The second half of the program featured a recent nihon buyo work that premiered in 2021 titled “Boléro – The Legend of Anchin and Kiyohime” set to Ravel’s Boléro. The idea for the dance was conceived by the late Hanayagi Jyuo II, former Grand Master of the Hanayagi-ryu School, while he was serving as an advisor to Maurice Béjart during his work with the Tokyo Ballet. Eventually choreographed by the Grand Master’s protégé, Hanayagi Genkuro, this unique combination of East and West retells an eleventh-century Buddhist story, “The Legend of Dojoji.”
The narrative revolves around a Buddhist monk named Anchin, who is on a religious pilgrimage. He stops at an inn along the trail to spend the night, and the innkeeper’s daughter Kiyohime falls in love with him. Anchin is unable to refuse her advances and vows to stop by on his return. But, of course, he never does. Kiyohime, consumed by obsessive passion and then rage, turns into a giant serpent, seeks out Anchin, and chases him into the bell at Dojoji Temple. There, she burns him to death.
The sublime choreography for five dancers flows from one memorable image to the next in a refined stream of motion and stillness that enacts the narrative. Four of the dancers portray Anchin and his brother monks while kabuki actor and dancer Azuma Tokuyo plays the onnagata role of the heartbroken, Kiyohime. The specialized art of the onnagata, cultivated by male actors who perform female roles, comes from the dance’s roots in kabuki theater, which was restricted to an all-male performing art form by the ruling authorities in 1653. Today, however, nihon buyo incorporates female performers.
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