Festival/Tokyo 2014 is now over. Thank you to all our audiences and visitors.
Festival/Tokyo 2014 is now over. Thank you to all our audiences and visitors.
Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre, Atelier East
Free
Box office opens 30 minutes before.
Doors open 30 minutes before.
This talk in Japanese will introduce audiences to Peter Brook’s long career in the theatre, ahead of the first performance of Peter Brook and MH Estienne’s “The Valley of Astonishment”, the opening theatre production at F/T14.
Lecturer: Akihiko Senda
November 3rd (Mon) 15:30-17:30
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Akihiko Senda
Theatre Critic
Born in Tokyo in 1940, Senda graduated from the University of Tokyo, majoring in western literature. One of Japan’s best-known theatre critics, his many publications include “The Voyage of Contemporary Japanese Theatre”.
Photo: Ryosuke Kikuchi
PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! was set up in the wake of the March 11th 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami by musicians Michiro Endo and Otomo Yoshihide, and poet Ryoichi Wago. This documentary follows seven months surrounding the making of a PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! music event in August 2011 in Fukushima City.
November 3rd (Mon) 18:00-19:30 / November 7th (Fri) 19:00-20:30
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Produced by PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! Official Video Documentary Committee
Hikaru Fujii
Artist, Film Director
Born in 1976. Graduated with a doctoral diploma in advanced studies (DEA) in Athletic, Sciences and Technology of the Arts from the University of Paris VIII. In 2005, he returned to Japan, where he works with film as a medium for dealing directly with contemporary Japanese society and politics. Since 3.11 he has been filming all over the areas afflicted by the disaster on the theme of the relationship between the arts and catastrophes.
http://hikarufujii.com/
Photo: Yuichi Jibiki
Four years on from when it was first set up in the wake of the 2011 Tohoku disaster, PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! now arrives in Ikebukuro for “Festival Fukushima!@Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Park”, which will open F/T14. This talk will see project members look back at the launching of the project and how it has since changed, as well as the situation today in Fukushima.
November 3rd (Mon) 20:00-21:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Guest Speakers: PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! members (Kumi Sato, Kumiko Takano, Ayako Kishinami, Akiko Tomiyama)
Moderator: Mayuko Arakawa (Festival/Tokyo)
Language: Japanese
Photo: Ryosuke Kikuchi
The month-long Festival/Tokyo 2014 is opening with a unique weekend of music and dance. “Festival Fukushima!@Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Park” will kick off F/T14 on November 1st and November 2nd. This exhibition gives visitors the chance to see the large furoshiki cloth used in the event, created from materials collected from around the country. Photographs from previous Festival Fukushima! events will also be on display.
November 4th (Tue) to November 30th (Sun) 12:00-20:00
(Closed on 11/10, 11/17. Until 17:00 on 11/30.)
Free (no reservation needed)
During other Discover Atelier events, visitors may not be able to enter due to space issues. Please check the Discover Atelier schedule for details.
“Festival Fukushima!@Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Park”
This unique festive event sees Ikebukuro come to life with a colorful giant furoshiki cloth on the ground, big band music and original Bon dancing. Led by musicians Michiro Endo and Otomo Yoshihide, and poet Ryoichi Wago, PROJECT FUKUSHIMA! was set up following the 2011 Tohoku tsunami to tell the world about the energy of Fukushima. Their signature large festival event now comes to Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Park for the opening weekend of F/T14. The festival weekend is participatory. Anyone is able to join in the Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Orchestra created especially for the event and the Bon dance workshops. Of course, it’s also fine just to turn up and watch the music and dancing!
©Jun Ishikawa
This is a screening of Al-Kasaba Theatre’s witty and acclaimed response to the conflict in their homeland. The play features six Palestinian characters appearing out of a mountain of newspapers piled up on the stage. Each has their own compelling tale to tell; these are the real stories behind the headlines. “Alive from Palestine: Stories Under Occupation” was performed at in Japan at Theatre Tram in February 2004 and the Kawasaki Art Center in February 2011.
