Kawatake Mokuami
Kawatake Mokuami (河竹黙阿弥) (birth name Yoshimura Yoshisaburō; 吉村芳三郎) (1 March 1816 – 22 January 1893) was a Japanese dramatist of Kabuki. It has been said that "as a writer of plays of Kabuki origin, he was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, Japan has ever known". He wrote 150 or so plays over the course of his 58-year career, covering a wide variety of themes, styles, and forms, including short dance pieces, period plays (jidaimono), contemporary genre pieces (sewamono), tragedies and comedies, as well as adaptations of foreign (Western) stories, though he is perhaps most famous for his shiranamimono, plays featuring sympathetic or tragic rogues and thieves. For the greater part of his career he wrote under the professional name Kawatake Shinshichi, only taking the name Mokuami on his retirement from the stage in 1881.
Kawatake Mokuami 河竹黙阿弥 | |
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Portrait of Mokuami Kawatake | |
Born | 1 March 1816 Nihonbashi, Chūō-ku, Tokyo, Japan |
Died | 22 January 1893 Tokyo, Japan |
Occupation | Kabuki |
Nationality | Japanese |
Period | Edo |
Genre |
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Parent | Kanbei Yoshimura (father) |
Relatives | Kawatake Shigetoshi (adopted son) |