Musei Tokugawa Explained

Musei Tokugawa
Birth Name:Toshio Fukuhara
Birth Date:13 April 1894
Birth Place:Masuda, Shimane, Japan
Nationality:Japanese
Occupation:Film actor, raconteur

was a Japanese benshi, actor, raconteur, essayist, and radio and television personality.

Career

Musei (as he was called) first came to prominence as a benshi, a narrator of films during the silent era in Japan. He was celebrated for his restrained but erudite narration that was popular among intellectual film fans.[1] He concentrated on foreign films such as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari at high-class theaters like the Aoikan and the Musashinokan, but also performed Japanese works such as Teinosuke Kinugasa's experimental masterpiece A Page of Madness (1926).[2]

As the silent era ended, Musei switched to storytelling on stage and on radio, and also began acting and doing narrations in films.

He was also famous for his essays, humorous novels, and autobiographical writings, publishing nearly fifty books in his life.[3] With the advent of television in Japan, Musei also became a prominent presence in that medium.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Dym, Jeffrey A. "Tokugawa Musei: A Portrait Sketch of One of Japan's Greatest Narrative Artists." In Praise of Film Studies: Essays in Honor of Makino Mamoru. Eds. Aaron Gerow and Abé Mark Nornes (Kinema Club, 2001).
  2. Book: Gerow, Aaron. Aaron Gerow

    . Aaron Gerow. A Page of Madness: Cinema and Modernity in 1920s Japan. Center for Japanese Studies, University of Michigan. 2008. 53. 978-1-929280-51-3.

  3. [:ja:徳川夢声#.E8.91.97.E6.9B.B8|Tokugawa Musei chosho]