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travelingadiva: (Default)
Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 09:51 am
Today our plan of action was to a) Go to the Imperial Palace and take a tour there, b) see an act from Kabuki theatre and c) go back to the Tarazuka store (solely for my benefit). We completed the list before 1pm.

We arrived at the Imperial Palace about fifteen minutes before our tour was supposed to go, wandered until we sort of found the gate we were looking for, and managed to miss the tour. However, the outside gardens are open to visitors, admission free, to walk as they chose (which was what we wanted) so we just did that.

"Donna?" "Yeah?" "Does the Imperial Palace have a garden?" "Yeah." "Is it bit?" "Probably." Then I think we found it. )

It was a really nice day to walk around the gardens since it was actually warm with a nice breeze and just really pleasant. And since it's free, a lot of people just come to get in walks or jogs, which I think is pretty neat. We came across what we think was a sumo house (or at least, an area where some were doing something) considering the ungodly screaming coming from it, but sadly it was inside the grounds, where we were not allowed to go.

After that we hopped on a subway to get to the Kabuki-za, a kabuki theatre that is actually (supposedly) destined to be torn down in April. We got tickets for a single act, and a shorter one at that; only fifteen minutes. We saw a little something called Sanmon Gosan No Kiri (Goemon and Hisayoshi), and the description (from the website) is as follows: Though short, this play is one of the most visually spectacular in kabuki. The famous villain Ishikawa Goemon enjoys a sea of cherry blossoms while sitting on top the large gate of Nanzen-ji Temple. His enjoyment of the scene is cut short, though, but the appearance below of his arch-nemesis, the general Hisayoshi. It was interesting to finally see a snippet of what kabuki theatre is all about. My favorite parts were the stage-ninja (not their actual titles). These are men dressed all in black who do all the moving of things, including an instance where Goemon "magically" moved his table behind him with just a bit of help from the stage ninja in plain sight doing the actual moving. There was also a for of audience interaction--people would actually yell things out to the stage. Huh. The kabuki-za )

After the show we got onto a line to Ginza and eventually found the Takarazuka theatre again, and from there found the store. I bought two postcards and bit the bullet and purchased the photobook of Bolero. the show we saw. The pictures in it are gorgeous, you can see the incredible costume detail, I probably wouldn't be getting the chance again, and it was only 1000JPY. I'm very glad I got it and don't regret the purchase at all. Something for me!

We stopped to get lunch at a place Donna ate at her first night in and wanted to return to. The food was really good! I got a vegetable-curry-soup-thing and it was delicious and had vegetables in it. Um yum yum. There was also this namba(?) bread we got with the dinner (and rice and a small salad) that was really yummmy, and yogurt and tea for desert, all included in the set price. 650JPY! Pretty great! We meandered around for a little while longer, emerging from a building just in time to see Ginza's amazing mechanical clock. )

Tired of Ginza and all the expensive foreign-type shops, we grabbed another train to Yoyogi park. That was an experience too. Yoyogi! )

We left the park to try and find another metro station and ended up managing to walk to Shibuya. )

Then we went to Ginza in order to find Donna a citibank. We arrived around, eh, 6-ish? THREE HOURS LATER we manage to find a bank. Obviously we are awesome. But the lotta walking made up for yesterday's not-a-lotta-walking. Tomorrow, studio Ghibli and Harajuku!
travelingadiva: (Default)
Sunday, March 14th, 2010 08:15 am
Okay, since Kyoto was yesterday, I wanted to get that post done first before I started on today, breaking up the posts because of image-heavyness. (and, a note for me, 8-ish am over there, 9-ish pm over here)

Today we saw Takarazuka.

Let me explain. This is something I've been dying to see ever since I heard about it. Donna's friend Jen asked if we were interested on seeing the show playing today with her and my immediate YES YES YES drowned out anything Donna could possibly have said. (By the way, Meira? Ouran's Zuka club? Not an exaggeration. If anything, the representation was TAME.)

A very cool thing about Takarazuka (all-female theatre) is the fandom. There are fan clubs for the stars and the fandom is huge. To best explain, I am copy-pasting Donna's description of it because she's cooler than me and I can't even think of a better way to put it. )
It was the most polite group of fans I've ever seen in my whole life. The groups line up on the street in accordance to seniority; the greater their star's status, the farther up the street the fans get to line up. Once a group's "star" has come and gone, they, as Donna said, get up and leave in single-file and the next-senior group files into place, assuming the same crouched positions. (Explained by Jen:) Each fanclub has a symbol that they wear to signify they belong to the group--usually it's something their star has worn or is known for wearing. The salmon-shirt group's star actually showed up in the same shirt.

And then the actual arrival of the stars is a thing to behold in itself. Observe )

The performance itself was really cool. The Chie-san was phenomenal. Her voice, the way she spoke and moved, her singing--all amazing. Jen, Takarazuka fan that she is, had a pair of binoculars that I borrowed when she wasn't using them to close up on the expressions and costumes and just. Wow.

We saw a show called Bolero a more subdued show (but still cool to watch) and really easy to follow, even with the language barriers. Takarazuka shows have two parts. The actual plot-performance, then intermission, and then part 2, the revue. With crazy costumes and lights and dance numbers and crazy costumes and there was a LOT OF SPARKLE. And feathers. A LOT OF FEATHERS. (Meira, I repeat, Ouran? NOT EXAGGERATED.) It was just a really cool experience. And something I'd never get in America because an all-female theatre? Gasp! What sort of things go on behind the scenes! What is it representing? Ugh, it's just so--urg. Not dwelling on it. Back to the cool.

After the show, Jen went back home and Donna and I headed out to Shibuya. Shibuya is BUSY. Shibuya is BRIGHT. Shibuya is NUTS. )

Tomorrow we're going to Jen's place in Ota and she's taking us to an onsen! I'm not really one for hot soaks, but I think it might do my neck and back some good, especially considering the stress I've been putting on them from walking so much. Not that I regret a step!