Za Kabuki - définition. Qu'est-ce que Za Kabuki
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Za Kabuki - définition

KABUKI TROUPE IN AUSTRALIA
  • The second act of Za Kabuki's 2010 performance of Enokido Kenji's play Topknot Bunshichi

Kabuki         
  • Kabuki Scene (Diptych) by [[Hokushu]]
  • 450px
  • [[Yoshitsune Senbon Zakura]]}}
  • Exterior of [[Kabuki-za]] in Tokyo
  • [[Chūshingura]]}} at Edo Nakamura-za theater
  • Interior of [[Minami-za]] in Kyoto
  • Traditional striped black-red-green curtain, at the Misono-za in Nagoya
  • Shūmei}} ceremony of Ichikawa En'ō II, Ichikawa Ennosuke IV and Ichikawa Chūsha IX at the [[Misono-za]] in Nagoya (March 2013)
  • 300px
  • The earliest portrait of [[Izumo no Okuni]], the founder of kabuki (1600s)
  • Kabuki actors Bando Zenji and Sawamura Yodogoro; 1794, fifth month by [[Sharaku]]
  • Shibai Ukie}} ("A Scene from A Play") by Masanobu Okumura (1686–1764), depicting Edo Ichimura-za theatre in the early 1740s.
  • [[Shibaraku]]}} at the Tokyo [[Kabuki-za]] theatre
  • Koi Nyōbo Somewake Tazuna}}
  • Woodblock print of Famous Heroes of the Kabuki Stage Played by Frogs by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1798–1861)
CLASSICAL JAPANESE DANCE-DRAMA
Kabuki play; Kabuki theater; Kabuki Theatre; 歌舞伎; Kabuky; Zashiki kyōgen; Kabuki theatre; Chūnori
is a classical form of Japanese dance-drama. Kabuki theatre is known for its heavily-stylised performances, the often-glamorous costumes worn by performers, and for the elaborate make-up worn by some of its performers.
kabuki         
  • Kabuki Scene (Diptych) by [[Hokushu]]
  • 450px
  • [[Yoshitsune Senbon Zakura]]}}
  • Exterior of [[Kabuki-za]] in Tokyo
  • [[Chūshingura]]}} at Edo Nakamura-za theater
  • Interior of [[Minami-za]] in Kyoto
  • Traditional striped black-red-green curtain, at the Misono-za in Nagoya
  • Shūmei}} ceremony of Ichikawa En'ō II, Ichikawa Ennosuke IV and Ichikawa Chūsha IX at the [[Misono-za]] in Nagoya (March 2013)
  • 300px
  • The earliest portrait of [[Izumo no Okuni]], the founder of kabuki (1600s)
  • Kabuki actors Bando Zenji and Sawamura Yodogoro; 1794, fifth month by [[Sharaku]]
  • Shibai Ukie}} ("A Scene from A Play") by Masanobu Okumura (1686–1764), depicting Edo Ichimura-za theatre in the early 1740s.
  • [[Shibaraku]]}} at the Tokyo [[Kabuki-za]] theatre
  • Koi Nyōbo Somewake Tazuna}}
  • Woodblock print of Famous Heroes of the Kabuki Stage Played by Frogs by Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1798–1861)
CLASSICAL JAPANESE DANCE-DRAMA
Kabuki play; Kabuki theater; Kabuki Theatre; 歌舞伎; Kabuky; Zashiki kyōgen; Kabuki theatre; Chūnori
[k?'bu:ki]
¦ noun a form of traditional Japanese drama performed by men, with highly stylized song, mime, and dance.
Origin
Japanese, orig. as a verb meaning 'act dissolutely', later interpreted as if from ka 'song' + bu 'dance' + ki 'art'.
Za Kabuki         
Za Kabuki (), founded in 1976 at the Australian National University, is the longest running Kabuki troupe outside Japan.Negishi, K & Tomoeda, M.

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Za Kabuki

Za Kabuki (Japanese: ザ歌舞伎), founded in 1976 at the Australian National University, is the longest running Kabuki troupe outside Japan. Directed by Shun Ikeda of the ANU Japan Centre, with a cast and crew consisting mainly of ANU Japanese students, the troupe performs traditional Kabuki plays almost entirely in classical Japanese, with some English translation and ad-libs inserted to assist the mainly English-speaking audiences.