November 4th (Tue) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Arabic (Japanese subtitles)
George Ibrahim
Founder and Artistic Director, Al-Kasaba Theatre and Cinematheque
Born in 1945. He was an actor before studying theatre at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and going on to work as a playwright and director. His major work includes “Ramzi Abu Al-Majd”, which won the Best Actor Award at the Carthage International Theatre Festival 1995, and “Immigrant”, which won prizes for best director and costume design at the Carthage International Theatre Festival in 1999. http://www.alkasaba.org/english
Photo: Nobutaka Sato
This is a video screeing of a previous theatre work by Mikuni Yanaihara, whose reinterpretation of “The Cherry Orchard” is part of Festival/Tokyo 2014. “Hey Timon, Let’s Think Positive!” was the fifth work she created with her theatre unit Mikuni Yanaihara Project and it won the 56th Kishida Kunio Drama Award. Inspired by Shakespeare’s “Timon on Athens”, it was premiered in 2010 and has since been revived at many theatres around Japan.
November 6th (Thu) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Video courtesy of Mikuni Yanaihara Project
Language: Japanese
Mikuni Yanaihara
Choreographer, Director, Playwright
A choreographer working around the globe, Yanaihara formed her unit Nibroll in 1997. Nibroll has been invited to the Oregon Dance Festival, the San Francisco Butoh Festival, Fusion Festival in Berlin, Laokoon Summer Festival in Hamburg, and many other overseas festivals. It has also performed at The Kitchen in New York. She won the Kishida Kunio Drama Award in 2012 for her playwriting, which she has presented under the name Mikuni Yanaihara Project since 2005. Under the name off-Nibroll she also creates video artwork that has been shown at many exhibitions, such as “Roppongi Crossing” at Mori Art Museum. She choreographed the anime feature film “Oblivion Island: Haruka and the Magic Mirror” in 2009. She has won many awards for her choreography, including the Japan Dance Forum Award, NHK Prize and more. Her accolades include the Japan Dance Forum Award and the Yokohama City Arts Award. She also teaches at Kinki University.
Photo: Nobutaka Sato
This is a video screening of a previous dance work Mikuni Yanaihara, whose “The Cherry Orchard”, a reinterpretation of the Chekhov play, is part of Festival/Tokyo 2014. The multi-talented Yanaihara famously works in both dance and theatre. Whereas her contribution to F/T14 is a piece of outdoor, site-specific theatre, in this earlier adaptation of the same Chekhov source material she chose dance as her medium. Here, using the unique means of physical expression, she “remakes” the classic drama about a society on the brink of change. First performed at the Chekhov Festival at the Owlspot Theater in 2010, it forms a companion piece to the new theatre version at F/T14.
November 8th (Sat) 13:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Video courtesy of Owlspot Theater
Mikuni Yanaihara
Choreographer, Director, Playwright
A choreographer working around the globe, Yanaihara formed her unit Nibroll in 1997. Nibroll has been invited to the Oregon Dance Festival, the San Francisco Butoh Festival, Fusion Festival in Berlin, Laokoon Summer Festival in Hamburg, and many other overseas festivals. It has also performed at The Kitchen in New York. She won the Kishida Kunio Drama Award in 2012 for her playwriting, which she has presented under the name Mikuni Yanaihara Project since 2005. Under the name off-Nibroll she also creates video artwork that has been shown at many exhibitions, such as “Roppongi Crossing” at Mori Art Museum. She choreographed the anime feature film “Oblivion Island: Haruka and the Magic Mirror” in 2009. She has won many awards for her choreography, including the Japan Dance Forum Award, NHK Prize and more. Her accolades include the Japan Dance Forum Award and the Yokohama City Arts Award. She also teaches at Kinki University.
