Onnagata
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Onnagata (女形/女方, lit. 'female role'), also oyama (女形), are male actors who play female roles in kabuki theatre.[1] It originated in 1629 after women were banned from performing in kabuki performances.[2] There are many specific techniques that actors must learn to master the role of onnagata.
History
[edit]Edo Period
[edit]In the early 17th century, shortly after the emergence of the genre, many kabuki theaters had an all-female cast (onna kabuki, or kabukimono), with women playing men's roles as necessary.[3] Wakashū kabuki ('adolescent-boy kabuki'), with a cast composed entirely of young men playing both male and female roles, and frequently dealing in erotic themes, originated circa 1612.[4]: 90
The role of the onnagata was shaped during the Edo period as an expression of femininity that was meant to align with the femininity of real women in Edo society. Both onnagata and wakashū (or wakashū-gata), actors specializing in adolescent female roles (and usually adolescents themselves), were the subject of much appreciation by both male and female patrons, and were often prostitutes. All-male casts became the norm after 1629, when women were banned from appearing in kabuki due to the prevalent prostitution of actresses and violent quarrels among patrons for the actresses' favors.[4]: 90–91 This ban failed to stop the problems, since the young male (wakashū) actors were also fervently pursued by patrons.[2] This more modern, all-male kabuki was originally known as yarō kabuki ('male kabuki') to distinguish it from earlier theatrical forms.
In 1642, onnagata roles were forbidden, resulting in plays that featured only male characters. These plays continued to have erotic content and generally featured many wakashū roles, often dealing in themes of nanshoku (male homosexuality); officials responded by banning wakashū roles as well.[4]: 92 The ban on onnagata was lifted in 1644, and on wakashū in 1652, on the condition that all actors, regardless of role, adopted the adult male hairstyle with shaved pate. Onnagata and wakashū actors soon began wearing a small purple headscarf (murasaki bōshi) to cover the shaved portion, which became iconic signifiers of their roles and eventually became invested with erotic significance as a result.[4]: 132 After authorities rescinded a ban on wig-wearing by onnagata and wakashū actors, the murasaki bōshi was replaced by a wig and now survives in a few older plays and as a ceremonial accessory.[5]
Meiji era and beyond
[edit]During the Meiji era, the ban on women performing was lifted, and women began performing in kabuki performances where they played onnagata roles. This was more uncommon as it was standard for onnagata to be an artistically feminine performance played by a male actor who underwent training to learn the role.[6] In contemporary kabuki performance, onnagata is a separate theatrical role with different training that is separate from actual women in society.[6]
After film was introduced in Japan at the end of the 19th century, the oyama continued to portray females in movies until the early 1920s. At that time, however, using real female actresses was coming into fashion with the introduction of realist shingeki films. The oyama staged a protest at Nikkatsu in 1922 in backlash against the lack of work because of this.
Onnagata performance techniques
[edit]Every kabuki actor is expected to have facility with onnagata techniques. These include learning onnagata makeup, which is vastly different from that of a male character's, and adopting traditional feminine mannerisms specific to the role of the onnagata.[7] Some of the techniques that onnagata actors have to master with years of training and research include being able to move gracefully across the stage when wearing geta, adopting a more feminine posture and physical mannerisms like slouched shoulders and bending knees, and speaking at a higher pitch (falsetto) throughout the entire performance.[2] The falsetto used by the onnagata performers is not meant to be an exact imitation of the female voice. Instead, onnagata imitate typical vocal intonations associated with femininity. The type of falsetto varies depending on the specific role that the onnagata is performing.[8] Many actors specialise in onnagata roles, such as Bandō Tamasaburō V.
- "Two Actors Combing Hair"; handpainted ukiyo-e scroll attributed to Hishikawa Morofusa, circa 1700. An onnagata wearing a purple headscarf combs the hair of a wakashū-gata (identifiable by his forelocks and partially shaved head).
- Nakamura Shikan IV and Sawamura Tanosuke III in courtesan roles. Print by Toyokuni in 1860, the year of Sawamura's debut under that name on the kabuki stage.
- Nakamura Utaemon VI in costume for a female kabuki role in Musume Dōjōji, 1951.
- Popular onnagata Daigoro Tachibana dancing in a performance at the Miyoshibashi Theatre in Yokohama, November 2007. His crest can be seen on the red curtain behind him.
- Bandō Tamasaburō V (center) in kabuki play Nihonbashi (December 2012)
Significance in visual kei
[edit]The influence of onnagata on Japanese culture has also played an important part in the visual kei subculture. The subculture emphasizes gender-nonconforming expression, and self-identified male performers who adopt female clothing within the genre are referred to as onnagata.[9] Japanese music website Barks credits the increase in onnagata band members to the band Malice Mizer, due to the influence of its guitarist and co-founder Mana. Mana himself has said that he wanted to be the ultimate onnagata.[10]
Notable onnagata
[edit]- Bandō Tamasaburō V
- Daigoro Tachibana
- Kataoka Nizaemon XII
- Nakamura Jakuemon IV
- Nakamura Shichinosuke II
- Nakamura Utaemon VI
- Onoe Kikugorō V
- Sawamura Tanosuke III (1845–78; 三代目 沢村田之助; only occasionally Sawamura written as 澤村).
- Sakata Tōjūrō IV
- Taichi Saotome
- Yoshizawa Ayame I
See also
[edit]- Japanese theatre
- Otokonoko
- Kagema for male prostitutes generally
- Cross-gender acting
- Drag show
- Köçek
- Pantomime dame
- Travesti (theatre)
- Womanless wedding
References
[edit]- ^ "Three Actors". World Digital Library. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
- ^ a b c Episale, Frank (2012). "Gender, Tradition, and Culture in Translation: Reading the "Onnagata" in English". Asian Theatre Journal. 29 (1): 89–111. doi:10.1353/atj.2012.0023. ISSN 0742-5457. JSTOR 23359546.
- ^ Gabrovska, Galia Todorova (2015). "Onna Mono: The "Female Presence" on the Stage of the All-Male Traditional Japanese Theatre". Asian Theatre Journal. 32 (2): 387–415. ISSN 0742-5457.
- ^ a b c d Leupp, Gary P. (1997). Male Colors: The Construction of Homosexuality in Tokugawa Japan. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20900-1.
- ^ Leiter, Samuel L. (2006). Historical dictionary of Japanese traditional theatre. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 251. ISBN 0-8108-5527-5.
- ^ a b Isaka, Maki (2006). "Women "Onnagata" in the Porous Labyrinth of Femininity: On Ichikawa Kumehachi I". U.S.-Japan Women's Journal (30/31): 105–131. ISSN 2330-5037.
- ^ Leiter, Samuel L. (1999). "From Gay to Gei: The Onnagata and the Creation of Kabuki's Female Characters". Comparative Drama. 33 (4): 495–514. ISSN 0010-4078.
- ^ ""Female Voices in Male Bodies": Castrati, Onnagata, and the Performance of Gender through Ambiguous Bodies and Vocal Acts". web.archive.org. 2016-12-21. Retrieved 2024-11-01.
- ^ Johnson, Adrienne Renee (2020-04-02). "Josōor "gender free"? Playfully queer "lives" in visualkei". Asian Anthropology. 19 (2). Informa UK Limited: 119–142. doi:10.1080/1683478x.2020.1756076. ISSN 1683-478X. S2CID 221063774.
- ^ "【インタビュー】Mana × Közi、MALICE MIZERを語る「Kamiの約束が実現できる」". Barks (in Japanese). 2018-08-29. Retrieved 2021-01-02.