Tuesday, February 24, 2026

KOKUHO: A New Movie About Kabuki Actors

 


I apologize for how long this blog has been dormant. Covid and the ultimate demise of the great kabuki magazine, ENGEKIKAI, whose monthly issues I used to chronicle, are part of the reason. Also, my other research and writing interests were involved. Recently, though, I was commissioned to write an essay related to the release of the new Japanese movie, Kokuho, which is Japan’s entry into the Academy Awards competition for BEST INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM. The essay was intended as a reference point for Western journalists writing about the movie. Now that the film is released I’m posting the essay below for those who might be interested. The movie is definitely worth seeing,, but this is not a review.

KABUKI: An Introduction to Kokuho

Samuel L. Leiter

Kabuki, one of the world’s most honored theatrical traditions, shines brightly in Lee Sang-Il’s Kokuho, a movie whose title, meaning “National Treasure,” applies to kabuki as well as to a handful of its actors and musicians who have received that honor.  It is one of Japan’s four classical theatre genres, the others being the ritualistic noh, the comical kyogen, and the dramatic puppet theatre called bunraku; kabuki draws material from each, but especially from the last, which provides perhaps half its plays.

Born in Kyoto in 1603, kabuki originally meant anything “offbeat,” but came to be written with characters meaning “song,” “dance,” and “prostitute” (later replaced by “skill”). It began as a popular art of songs, dances, and sketches set in the pleasure quarters among prostitutes and their clients that delighted the burgeoning urban citizenry under the newly established Tokugawa shogunate. Kabuki’s creative and performative centers were in Osaka and Kyoto, in Western Japan, and Edo (later Tokyo), in the East. These areas competed in intense rivalry for artistic dominance. Kokuho’s leading actors are from Osaka, but also play in Tokyo.

While noh and kyogen were associated with the samurai class, the highly commercialized kabuki (like its rival, bunraku) was ragingly popular among the masses, its leading performers as glorified and well paid as movie or rock stars. Scandal and family dissension could as easily arise among them then as today. While many parallels can be drawn between kabuki and the commercial theatres of the West, it differed largely—apart from its native subject matter and conventions—in the breadth of its artistic methods.

Actors, who often begin their rigorous training before they’re even in kindergarten, learn to perform in serious historical and domestic dramas with tales of revenge, murder, suicide, romance, dissipation, theft, power, war, inheritance, usurpation, loyalty, and the like. They also learn to dance in a vast repertory ranging from symbolic to dramatic.

Kabuki is an all-male theatre whose female roles are played by specialists called onnagata (onna=woman, gata=person), as we see in Kokuho. This practice began in the mid-seventeenth century after real women were banned from the stage in 1629, following incidents of rowdiness stirred by men seeking the actresses’ favors. The shift from depending on the natural sex appeal of women to performances by men intent on deepening the internal representation of women led to a marked enrichment of kabuki as a serious artistic form.

At one time, some top-rated onnagata, seeking realism in their art, lived as much like women offstage as possible, even when married with children. Externally, these male actors created a stage femininity that strongly influenced the behavior and fashions of women in real life. It should be noted though, that despite gender-role specialization, many actors play both males and females, requiring the best of them to be part Baryshnikov and part Graham, part Olivier and part Streep.

As in any traditional Japanese art, devotion to perfection can be all-consuming for kabuki actors. Kokuho presents a glimpse of the rigorous training process as well as substantial selections from five kabuki works, four from famous dances and one adapted from a classic 1703 puppet play. A typical program, which might last over four hours, presents several such pieces, including both dance and drama.

The non-dance plays are mainly well-known scenes drawn from longer plays whose full-length versions are only rarely staged. This accounts for the unique, semi-musical way the female character shown in Kokuho’s dramatic scene speaks, based as it is on the narrative style of the puppet theatre chanter, who recites everyone’s lines in distinctly different voices according to long-established musical and poetic conventions.

The dances in Kokuho represent several types, but it’s interesting that two of them allow the film’s two young actors to perform roles that closely mirror one another. In one selection, they play vigorous male lions, playfully swinging around their floor-length manes; in the other they’re beautiful dancers—in reality, jealous women transformed into serpents—visiting a temple’s bell-raising ceremony, during which they shed their gorgeous costumes as a serpent does its skin.

Although a work of fiction in which the names of the characters and theatres are made up, Kokuho truthfully reflects many things about kabuki, including allusions to a historical background that gives credence to the dramatized events. The film provides a trustworthy depiction of a world where actors take different names with a new ordinal number as their artistry progresses. In this world, an actor’s successor succeeds to a name as the present holder—if still active—takes a new one during a highly formalized public ceremony. Further, succession need not be to a biological relative. None of kabuki’s longest dynasties—there have been eighteen actors called Nakamura Kanzaburo—has a direct blood connection to its founders.

From a theatregoer’s perspective, Kokuho—filmed in real kabuki theatres—shows both the premodern seating arrangements still found in a few old-time venues, where audiences sit on the ground in small, boxed-in enclosures, and modern ones with their comfortable Western seats. We also witness the use not only of an audience runway, the famous hanamichi, but of an elevator trap fitted into it for magical entrances. And, obviously, kabuki’s various stage conventions catch the eye, as do its quick onstage changes, stylized posing, visible onstage assistants, and exquisite scenery, costumes, wigs, and makeup.

Kokuho provides a lens through which to view kabuki, a living tradition where artistic legacy and personal ambition intersect. The film spotlights the rigorous practices, name-succession pressures, and theatrical conventions that define this four-and-a-quarter-century art form, revealing the human dynamics behind the iconic makeup and spectacle.