Hyunsuk Seo is known for his site-specific work in Korea, turning a certain place into a “theatre” and weaving in episodes from its locale and history. He has made works at such sites as a former train station turned art space, communities where urban development projects have failed, and even a theatre rehearsal room that was once a venue for wedding ceremonies. Making use of video, music and theatre techniques, his experiments conjure up visionary and complex narratives that can only be shared at those specific places. This talk will look at Seo’s previous dawon work, as well as explore the creation process behind his new work at F/T14, “From the Sea”.
November 8th (Sat) 18:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Korean (Japanese interpretation)
Hyunsuk Seo
Director, Performing Arts Researcher
Born in 1965. Lecturer at Yonsei University. He has created many site-specific performances, which have been shown at Festival Bo:m, the Nam Jun Paik Center and more. His major works include “FAT SHOW”, “Heterotopia”, “The Divine Prostitution of the Soul”, and “Desire Paths”. He participated in Critics in Residence at F/T11 and was one of the jury for the F/T Award at 2012’s Festival/Tokyo Emerging Artists Program. In 2013 he created a work for Festival Bo:m and staged a special Japanese-Korean co-production at the Steep Slope Studio.
When first premiered in May 1903 in Paris, “The Rite of Spring”, composed by Igor Stravinsky and with choreography by Vaslay Nijinsky for the Ballets Russes, sent shock waves through the world of twentieth-century ballet. This autumn, F/T14 welcomes three young female Japanese artists to create a new interpretation of “The Rite of Spring”, 101 years on from its debut in Europe. Momoko Shiraga will handle the direction and choreography, while Yuko Mohri will create the stage design against a musical landscape by Yasuno Miyauchi. Ahead of the premiere, Discover Atelier will host a special talk that turns a contemporary ear to the unique sounds of Stravinsky’s ballet. The speakers are theatre editor, writer, broadcaster and music event producer Reiko Yuyama, and Miho Watanabe, the music researcher and dramaturge for the F/T14 production of “The Rite of Spring”.
Guest Speakers: Reiko Yuyama, Miho Watanabe
November 9th (Sun) 13:00-16:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Reiko Yuyama
Essayist; Lecturer, Nihon University College of Art
A prolific columnist for many kinds of women’s fashion magazines and a regular television broadcaster for NHK and Tokyo MX. She writes about a range of subjects, including film, music, food and fashion. Her many publications include “Onna hitori sushi” (Sushi for the Woman Dining Alone), “Club Culture!”, “Joso suru onna” (Women Dressed as Women) and “Yosoji goe!” (Crossing the Forty-Year Mark).
Miho Watanabe
Dramaturge for F/T14′s “The Rite of Spring”
Born in 1979, she completed her doctoral studies at Tokyo University of the Arts, gaining a Ph.D. in Japanese avant-garde music. She previously taught at the Department of Musical Creativity and the Environment, Tokyo University of the Arts, and currently is a part-time lecturer at Waseda University. She also writes and edits music magazines and publications, as well as producing and directing a radio show about classical music and jazz.
©2009 Toshikuni Doi / SIGLO
This is a screening of the first part of the documentary “Unheard Voices: Palestinians, Israelis, and the Occupation” by Toshikuni Doi, filmed over six years during the 1990′s. It follows a family in Jabalia refugee camp, the largest in Gaza, and shows how the 1993 Peace Accords did not bring real and lasting peace to the Palestinians.
November 9th (Sun) 18:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Director: Toshikuni Doi
Language: Arabic (Japanese subtitles)
Toshikuni Doi
Freelance journalist
Born in 1953 in Saga Prefecture. Doi first became involved with the Palestine-Israel problem in 1985. He has been filming in Palestine and Israel for 17 years, and, working with the Palestinian Documentary Society, completed the four-part “Unheard Voices: Palestinians, Israelis, and the Occupation” in 2009.
