kabuki (käbOO'kē) [key]: see Asian drama.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
Related content from HighBeam Research on: kabuki
Kabuki Plays on Stage, Vol. 1: Brilliance and Bravado, 1697-1766.(Book Review) (Asian Theatre Journal)
Masterpieces of Kabuki: Eighteen Plays on Stage.(Book review) (Philosophy East and West)
Artistic direction in Takechi Kabuki.(Takechi Tetsuji) (Asian Theatre Journal)
Kabuki Goes Hollywood (The Hudson Review)
Myth and reality: a story of kabuki during American censorship, 1945-1949. (Asian Theatre Journal)
Heroes of the Kabuki Stage.(Book Review) (Asian Theatre Journal)
Ganjiro III and Chikamatsu's "Lost" Kabuki Masterpiece. (Asian Theatre Journal)
The elements of abstraction: a kabuki primer: four hundred years after its first moves were played out on the dry river beds of Kyoto, the theatrical form known as kabuki is still going strong. Watanabe Tamotsu outlines the history and defining elements of this venerable dramatic tradition.(Culture Feature) (Look Japan)
Frozen Moments: Writings on Kabuki 1966-2001.(Book Reviews)(Book Review) (Asian Theatre Journal)
Yoritomo's Death: A Shin Kabuki Play by Mayama Seika.(text and commentary)(Play) (Asian Theatre Journal)
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