Namiki Gohei I
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Namiki Gohei I 並木五瓶初代 |
|
---|---|
Born | 1747 |
Died | 1808 |
Occupation | Kabuki actor and playwright |
Nationality | Japan |
Genres | jidai-mono, sewa-mono |
Influences
|
|
Influenced
|
Namiki Gohei I (並木五瓶初代)(1747-1808) was a Kabuki actor and playwright active in both Edo and Osaka. He wrote over 110 plays, mostly in the genres of jidai-mono (historical) and sewa-mono (current events).
Gohei was a student of the playwright Namiki Shōzō I, and may have in fact taken on the name "Namiki" as a result of this relationship.
[edit] Plays
(The following list is only a small selection of Namiki Gohei's most famous works.)
- Kimon gosan no kiri (The Thief of the Temple Gate, 1778)
- Keisei kogane no sachihoko (The Thief of Fish Scales, 1782)
- Kanjin kammon tekuda no hajimari (Murder of a Foreign Envoy, 1789)
- Godairiki koi no fūjime (Seal of the Five Great Powers, 1794)
- Sumida no hara geisha-katagi (Geisha Spirit of the Sumida Valley, 1796)
[edit] References
- Frederic, Louis (2002). "Japan Encyclopedia." Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.