Myanmar is today undergoing rapid change as foreign investment pours in and the government shifts towards a full democracy. The art world is watching the country’s developing creative scene with much anticipatino and as such, F/T has invited leading artist Moe Satt to present a work as part of the 2014 festival. This event will see cultural anthropologist and Burmese specialist Katsumi Tamura join writer Andrew Maerkle, who recently traveled to Myanmar with Koki Tanaka to survey the local scene, discuss contemporary art in the country. As we look ahead to F/T15 and its planned second Asia Series showcase which will focus on Myanmar, Tamura and Maerkle will examine the nation’s history, politics, culture and art.
Guest Speakers: Katsumi Tamura, Andrew Maerkle
November 11th (Tue) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Katsumi Tamura
Executive Director, Graduate University for Advanced Studies; Professor Emeritus, National Museum of Ethnology
He completed his post-graduate studies at the University of Tokyo and has taught at Kagoshima University, Kanazawa University and the National Museum of Ethnology. As a cultural anthropologist he has specialized in Burma (Myanmar) and the Southeast Asian region.
Andrew Maerkle
Art Writer, Researcher
Born in 1981 and based in Tokyo. He graduated from Columbia University’s Comparative Literature and Society Program. He is currently Deputy Editor of the Japanese-English online publication ART iT, International Edition, and served as Deputy Editor of ArtAsiaPacific magazine in New York from 2006 to 2008. He has contributed to numerous international periodicals including Artforum and frieze. He also teaches at Tokyo Zokei University and AIT. In February 2014 he visited Myanmar with the artist Koki Tanaka under the auspices of the Japan Foundation to survey the local contemporary art scene.
Photo: Watanabe Genshiro Shoten
Playwright and director Seigo Hatasawa (Watanabe Genshiro Shoten) is presenting two works at F/T14, “Moshi-ita – What if the manager of a high school baseball team called in an Aomori itako shaman?” and “Farewell to Nuclear Robot Mutsu: Soldiers of Love”. This is a screening of one of his previous plays, “Electric Grandma”, a story about an old lady (and electricity) in Aomori Prefecture, northern Japan, in the near future. It was performed in Aomori City in April 2014 and then in Tokyo in May.
November 12th (Wed) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Seigo Hatasawa
Playwright, Director, Leader of Watanabe Genshiro Shoten
Born in Akita Prefecture in 1964 and works in Aomori City. “Farewell to Nuclear Robot Mutsu” was nominated for the 57th Kishida Kunio Drama Award. As well as his work with Watanabe Genshiro Shoten, he also writes for other companies, and has won many awards for his radio drama. He teaches theatre at high school and his work with Aomori Prefectural Aomori Chuo High School and Aomori Prefectural Hirosaki Chuo High School students have competed in the National High School Theatre Contest eight times, winning the top prize on three occasions and the prize for excellence a further four times.
K3 Tanzplan Hamburg is one of the co-producers of “10 Years in 1 Minute” (Concept, Choreography: Jeeae Lim) and this talk features K3′s artistic director, Kerstin Evert, who will talk about the dance venue’s work as a centre for choreography.
November 14th (Fri) 17:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: German (with Japanese interpretation)
Photo: Thies Rätzke
Kerstin Evert
Artistic Director, K3 Tanzplan Hamburg
Studied Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen, where she did her doctorate on the theme of dance and technology. From 1997 to 2000, she was a doctoral candidate at Freie Universität Berlin and founded the production label Stadt Raum Inszenierung. From 2002 to 2006, Kerstin Evert was a dramaturge at Kampnagel. In 2005 she established the K3 tanzplan Hamburg, where she serves as its artistic director. She also works as a university lecturer in Berlin, Gießen and Hamburg, as well as a dance festival screener.
This talk invites two guest speakers active in gay rights campaigning to discuss sexual minorities and adoption for same-sex couples in Japan.
