Schools |
All five |
Category |
The Fourth Group Noh |
Author |
Kanze Motomasa |
Subject |
Unknown A story of poem divination at Ise appears in Kasshi Yawa (Night Stories of Kasshi) and other sources. The Dance of the Hells is a style of dance incorporated in a then-popular form of entertainment depicting scenes in the hells. One such example of an infernal scene is “Yūki Nyūdō Jigoku ni Otsuru koto” (“An Account of Monk Yūki Falling into a Hell”), chapter 20 of the Taiheiki (Chronicle of Great Peace). |
Season |
Summer (April in the lunar calendar) |
Scene | The foot of Mount Hakusan in Kaga Province |
Characters |
Shite |
Male Shaman Named Watarai |
Kokata | Kōgiku-maru |
Tsure (Waki in Komparu, Kongoh, and Kita schools) |
Villager (Man) |
Masks |
Shite |
Wears no mask or a mask of kantan-otoko, waka-otoko, or imawaka |
Costumes |
Shite |
Shirotare (a type of wig made of white hair), okina-eboshi (eboshi-style headdress worn by old male or Shinto priest characters), white headband, yore-kariginu (creped kariginu-style kimono worn by male characters), kitsuke / atsuita (a type of short-sleeved kimono mainly worn by male characters), hakama in ōkuchi-style (white or scarlet), koshi-obi (belt), and a fan. Holding a small bow from which are hanging some long strips of paper. |
Kokata |
Kitsuke / nuihaku (a short-sleeved kimono with embroidery and with gold or silver flakes placed on the fabric), nagabakama (a hakama-style trousers with long-stretched trains), and a fan. |
Tsure |
Tops and bottoms of suō (a long-sleeved unlined hemp kimono with matching top and bottom, worn by male characters), kitsuke / muji-noshime (short-sleeved kimono with no pattern, worn as the innermost layer of the costumes of male characters of lesser standing) or dan-noshime (short-sleeved kimono with very wide stripes), a small sword, and a fan. |
Number of scenes |
One |
Length |
About 1 hour 10 minutes |