Misplaced Pages

Konparu Zenpō

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Japanese Noh actor and playwright In this Japanese name, the surname is Komparu.

Konparu Zenpō (金春 禅鳳, 1454–1520?) was a Japanese Noh actor and playwright of the Konparu school. He was the grandson of Konparu Zenchiku. Zenpō's plays were more popular and dramatic, novel and crowd-pleasing with large casts and more elaborate effects and sets, than the plays of his grandfather's, or his great-grandfather Zeami's, although he did have an appreciation of yugen and wabi (Zenpō was a pupil of Shuko and quoted him as saying "The moon not glimpsed through rifts in clouds holds no interest").

Plays

See also: List of Noh plays: A-M and List of Noh plays: N-Z
  • Arashiyama (嵐山)
  • Hatsuyuki ("Virgin Snow" or "First Snow"; 初雪; written in the yugen Zenchiku style)
  • Ikarikazuki ("The Anchor Draping"; 碇潜)
  • Ikkaku sennin ("One-Horned Wizard"; 一角仙人; this Noh inspired the kabuki play Narukami)
  • Ikuta Atsumori (生田敦盛)
  • Kamo (賀茂)
  • Tōbōsaku (東方朔)

Treatises

  • Mōtanshichinshō (1455)

Further reading

  • Four classical Asian plays in modern translation (1972), by Vera Rushforth Irwin. ISBN 978-0-14-021249-5. (Contains a translation of Ikkaku sennin.)
  • Furyuno no jidai: Konparu Zenpo to sono shuhen ("Komparu Zempo and the age of furyu (spectacle) noh performance"; 1998), by Tomoko Ishii. Published in Tokyo by Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai; ISBN 978-4-13-086027-7

References

  1. ^ Komparu Zempo. (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 12, 2007
  2. ^ pg 1029 of Seeds in the Heart
  3. (Zempo Zodan, 1553, p. 480)
  4. "How to Write a Noh Play; Zeami's Sando", by Shelley Fenno Quinn. Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 48, No. 1. (Spring, 1993), pp. 53-88.
  • Zempo Zodan (manuscript dated 1553) section 4, in Kodai Chusei Geijutsuron. Cited in Hirota, D. (ed) (1995). Wind in the pines: classic writings of the way of tea as a Buddhist path. Fremont, CA: Asian Humanities Press, 71.
Stub icon

This article about a Japanese writer, poet, or screenwriter is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: