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Person
| Фамилия, имя | Bandō Sampachi I |
|---|---|
| Иное имя |
Bando Matahachi I
([Предыдущее сценическое имя] Earlier stage name) , Heikyu ([Псевдоним] Pen or literary name) , Ota Sanjuro (shamisen player name) , Tojaku , Bandō Mitsugorō , Bandō Sanpachi ([Иное правописание] Alternate spelling) |
| Пол | [мужчина] Male |
| Национальная культурная самоидентификация | Japanese |
| Страна (страны) проживания | Japan |
| Дата рождения | [Unknown] Unknown |
| Дата смерти | [Янв 11, 1874] January 11, 1874 |
| Виды художественной деятельности | Kabuki |
| Географические связи | Edo (Japan) (historic name) |
| Ссылки (Страницы) |
Kabuki Jinmei Jiten
(p.536) , The Actor's Image: Print Makers of the Katsukawa School (p.476) |
| Примечания | Character types: Shamisen player; evil enemies (kataki yaku); male lead roles (tachiyaku); manservants of samurai (yakko)ï¼ aragoto. Group affiliations: Yamatoya. Bando Sampachi I was a son of Yamatoya Matahachi. He initially was a shamisen player as Ota Sanjuro at Ichimuraza but changed to a kabuki actor. In 1745 he became a student of Ichimura Uzaemon VIII and changed his name to Bando Matahachi. The following year he first appeared on stage in an evil role at the same theater. In 1750 he changed his name to Bando Sampachi and the next year he played a male role and became popular. In 1764 he went to Osaka and adopted Takeda Minosuke. He took Minosuke to Edo and made him take the name Bando Mitsugoro. He retired in 1770. He was good at both jidaimono and sewamono and was skillful as manservants of samurai (yakko aragoto). He was active from 1750 to 1770. |
Associated Items
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