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Tradition Triumphs in ‘Buyo’ Anthology

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Hanayagi Takujiro belongs to a Japanese family with a history of choreography for the Grand Kabuki dating back more than 200 years. However, his clan’s involvement with Western-style modernism remains all too obviously recent. So you can guess which type of assignment found the handsome 34-year-old dancer-choreographer looking brilliantly authoritative and which hopelessly silly Sunday afternoon at the Japan America Theatre.

In “The World of Hanayagi Takujiro: Anthology of Buyo,” he joined dancers Hanayagi Takubei (his father), Hanayagi Kazuayaki (no relation), Bando Hidesomi and a host of distinguished musicians in a survey of Japanese traditional dance. It began with “Ayatsuri Sambaso” from 1853, in which father and son portray a puppeteer and his accident-prone marionette. Both displayed masterly mime skills and great vigor and each soon ventured character-dance solos requiring even more concentrated power and subtlety: “Kuroda Bushi” for Takubei, “Shana O” for Takujiro.

Sweeping gestures with a fan, forceful walking steps accented with a thunderous stamp, the use of the eyes to convey nobility and intelligence: These tests of artistry revealed a dance culture prioritizing meticulous movement detail and performer precision, qualities also evident in the solo “Akikaze no Kyoku,” choreographed by Takujiro and danced by Kazuayaki.

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After intermission came lush contemporary music from the group Kokin-gumi, with Takujiro and Kazuayaki looking as if they’d wandered into the wrong party but were determined to keep dancing along in a bastardized contemporary style until they found the exit. The relentless use of a smoke machine reinforced the sense of foggy overkill.

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