A. Osaka B. Tokyo C. Kyoto D. Nagoya 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 B。解析:在东京(Tokyo)可以欣赏到歌舞伎(Kabuki)这种日本传统戏剧形式,大阪、京都和名古屋虽然也有日本传统文化元素,但歌舞伎主要与东京联系紧密,所以选B。反馈 收藏
The interior of the previous Kabukiza Theater, a modern kabuki theater Where to watch it In the olden days, mainstream kabuki was performed at selected venues in big cities likeEdo(present dayTokyo),OsakaandKyoto. Local versions of kabuki also took place in rural towns. These days, kabuki pla...
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东京歌舞伎剧场(Kabuki Theater)、 吉卜力博物馆(Jibuli Museum) [校外参访景点将根据参与者兴趣选出] 3. 假日寄宿家庭体验 假... oiapu.pixnet.net|基于4个网页 3. 歌舞伎座 Well, the famous歌舞伎座(Kabuki Theater), which is in 银座 (Ginza, Tokyo), is scheduled to be demolished in April 2010...
Ornate kabuki theater in the Ginza District of Tokyo.kobakou on Flickr.com Meiji trends in kabuki continued into the early 20th century, but late in the Taisho period (1912 - 1926), another cataclysmic event put the theater tradition in peril. Tokyo's Great Earthquake of 1923, and the fire...
Kabukiza offers a solution that could have been lifted out of the Tokyo Cheapo manual (yes, there is one). It’s called the “Hitomakumi” (“single-act”) tickets and it’s devilishly hidden in the Japanese-language website of the theater, in the “News” section, although some ...
Last Christmas I visited the Kabuki-za theater in Tokyo to experiencekabuki—one of Japan’s traditional forms of drama, dating back to 1603. As the curtain slid aside, it revealed a world of breathtaking beauty: a stage like a painted scroll, where actors in bright costumes and makeup act...
Kabuki is truly a theatrical spectacle, combining form, color and sound into one of the world's great theatrical traditions. But as far as dipping your toe into this particular cultural pond is concerned, a half hour spent at theKabukizatheater in Tokyo,Shin-Kabukizain Osaka or theMinamizain...
Twitter Google Share on Facebook kabuki (redirected fromKabuki Theatre) Medical Encyclopedia Related to Kabuki Theatre:Noh theatre Ka·bu·ki (kə-bo͞o′kē) n. A type of popular Japanese drama, evolved from the older Noh theater, in which elaborately costumed performers, nowadays men only...
Kabuki and bunraku theater developed as popular forms of entertainment in the seventeenth century. Kabuki combined contemporary music, acrobatics, and mimicry like that of No, and it was originally performed by troupes that included actresses. Women were soon barred from appearing, so the often ...