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'''Bunroku Shishi''' (a pen name for ''Toyoo Iwata''; b. July 1, 1893, [[Yokohama]]; d. Dec. 13, 1969) was a Japanese [[writer]] and director of the |
'''Bunroku Shishi''' (a pen name for ''Toyoo Iwata''; b. July 1, 1893, [[Yokohama]]; d. Dec. 13, 1969) was a Japanese [[writer]] and director of the [[Bungakuza|Bungakuza Theater]] in [[Tokyo]]. |
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In 1922 he traveled to [[France]] to study modern [[French theater]], and worked in the atelier of [[Jacques Copeau]]. |
In 1922 he traveled to [[France]] to study modern [[French theater]], and worked in the atelier of [[Jacques Copeau]]. |
Revision as of 01:53, 13 June 2015
Bunroku Shishi (a pen name for Toyoo Iwata; b. July 1, 1893, Yokohama; d. Dec. 13, 1969) was a Japanese writer and director of the Bungakuza Theater in Tokyo.
In 1922 he traveled to France to study modern French theater, and worked in the atelier of Jacques Copeau.
Selected books
- Ecchan, (Little Etsuko, 1936)
- Ten'ya Wan'ya (Chaos, 1949)
- Jiyu Gakko, (1950) Published in English in 2006 as School of Freedom by Lynne E. Riggs, ISBN 1-929280-40-8.
- Yassa Mossa, (Helter-Skelter, 1952)
- Musume to watashi, (My Daughter And I, 1956, was made into both a TV-series and a movie)
- Hakoneyama, (Mount Hakone, 1962)
References
- 牧村健一郎『獅子文六の二つの昭和』朝日新聞出版, 2009 (Makimura Kenichirō, Shishi Bunroku no futatsu no Shōwa, Asahi Shinbun Shuppan, 2009)