Guest Speakers: Megumi Fuji, Yuichiro Nagatsu
November 14th (Fri) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Megumi Fuji
Representative, Rainbow Foster Care
Born in 1974 and raised in Osaka, she is representative of Rainbow Foster Care and also head of a LGBT and social childcare study group. She works to raise awareness of gay adoption rights. http://rainbowfostercare.jimdo.com/
Yuichiro Nagatsu
Planning for F/T14′s “Invisible Neighbors (inspired by ’8′)”
Born in 1985, he gained a Ph.D. from Tokyo University of the Arts. His research specialty is in the arts and social subsumption, and arts and regional communities. He is currently a research assistant at Tokyo University of the Arts and Keio University, as well as a lecturer at Tokyo Kasei University, and the head of a non-profit research into dialogue and expression about diversity.
This event has been cancelled. We apologise for the inconvenience.
The LIG Arts Foundation is one of the co-producers of “10 Years in 1 Minute” (Concept, Choreography: Jeeae Lim). This talk welcomes Jaehwui Bae, who is a producer at LIG Art Hall·Busan. He will discuss the productions the foundation stages in Busan, as well as how the venue is run and about its residency program.
November 15th (Sat) 18:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Korean (Japanese interpretation)
Photo: Thies Rätzke
Jaehwui Bae
Producer, LIG Art Hall·Busan
He has been an independent performing arts producer since 2008 and joined the LIG Arts Foundation in 2011. He is currently a producer at LIG Art Hall·Busan.
After winning awards in their native Korea and staging work in Europe, Creative VaQi is making its much-anticipated debut in Japan at Festival/Tokyo 2014. This artist talk will see Creative VaQi leader Kyungsung Lee discuss his past work and creative process. A typical Creative VaQi work is heavily documentary in nature and created after a period of length research and workshops. In the spirit the Korean dawon (crossover arts), Creative VaQi leave the traditional theatre space behind to stage work outside, and their work is rich with experimentation, ideas, and humor. This talk is an ideal opportunity to learn more about the award-winning group during the Tokyo run of “The Conversations”.
November 16th (Sun) 15:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Korean (Japanese interpretation)
©Kyungmin Na
Kyungsung Lee
Director, Leader of Creative VaQi
Born in Basel, Switzerland, in 1983. He studied directing at Seoul’s Chung-Ang University before undertaking postgraduate studies at Central School of Speech and Drama in London. He formed Creative VaQi in 2007 and works as its leader and director. Past work includes “The Moving Exhibition” (200), “The Dream of Sancho” (2010) (which took part in the Edinburgh Festival), “The History of Gangnam” (2011), and the “Theatre Practice” series (2013-2014), the most recent of which was performed in Seoul. He won a prize at the Chuncheon International Mime Festival in 2009 and in the same year he also became the youngest winner of the important Korea New Conception Theatre Award for “Let us move your sofa”.
©Maiko Miyagawa
Yukio Ninagawa’s Saitama Gold Theater features a troupe of veteran performers and has attracted much attention as a project responding to the reality of Japan’s ageing population. Ahead of the company’s revival of “Ravens, We Shall Load Bullets” at F/T14, this screening offers audiences the chance to see its earlier production of “Seichi” (Holy Land), directed by Ninagawa and written by F/T favorite Shu Matsui.
November 19th (Wed) 18:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Video courtesy of Saitama Arts Theater, Eigeki
Language: Japanese
Yukio Ninagawa
Director, Artistic Director of Saitama Arts Theater
Born in Saitama in 1935, Yukio Ninagawa made his directing debut in 1969. In 1974 he entered the commercial theatre world with a staging of “Romeo and Juliet”. Since then he has produced a succession of major theatrical hits, establishing himself as one of the most renowned Japanese directors. He has been Artistic Director of Saitama Arts Theater since 2006, where he established Saitama Gold Theater. Since 2009 he has also been working with younger performers through Saitama Next Theatre. Recent productions include a theatre adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel “Never Let Me Go”, “Kafka on the Shore” based on Haruki Murakami’s novel, and a play written by Tomohiro Maekawa. He has received honorary doctorates from Edinburgh University in 1992 and Plymouth University in 2009, a CBE in 2002, the Order of Culture in 2010, and the Grand Prize and Best Directing Award at the 20th Yomiuri Theatre Awards.
