Sanskrit, although the dates of its origin are uncertain.
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kabuki

Popular Japanese entertainment that combines music, dance, and mime in highly stylized performances. The word is written using three Japanese characters—ka (“song”), bu (“dance”), and ki (“skill”). Kabuki dates from the end of the 16th century, when it developed from the nobility's no theatre and became the theatre of townspeople. In its early years it had a licentious reputation, its actors often being prostitutes; women and young boys were consequently forbidden to perform, and kabuki is today performed by an adult all-male cast. Its texts, unlike no texts, are easily understood by its audience. The lyrical but fast-moving and acrobatic plays, noted for their spectacular staging, elaborate costumes, and striking makeup in place of masks, are vehicles in which the actors demonstrate a wide range of skills. Kabuki employs two musical ensembles, one onstage and the other offstage. It shares much of its repertoire with bunraku, a traditional puppet theatre.



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Masterpieces of Kabuki: Eighteen Plays on Stage highlights excerpts from 18 of 51 newly translated kabuki plays, appearing in the four-part series Kabuki Plays on Stage.
Lost in Translation is not unlike a Kabuki play, its true meaning and emotion masked behind a painstakingly crafted facade--which here consisted of brash, Westernized Tokyoites.
Part of the problem is summit-hopping itself: one often finds white, middle-class activists and labor union leadership swooping into town for the action, then departing, with the local community serving as a mere stage for the Kabuki play of protest and repression.
 
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