Yanagisawa not only visited the theater, but also wrote his own plays, which he had his servants and maids perform, granting them actor-sounding names like Bandô Shitsugorô and Ichikawa Benzô. Yanagisawa also commissioned an otherwise unknown ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artist named Beisha to produce [[yakusha-e|actor prints]] of these workers. He also engaged in close social relationships with a number of kabuki actors, including [[Nakamura Nakazo I|Nakamura Nakazô I]]; when the [[Nakamura-za]] was briefly replaced by the [[Kiri-za]] in [[1784]], Nobutoki and Nakazô sent numerous materials back and forth to one another, including advertising materials and other information about the upcoming theater season. | Yanagisawa not only visited the theater, but also wrote his own plays, which he had his servants and maids perform, granting them actor-sounding names like Bandô Shitsugorô and Ichikawa Benzô. Yanagisawa also commissioned an otherwise unknown ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artist named Beisha to produce [[yakusha-e|actor prints]] of these workers. He also engaged in close social relationships with a number of kabuki actors, including [[Nakamura Nakazo I|Nakamura Nakazô I]]; when the [[Nakamura-za]] was briefly replaced by the [[Kiri-za]] in [[1784]], Nobutoki and Nakazô sent numerous materials back and forth to one another, including advertising materials and other information about the upcoming theater season. |