Playwright and director Seigo Hatasawa (Watanabe Genshiro Shoten) is presenting two works at F/T14, “Moshi-ita – What if the manager of a high school baseball team called in an Aomori itako shaman?” and “Farewell to Nuclear Robot Mutsu: Soldiers of Love”. This is a screening of one of his previous plays, “Me, the Sky, and Hakkoda-Maru”, which was performed on the deck of the famous Memorial Ship Hakkoda-Maru. The cast was selected by open audition and included actors from elementary school age right up to a veteran in their eighties. The play is performed annually and this screening is of the 2013 production.
November 21st (Fri) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Video courtesy of Watanabe Genshiro Shoten
In co-operation with NPO-AMIC, Aomori Cable Television
Language: Japanese
Seigo Hatasawa
Playwright, Director, Leader of Watanabe Genshiro Shoten
Born in Akita Prefecture in 1964 and works in Aomori City. “Farewell to Nuclear Robot Mutsu” was nominated for the 57th Kishida Kunio Drama Award. As well as his work with Watanabe Genshiro Shoten, he also writes for other companies, and has won many awards for his radio drama. He teaches theatre at high school and his work with Aomori Prefectural Aomori Chuo High School and Aomori Prefectural Hirosaki Chuo High School students have competed in the National High School Theatre Contest eight times, winning the top prize on three occasions and the prize for excellence a further four times.
As Chong Wang’s Théâtre du Rêve Expérimental returns to F/T with “Ghosts 2.0″, these two screenings offer audiences the chance to catch up with the company’s previous performance presented in Tokyo. “The Warfare of Landmine 2.0″ won Wang and his troupe the F/T Award at the F/T13 Emerging Artists Program as well as a commission for F/T14. Its subject is a 1960′s Chinese propaganda film. Wang humorously and boldly makes use of a range of texts and references to explore the theme of war.
November 22nd (Sat) 13:00, November 23rd (Sun) 15:00
Duration: 90 min.
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Chinese (Japanese subtitles)
©Zhou Jing
Chong Wang
Playwright, Director, Leader of Théâtre du Rêve Expérimental
Born in 1982 in Beijing. After studying in Beijing, he completed his master’s degree in theatre at the University of Hawaii. He formed Théâtre du Rêve Expérimental in 2008. Its multi-media performance and documentary theatre has made it a leader of experimental theatre in China. He has toured internationally, including in Asia and Europe. He took part in the Asian Directors’ Festival in Toga (Japan) in 2012 and won the F/T Award for “The Warfare of Landmine 2.0”, which was part of the F/T13 Emerging Artists Program. Wang is also a prolific translator of plays, books and criticism.
Chong Wang’s Théâtre du Rêve Expérimental won the F/T Award at the F/T13 Emerging Artists Program and return to F/T this year with an adaptation of Ibsen’s famous play “Ghosts”, which shocked audiences when it was first performed in the 1880′s. This talk welcomes the researcher Itsuki Umeyama to examine candidly the signficance of the staging from the perspective of contemporary theatre theory. This informal talk is also an ideal opportunity for audiences to gain a better understanding of Chong Wang’s new version of the Ibsen classic.
November 22nd (Sat) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Itsuki Umeyama
Assistant Professor, Waseda University Tsubouchi Memorial Theatre Museum
Born in Niigata Prefecture in 1981, she graduated from Tokyo University of the Arts and then completed her doctoral training at Waseda University. From 2008 to 2011, she worked as an assistant at Waseda University Tsubouchi Memorial Theatre Museum, organizing exhibitions on the work of Shogo Ota, Daisan Erochika and contemporary theatre. Her writing includes books on Angura theatre and 1960′s theatre, while her research areas include political organs and outdoor theatre.
