Noh

From SamuraiWiki
Revision as of 00:34, 26 June 2019 by LordAmeth (talk | contribs) (→‎Stage Design)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Hagoromo being performed at the Ôe Nôgakudô in Kyoto.
  • Japanese: お能 (o-nou), 能楽 (nougaku)

Noh is the oldest, and most elite, or culturally refined, of the major forms of Japanese traditional drama, and is said to be the oldest continuing dramatic form in the world.[1] Developed in the early 15th century, it came to be patronized by the samurai class, and especially the Muromachi and Tokugawa shogunates and provincial daimyo, becoming more widely accessible beginning in the Meiji period.

Performed painstakingly slowly, Noh focuses on conceptual and aesthetic impact, rather than lengthy or complex plots, and employs a minimum of set pieces, props, and cast members. Performance consists chiefly of two portions: utai (song/chant) and mai (dance), and while attention is most certainly paid to dramatic imitation (monomane) of the figure being portrayed (e.g. a madwoman, an old man, a deity), emphasis is placed on masterful performance of the forms, in order to effect a moving experience for the audience. Noh is also the most spiritual, or ritual, of the major traditional theatre forms, and performance is also seen as a form of meditation for the actors, and as a prayer of sorts for the spirits.

Role Types

  • Shite (lit. "do-er") - the shite plays the lead role, often a warrior, madwoman, god, spirit, or sprite. Shite roles include the madwoman in Sumidagawa, the spirit of Taira no Atsumori in Atsumori, and the angel in Hagoromo.
  • Waki (lit. "to the side") - the waki plays the chief character who interacts with the shite. Though often human, and not demon, god, or spirit, and though typically with a less ornate costume, the waki often has more stage time and more lines than the shite. This role is always a living person, nearly always male, and tends to often be a wandering monk, another sort of traveler, or a local fisherman or farmer. Waki roles include the boatman in Sumidagawa, the monk Renshô in Atsumori, and the fisherman in Hagoromo.
  • Tsure (lit. "accompanying") - divided into wakitsure and shite-tsure, the tsure actors play figures accompanying the main roles. In many plays where the waki is a wandering monk, for example, the tsure play other monks accompanying him.
  • Chorus (J: jiutai) - Noh features a chorus of six to ten people, usually eight, visible and seated onstage at stage left, facing towards stage right. The chorus generally chants narration, as well as often chanting lines for the characters. Members of the chorus are typically shite actors themselves, though originally (in Zeami's time) it was waki actors who composed the chorus.[2]
  • Hayashi - in Noh, the musicians, known as the hayashi, sit along the rear wall, facing the audience. They play a variety of instruments, chiefly flute (nôkan) and several types of drums (kotsuzumi, ôtsuzumi, and shimedaiko). Unlike in the Edo period theater forms of kabuki and ningyô jôruri, Noh does not incorporate shamisen or other string instruments. As in other theatrical forms, the musical instruments are frequently used to suggest sounds which help to set a scene, such as gentle or harsh winds, rain or snow, waves, or forest sounds such as the snapping of twigs.
  • Kôken, or "stage assistants," handle a variety of tasks including helping adjust actors' robes, handling props, and assisting in onstage costume changes. Insofar as they are not characters present in the world (setting/plot) of the play, they are meant to be ignored by the audience, though they make little overt effort to hide themselves.

Stage Design

The main stage at the National Noh Theatre in Sendagaya, Tokyo.

The Noh stage, much smaller than that of kabuki or the typical Western-style proscenium stage, follows a standard design. A bridgeway (hashigakari) which provides the chief avenue for actors' entrances and exits runs at an angle, connecting with the main portion of the stage at the rear of stage right. Small pine trees typically run along the front of this bridgeway. The entrance/exit at the end is separated from backstage areas by a multi-colored curtain known as an agemaku, which is raised on wooden poles to allow actors to enter and exit.

The main portion of the stage is a square, with pillars at the four corners, and a painting of a pine tree on the rear wall. This painted pine, supposedly a reference to the Yôgô Pine (yôgô no matsu of Kasuga Shrine),[3] along with others standing along the bridge, help evoke the sense of being not in a theater, but in a natural setting, such as a forest clearing, and thus enhancing the sense of a spiritual place, where one might be visited by spirits or visions. Further, the pine, as an evergreen tree which does not lose its leaves in winter but remains strong, represents a sense of the eternal, and the notion that the very same tree might witness events in a given place over many centuries, thus linking the present of the audience to the present of the characters, and, in the case of mugen Noh, to the past (the present of the spirits' lives) as well.

