Looking back to the last years of the nineteenth century,
veteran producer-director Joseph L. Anderson draws upon a
monumental body of research gleaned from libraries and archives in
seven countries to introduce the Japanese theatrical impresario
Kawakami Otojiro. In 1899, Kawakami, his wife -- the inspired
dancer and actress Sadayakko -- and his troupe went on epochal
performance tours of the U.S. and Europe, introducing audiences to
new forms of dramatic art and dance previously unseen in the
West.
Possessed of boundless energy and limitless imagination,
Kawakami was a pioneer who quite literally viewed the world as his
stage. In the closing decade of an all-too-brief life, Kawakami
introduced major reforms of Japanese performance and the theatre
business.
Scholarly, witty, and filled with fascinating insights into the
culture and conventions of "fin de siecle" America, Europe, and
Japan, "Enter a Samurai" opens a door into a little-known, yet
vitally important era of modern theatrical history.
About the Author
Joseph L. Anderson has been enjoying Japanese and American plays
and films for over seven decades. During the 1950s and 1960s he
wrote for and was an editorial board member on many little film
magazines. Later, as professor of film in the Ohio University
College of Fine Arts and adjunct in its Comparative Arts doctoral
program in the early 1960s, he pioneered university-level studies
of Japanese cinema. He has a BA in history from Antioch College and
an MA from Ohio State University, and he was a language student at
ICU, Tokyo. Anderson is the principal coauthor of "The Japanese
Film: Art and Industry" (in print for fifty years).
Anderson was chief advisor for the Tokyo Broadcasting System
academic program in Japanese Broadcasting, Media, and Culture and
taught at the Tisch School of the Arts, New York University. He has
been an assistant director and dialogue coach on American feature
films shot in Japan as well as a director of documentary films, a
"Variety" stringer, and a writer of subtitles for Japanese films.
In Hollywood and at WGBH Boston, he developed computer-generated
subtitles for feature motion pictures (the technique in use
today).
During his career, he directed two independent American feature
films, was an outside producer for ABC and CBS news specials,
director of special projects at the American] Art Theatre Guild,
Mid-West producer for the Candid Camera Company, a puppeteer, a
neophyte comedian in burlesque, an actor in lesser touring
companies, director of a children's theatre, and an English
language "benshi" (live narrator of Japanese silent films). In his
teens he was a professional scenic artist, stage carpenter, and
minor actor with several Equity summer stock theatres.
Anderson is now a retired vice president of WGBH Boston, the
organization that for several decades has produced more than a
fourth of the television programs seen nationwide on PBS. In 1989,
he received the Japan Prize (Nihonsho) for WGBH and was a Japan
Foundation senior fellow in 1975.
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