This talk will look at the emerging role of the dramaturge in Japanese theatre. Inviting two young dramaturges who have worked on productions taking part in Festival/Tokyo 2014, the discussion will share examples of dramaturgy in praxis in the local theatre scene. It will also form a follow-up to the second part of F/T14 Symposium on November 24th, which will look back on ten years of dramaturgy in Japan.
Panelists: Chinatsu Kudo, Kako Kishimoto
Moderator: Masahiko Yokobori
November 26th (Wed) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Language: Japanese
Chinatsu Kudo
Playwright, Director, Dramaturge for Watanabe Genshiro Shoten
A playwright and director, Kudo is the head of Usagi-an and is also attached to Seinendan’s directors department. She completed post-graduate studies in theatre at New York University and after a time at an ad agency she began to specialize in dramaturgy. She returned to Japan and has been working in Japanese theatre since 2003. Her plays include “Paamaya-san” and “Mayonaka no taiyo”.
Kako Kishimoto
Director, Translator, Dramaturge for “Invisible Neighbors (inspired by ‘8’)”
Kako Kishimoto is the director and founder of the Tokyo-based multilingual performance company utsubo, which she founded in 2009. She has worked as a translator and dramaturge at Festival/Tokyo 2010 and the World Theatre Festival under Mt. Fuji 2012, which was held at the Shizuoka Performing Arts Center. She holds a B.A. from Waseda University and a M.A. from the University of Tokyo. She is now a MFA candidate at Columbia University, with a concentration in dramaturgy, and a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Tokyo. She received the first prize at Geisou Connect Vol.7, the highly acclaimed young directors festival in Osaka.
After a long career helping to run Festival/Tokyo’s predecessors, Tokyo International Festival of Performing Arts and Tokyo International Arts Festival, Sachio Ichimura this year established a Directors Committee at F/T to control the direction and programming of the festival. A veteran of programming and running large-scale festivals, he will here share his opinions and experiences about the system of festival directorships and what kind of festival director role is needed in Japan today. Asking the questions will be Masao Katayama, another arts administrator with a wealth of experience in Japanese corporate subsidiary and sponsorship.
Guest Speakers: Sachio Ichimura, Masao Katayama
November 29th (Sat) 19:00
Free (priority to reservations)
Capacity: 50 (first come, first served)
Language: Japanese
Sachio Ichimura
Representative, Festival/Tokyo Directors Committee
Born in 1949. He has served as an administrator for Sankai Juku, Toyota Art Management Lecture Director, Park Tower Art Program Advisor, President of Theater TV, Administrative Director of Tokyo International Festival of Performing Arts, and Director of Tokyo International Arts Festival. His long career has seen him work in Japan and overseas in performing arts programming and production, as well as operating cultural facilities, arts management, projects connecting corporations with culture, and NPO research. He is currently Chairman of NPO Arts Network Japan, as well as an associate professor in the Department of Musical Creativity and the Environment at Tokyo University of the Arts.
Masao Katayama
Managing Director, Saison Foundation
Born in Hyogo Prefecture in 1958. After a career at Seibu Department Store he joined the Saison Foundation in 1989 and has been the Managing Director since 2003. He was a research fellow at John Hopkins University from 1994 to 1995, researching subsidiary programs. As well as his role at the Saison Foundation, he is also a lecturer at the Graduate School of Social Design Studies at Rikkyo University, alongside roles in many other organizations such as the Japan Association of Charitable Organizations (JACO), the Japan Foundation Center (JFC), the Association for Corporate Support of the Arts (Mecenat), Arts Council Tokyo, the Civil Society Initiative Fund, among others. He has co-written several books about non-profits and corporate sponsorship.
Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre, Atelier East
1-8-1 Nishi-Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo
Tel: 03-5391-2111
2 minutes’ walk from West Exit of Ikebukuro Station on JR Line, Tokyo Metro, Tobu Tojo Line, and Seibu Ikebukuro Line. (Direct connection to the theatre from Exit 2b.)