Earthenware jugs arranged under the stage floor capture and reverberate sound, allowing actors' foot-stomps and jumps to produce resounding audible sound.[3]

Noh was traditionally performed outdoors, with Noh stages often being free-standing structures located at Shinto shrines; though often located indoors today, Noh stages retain the architectural form of those free-standing structures, and continue to bear their own roofs.

Costumes & Props

While Noh is often performed in comparatively plain (but still traditional-style) clothing, in full performances, the shite performer (and sometimes others) is often dressed in oversized robes with intricate embroidered or otherwise decorative designs. Such robes, often incorporating bright colors and sometimes silver or gold thread, are lavish and expensive, and traditionally helped to not only convey the sense of a divine or otherwise larger-than-life character but also to make the actor visible from a distance in what was sometimes limited light.

Like other traditional Japanese garments ("kimono"), Noh robes are generally made to a single size; rather than different actors using different size costumes, the garments are simply folded and tucked to adjust the size. Removable collars (eri) are employed, so that a single costume might be adapted to serve multiple roles; while female roles typically wear a red collar, male roles employ a variety of colors. Aristocratic or otherwise elite characters often wear multiple collars, implying multiple layers of clothing.

Deities and spirits often wear collars in lighter colors. Supernatural characters such as deities, spirits, demons, and dragons also often wear oversized skirt-like pants known as ôkuchi.

The Noh mask (nômen, 能面) is a particularly distinctive feature of Noh. While not all roles or performance styles call for masks, such masks are unique to Noh and are not used in kabuki or other theatrical forms. Though these masks, carved from wood, are immobile, obscuring the actor's facial expressions, many masks - particularly those meant to depict refined young men and women - are designed so as to convey a wide range of emotions depending, simply, on how they are tilted and thus how they catch the light. Such masks, when tilted slightly downwards, can be made to appear sad, or "darkened" (kumoru); when tilted slightly upwards, the same mask can appear to smile or to otherwise "brighten up" (terasu).

Categories of Plays

The opening lines of Kasuga ryûjin, from a Kita school utaibon published in Tokyo, 1925.

Noh is traditionally divided into five categories of plays. Each category is defined by the types of characters it features, representing different themes, but also different points in a jo-ha-kyû progression, making the categories particularly suitable for being performed in a particular sequence, from First Category to Fifth, in order, in a full program. There are roughly 240 plays in the traditional repertoire still performed today.[4]

  1. First Category - God Plays (kami Noh or waki Noh). Typically with a minimum of plot, so-called "god plays" are employed as an auspicious opening to a performance program, and often feature specific deities or other auspicious figures. Corresponding to the jo (Introduction) of jo-ha-kyû.
  2. Second Category - Warrior Plays. Typically featuring famous warriors from epics such as the Tale of the Heike, warrior plays often focus on releasing the spirit of a dead warrior from Buddhist attachment to ideas of regret and revenge, and to the place and circumstances of his death. These often end in the shite as the warrior spirit dancing a reenactment of a famous episode from his life, narrated by the chorus. Atsumori is a particularly representative example.
    There are sixteen warrior plays (shuramono) in the current Noh repertoire; the majority of them draw upon the Tale of the Heike. Figures from the Heike are also the protagonists in 33 of the 50 extant kôwaka-mai.[5]
  3. Third Category - Women Plays. Typically featuring female characters from the Tales of Ise, Tale of Genji, or other Heian period texts, women plays often focus on releasing the spirit of a woman from Buddhist attachment to a man who left her waiting. Matsukaze is a particularly representative example.
  4. Fourth Category - Madwoman and Miscellaneous Plays. As the term "miscellaneous" implies, this category includes a variety of different sorts of plays. Ataka, a genzai Noh telling the story of Yoshitsune and Benkei at the checkpoint barrier at Ataka, is a prominent play in this category. Sumidagawa is particularly representative of the sub-category of "madness plays" (monogurui Noh), which feature characters grieving over a lost loved one.
  5. Fifth Category - Demon Plays and other Ending Plays. Corresponding to the kyû (quick denouement) of jo-ha-kyû, ending plays (kiri Noh) often feature a demon, spirit, or sprite, and emphasize dance over plot, bringing the overall program to a close in an auspicious and energetic way.

