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Konparu Zenchiku

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Konparu Zenchiku (金春 禅竹, b. Shichirō Ujinobu[1] (七郎 氏信), 1405–1468,[2] 1470 or 1471) was a skilled[3] Japanese Noh actor, troupe leader, and playwright. His plays are particularly characterized by an intricate, allusive, and subtle style inherited from Zeami Motokiyo[4] which convolved yūgen with influences from Zen Buddhism (his Zen master was Ikkyū[5]) and Kegon. Actors should strive for unconscious performance, in which they enters the "circle of emptiness"; such a state of being is the highest level of artistic or religious achievement.

He lived, worked, and died in the Nara area of Japan. He was trained by Zeami and his son, Motomasa (died 1432), eventually marrying a daughter of Zeami.[1] At some point he took the artistic name Komparu Ujinobu and then finally Konparu Zenchiku. In 1443, he became the leader of the Kanze acting troupe and thus the second successor to Zeami Motokiyo. Zeami passed on his secret teachings to Zenchiku, apparently prompting Zeami's exiling; this refusal to transmit to his blood descendants also prompted a split between the Komparu school and the Kanze. Zenchiku's grandson was Konparu Zenpō, and his descendants would continue to head the Komparu school of Noh.

Works

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Attributed writings

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  • Rokurin ichiro no ki ("A Record of Six Rings and the One Sword"; 六輪一露之記)[6]
  • Go'on Sangyoku Shū ("Collected Comments on the Five [Feeling] Tones and the Three Performing Modes [Used to Create Them]"; 五音三曲集)[7]

Noh plays

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  • Bashō ("The Plantain Tree"; 芭蕉)
  • Eguchi (江口; sometimes credited to Kan'ami and revised by Zeami, or Ikkyu)
  • Kakitsubata ("The Iris"; 杜若; possibly by Zeami)
  • Kasuga ryūjin ("The Kasuga Dragon God"; uncertain authorship but attributed to Zenchiku)
  • Kogō ("Lady Kogō"; 小督)
  • Matsumushi ("The Pine Cricket"; 松虫)
  • Mekari (和布刈)
  • Oshio (小塩)
  • Saoyama (佐保山; Zenchiku?)
  • Seiōbo ("Queen Mother of the West"; 西王母)
  • Senju (千手 or 千寿)
  • Shironushi (代主)
  • Shōkun (very uncertain authorship; variously attributed to Zenchiku, Zeami, or neither[8])
  • Shōki (鍾馗)
  • Shunkan or Kikaigashima (俊寛 or 鬼界島)
  • Tamakazura ("The Jeweled Chaplet"; 玉葛 or 玉鬘)
  • Tatsuta (龍田 or 竜田)
  • Teika (定家; about the rumored love affair between Fujiwara no Teika and Shikishi Naishinnō)
  • Ugetsu ("Rain and Moon"; 雨月)
  • Yang Kuei-fei, Yokihi, or Yōkihi (楊貴妃)

Further reading

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  • Nōgakuron Kenkyū, by Konishi Jin'ichi (Keene commends pgs 240–271 in particular)
  • Revealed Identity: The Noh Plays of Komparu Zenchiku (Michigan Monograph Series in Japanese Studies, 55), by Paul S. Atkins. ISBN 978-1-929280-36-0
  • Six Circles, One Dewdrop: The Religio-aesthetic World of Komparu Zenchiku, Arthur H. Thornhill. ISBN 978-0-691-07352-1, 1 June 1993, Princeton University Press
  • Traces in the Way: Michi and the Writings of Komparu Zenchiku, Noel J. Pinnington. Published by Cornell University's East Asia Program 30 June 2006; ISBN 978-1-933947-02-0
  • Zeami, Zenchiku (1974), Zeami; Zenchiku Konparu; Akira Omote; Shuichi Katō. ISBN 978-4-00-070024-5
  • "Crossed Paths: Zeami's Transmission to Zenchiku" by Noel J. Pinnington, Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 52, No. 2. (Summer, 1997), pp. 201–234.
  • "Esotericism in noh commentaries and plays: Konparu Zenchiku's Meishuku shu and Kakitsubata," by Susan Blakeley Klein in The culture of secrecy in Japanese religion, Bernhard Scheid; Mark Teeuwen. ISBN 0-415-38713-2
  • "Spirituality for the dancer-actor in Zeami's and Zenchiku's writings on the No." Benito Ortolani, 1983–1978; Dance as cultural heritage. Vol. 1. (CORD dance research annual. 14) New York, CORD, c1983. p [147]-158. OCLC: 83163532
  • "Was the Author of Ominameshi Komparu Zenchiku?", Haruo Nishino, in "The Noh Ominameshi: A Flower Viewed from Many Directions," Cornell East Asia Series 2003, Vol. 118, pages 209-222, ISSN 1050-2955
  • "Zenchiku's Aesthetics of the Nō Theatre", Benito Ortolani
  • "Zenchiku's Philosophy of the Noh Drama", by Asaji Nobori, in the 1960 Hiroshima Bunkyō Joshi Daigaku Kenkyū Kiyō.

References

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  1. ^ a b Komparu Zenchiku. (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 11, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9045984
  2. ^ Komparu, Zenchiku (1405 - ?1468). (2000). In The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Retrieved November 12, 2007, from http://www.credoreference.com/entry/965809
  3. ^ "...His [Zeami] only important successor as a playwright of yūgen was Konparu Zenchiku, the author of such plays as Ugetsu, Yōhiki, and Bashō, all of the third [yugen] category, as well as treatises on the art of Nō that rank in a class with Zeami's." pg 1026, Seeds in the Heart, Donald Keene.
  4. ^ "Passages in the texts are sometimes so complex as to defy parsing ... the obscurity arises in part because of the many varieties of word-play used to impart depth and richness to the text ... The notes to a well-annotated edition of the play are likely to cause the reader to wonder how spectators, especially those at first performances, could have caught all the allusions ... It has been argued that Zeami's plays are not in the mainstream of Nō composition. The only Nō dramatist who followed his style was his son-in-law Komparu Zenchiku (1405–1468?); ..." pg 1016, Seeds in the Heart.
  5. ^ "Mandalas of the Heart. Two Prose Works by Ikkyu Sojun" Ikkyū Sojun; James H. Sanford in Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 35, No. 3. (Autumn, 1980), pp. 273–298.
  6. ^ The Princeton Companion to Classical Japanese Literature by Earl Miner; Hiroko Odagiri; Robert E. Morrell; review author: Edwin A. Cranston. Reviewed in Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 53, No. 1. (Jun., 1993), pp. 188-231.[1]
  7. ^ "Kakyo: Zeami's Fundamental Principles of Acting. Part Three", Mark J. Nearman. Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 38, No. 1. (Spring, 1983), pp. 49-71.
  8. ^ pg 1048, note 62, of Seeds in the Heart
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