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Razzle Dazzle

Flower and Decoy” is stark, darkly poetic dance theater. Combining traditional Japanese aesthetics, supernatural horror and street dance, Tatsuya Hasegawa leads his all-male dance troupe, Dazzle, through an intricate, abstract contemplation of myth and mortality. 

Performance

Dazzle: “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa

Place

Owl Spot Theater, Tokyo, Japan, July 5, 2026

Words

Kris Kosaka

Dazzle in “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa. Photograph by Takayuki Shimizu  

Premiering in 2009, “Flower and Decoy” launched Dazzle’s success as a group, and was reconstructed and expanded to celebrate the company’s 30th anniversary for this production. Spinning off from famous Japanese metaphors surrounding fox weddings, the narrative explores ideas of obligation and familial love within supernatural realms. 

A brief prologue retells a familiar Japanese myth: after being rescued by a hunter, a white fox then assumes human shape to beguile him into marriage. At the ceremony, the deception is discovered, and the fox-bride is killed. The scene switches to two brothers, Saihi and Roihi, danced by Hasegawa and Takehiro Kaneda. As they prepare for a journey together, they encounter a fox wedding in the forest, portended by rain falling despite sunny skies. Following folklore, superstition claims that the unlucky observers of this mythical ritual will be spirited to liminal spaces. Often a task must be completed to escape the otherworldly influences. 

Dazzle in “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa. Photograph by Takayuki Shimizu  

Dazzle in “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa. Photograph by Takayuki Shimizu  

Hasegawa, who wrote and directed the staging, uses Japanese umbrellas, lanterns and fox masks to create a surreal opening, cleverly weaves together two well-known myths. Early highlights include the brothers’ duet, where Hasegawa and Kaneda partner in tender synchronicity and clever juxtaposition of hands and body. Also noteworthy is the fox wedding itself, where the lone female dancer, Moe Nakagomi, embodies the bride in a role both powerful and vulnerable, as dances represent the angry villagers intent on her destruction. 

During their attempted escape, the eldest brother deliberately lets go of his younger brother’s hand, leading to his transportation to a different realm. Most of the performance unfolds in this liminal space, represented by clever stagecraft of sliding shoji screens and moveable tatami platforms. The eldest brother’s mysterious guide in this realm, “the Mansion,” is danced by Hidefumi Takada, as the Master. Takada’s physicality and narrative skill manifests in his distinctive, minimalistic movement that is at once ominous and compelling. 

 

Dazzle in “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa. Photograph by Takayuki Shimizu  

Dazzle in “Flower and Decoy” by Tatsuya Hasegawa. Photograph by Takayuki Shimizu  

Hasegawa’s task involves the Master’s son, Mutsuki, danced by Shinji Arai, another eerie highlight, as two other dancers control his movements on a raised platform. Hasegawa’s blood is demanded for Mutsuki’s resurrection, and repetitive scenes of death and rebirth build the tension and horror. The staging also uses projected text and image to great effect alongside kokeshi dolls and puppetry for an innovative blend of modern with the traditional. The dolls, handpainted traditional wooden dolls without arms or legs, symbolize protection against evil spirits. Another standout dance performance is when Nakagomi, now representing a mother figure, is transformed into a doll herself as themes of rebirth and manipulation are echoed through various scenarios. 

Hasegawa, who won the first annual “Legends” streetdance competition in Japan, shows his choreographic roots with the hip-hop choreography. Most recently, Dazzle expanded into immersive theater, bringing the genre to Japan in 2017 to great acclaim with “Venus in Tokyo,” but “Flower and Decoy” remains one of their most popular works, featured at international theater festivals in Romania and Iran, while frequently touring the work both domestically and internationally. Layered, fluid choreography is deliberately repeated, adding to the sense of cyclical death and rebirth. Overall, the unnerving staging and storytelling manifests myth and modernity in a fresh, exciting way. 

 

Kris Kosaka


Kris Kosaka is a writer and educator based in Kamakura, Japan. A lifelong ballet fan and studio rat in her youth, she's been contributing to the Japan Times since 2009. She writes across culture, but especially in dance, opera and literature. 

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