Beyond these five categories, Noh plays can also be classified in a number of other ways. One of the chief divisions is between genzai Noh ("now" Noh), which reenact elements of famous stories, taking place during the lives of the characters, and mugen Noh (lit. "unlimited" or "infinite" Noh, referring to the unlimited depths of mystery and spiritual aesthetic), which feature spirits, (re)appearing after their demise. Some of the most famous genzai Noh are Ataka, Sumidagawa, and Hagoromo, while mugen Noh include Atsumori, Matsukaze, and Takasago.

Play Structure

The Noh stage at Itsukushima Shrine on Miyajima, one of the oldest Noh stages in the country.

Mugen Noh often follow a certain structure, with a monk or other wanderer, played by the waki, arriving at a famous place, and commenting on its association with a famous character or story (e.g. from the Tales of Heike, Genji, Ise, or poetry) before stopping there to take a rest. He then meets a local person, such as a farmer, played by the shite, and the two discuss that famous episode. Following a kyôgen intermission (ai-kyôgen), in which a kyôgen actor retells the same story in a more lively and easier to understand fashion, the shite character reveals himself to be the spirit of the chief character associated with that place. He then dances a dance representing his emotional struggle, while the monk prays for the spirit's release. The play ends with the spirit disappearing. There is often a strong implication of the waki questioning whether his meeting the local person, and the spirit, truly happened, or was merely a dream. For the audience, too, there can be a feeling of questioning whether one merely witnessed a play, or whether the spirit manifested on the stage.

Zeami plots out an ideal Noh play in five dan, or parts. The following is a slightly lengthier and more detailed description of what is summarized above.

  1. The first dan of the ideal Noh play, representing the jo of the play's overall jo-ha-kyû structure, opens with the waki entering, introducing the setting, and setting the tone for the play. His entrance is accompanied by an introductory style of music called shidai. He typically introduces himself, announcing his name and reason for being in that place. The first dan often ends with the waki chanting a brief michiyuki chant, signifying travel and arrival at a destination.
  2. The second dan marks the entrance of the shite character, typically to an issei chant, and the play's transition from its introductory jo portion to the ha portion, in which the plot develops and complexity and drama are introduced. In a two-act play, the shite is at this point typically disguised as a local person or a monk.
  3. In the third dan, the waki and shite characters engage in conversation (mondô), leading into a more heightened exchange (kakeai). In many plays, this takes the form of the waki character expressing curiosity about the history of the place, or about the historical or legendary events said to have taken place there, with the shite, often the ghost of the primary figure in those events in disguise, providing explanation. This dan often ends with a dramatic, climactic ageuta chant by the chorus.
  4. The fourth dan is the climactic center of the typical Noh play, at which the dramatic and emotional tension is at its peak, and the narrative of the play is explained out the most fully. In a warrior or woman play, for example, the shite character, though still having not revealed his/her identity, will now explicate a fuller version of their story. In this section, action and chant is performed more exclusively by the shite and the chorus, often with the chorus chanting the shite character's lines while the shite actor dances, with the waki having considerably lessened involvement. This section typically features either a kuse chant, or what is known as tada utai (plain chant in the kouta style), the form more original to Yamato sarugaku.
  5. The fifth dan represents the kyû portion of the play's jo-ha-kyû structure, and presents an energetic, dramatic, and quick conclusion to the play. In a two-act play, the fifth dan alone typically comprises the second act, with the shite actor changing costume during the interval, in order to reveal his true identity (e.g. as a ghost, god, or demon) in the final dan. This act typically consists chiefly of a visually spectacular dance, accompanied by the hayashi musicians. In many mugen Noh, this dance is a reenactment of the traumatic incident in the character's life to which the character is still emotionally attached; through reenacting the event, the ghost works through his or her trauma, and finds release. In other plays, such as Hagoromo, this is a more literal dance, performed for the waki character as spectator.

Performance

The chant (utai) is typically performed in lines of eight, twelve, or sixteen syllables, aligning or intentionally mis-aligning with a pattern of eight drum beats.

In one of Zeami's many descriptions and categorizations of types of chant or voice, he divides voice into two moods: the low half of the musical scale for conveying a sadness and pathos known as the bôoku mode (desolation), and the high half of the scale for conveying auspiciousness and happiness, a mode known as shûgen (auspiciousness).

The musicians of the hayashi are advised in Zeami's Shûdôsho to adjust their performance to the shite actor. In Noh, as in kabuki, it is not the text which is the supreme authority as to how a play should be performed, but rather the lead actor (though the actor, of course, performs largely in accordance with tradition). The drummers are advised to adjust their playing in accord with the spirit or intent (kokoro) of the actor, and the flute player similarly adjusts his pitch in accordance with the "fragrance" of the actor's voice.[6]

History

Noh evolved out of an earlier dance-drama form known as sarugaku, as actor, playwright, and troupe leader Kan'ami (1333-1384) and in particular his son Zeami (1363-1443) adapted their Yamato province style of sarugaku to incorporate elements of other arts, including the sarugaku style of Ômi province, and the narrative/dance form kusemai.

Zeami claimed that the origins of sarugaku could be traced to kagura (Shinto ritual dances). He also drew upon Chinese poetry theory, gagaku musical theory, dengaku performance, and numerous other sources in explaining the origins of his Yamato sarugaku tradition, or in adopting elements from these outside sources in altering and developing Yamato sarugaku into the early form of Noh.

Zeami worked to gain the approval and patronage of Kyoto elites, believing that the fame or prestige earned in this manner was crucial to attaining fame and success in the countryside.[7] Yamato sarugaku, in the time of Kan'ami and Zeami, specialized in monomane - imitation or mimicry of characters or character types. As Zeami sought to adapt his art to make it more appealing to cultivated elite Kyoto audiences, he struggled to maintain this strength while incorporating elements such as the Ômi sarugaku focus on cultivating a mood or atmosphere of mysterious beauty (yûgen). Through the incoporation of various elements from Ômi sarugaku, kusemai, and other art forms, as well as other innovations, Zeami developed Yamato sarugaku into a form featuring lengthier narratives and deeper themes, blending monomane with yûgen and other aesthetics to achieve an artistic effect (kakari) and deeper aesthetic impact.

Kyôgen pieces, which today typically serve as the comic interlude between acts of a Noh play, are known to have been performed alongside sarugaku/Noh (i.e. on the same program) since at least the mid-14th century. Ever since then, they have become closely intertwined, and have developed to a certain extent in parallel.[8]

Zeami, along with his sons and grandsons, composed many plays which remain central to the repertoire today. His line developed into the Kanze school, the oldest of the five main schools of Noh, with the other four schools (Konparu, Hôshô, Kongô, and Kita) becoming established over the centuries, some as late as the Edo period, though all five are quite firmly established today.

Noh continued to be patronized by samurai elites through the Sengoku and Edo periods. Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and a number of the Tokugawa shoguns are known to have been particularly fond of the art form, even practicing it themselves. Noh remained strongest, as a result, in Kyoto and Edo/Tokyo, but it found patrons among many of the provincial daimyô as well. Many castle-towns were littered with Noh stages, and for example, Shimazu Iehisa is said to have chided his father Shimazu Yoshihiro for not encouraging Noh in Satsuma han earlier; Iehisa then invited Noh actor Nakanishi Hidenaga from Kyoto to Kagoshima, where the Nakanishi family would continue to serve as Noh masters for the Shimazu lords down through the generations. Noh performances also took place at the Shimazu mansions in Edo quite regularly, including on occasions when the Shogun paid official visits to the mansion.[9] To give another example, Udaka Michishige, a prominent Noh master active in Kyoto today is the head of a lineage of Noh masters who served the lords of Iyo-Matsuyama han in Shikoku, and Iyo-Matsuyama castle still maintains today a significant collection of Noh masks, costumes, and so forth.

References

  • Thomas Hare, Zeami Performance Notes, Columbia University Press (2008).
  • Shelley Fenno Quinn, Developing Zeami, University of Hawaii Press (2005).
  1. Albert M. Craig, The Heritage of Japanese Civilization, Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 57.; also, presentation by Katayama Kurôemon X, at "Master Artists from Japan: Living Traditions," University of California at Santa Barbara, 27 January 2014.
  2. Quinn, Developing Zeami, 132.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Richard Schechner, Performance Studies: An Introduction, Routledge (2002), 61.
  4. Andrew Tsubaki, "The Performing Arts of Sixteenth-Century Japan: A Prelude to Kabuki," Educational Theatre Journal 29:3 (1977), 300.
  5. Helen McCullough trans., The Tale of the Heike, Stanford University Press (1990), 9
  6. Quinn, Developing Zeami, 135.
  7. Eiko Ikegami, Bonds of Civility, Cambridge University Press (2005), 110.
  8. Tsubaki, 301.
  9. "Nôgaku," Shimazu-ke ga hagukunda bunka, Shôkoshûseikan official website.