Photographer Unknown, The Kabuki Player
Tag: kabuki
David Mack
David Mack, “Abe Sapien #31”, Illustration for Variant Cover
David Mack is an American comic book artist and writer, known for his creator-owned series “Kabuki” and for co-creating with artist and writer Joe Quesada the deaf Marvel Comics superhero “Echo”. He graduated in 1995 with the Dean’s Scholarship for Academics and with a BFA in Graphic Design. His “Kabuki” was first published with Caliber Press in 1994 and is now released through Marvel Comics’ imprint Icon Comics.
Kabuki Theater
Kabuki Theater
In the years 1629–1673 Kabuki theater began its transition to yarō-kabuki. The modern all-male kabuki, known as yarō-kabuki (young man kabuki), was established during these decades. After women were banned from performing, cross-dressed male actors, known as onnagata (“female-role”) or oyama, took over. Young (adolescent) men were preferred for women’s roles due to their less masculine appearance and the higher pitch of their voices compared to adult men. In addition, wakashū (adolescent male) roles, played by young men often selected for attractiveness, became common, and were often presented in an erotic context.
Along with the change in the performer’s gender came a change in the emphasis of the performance: increased stress was placed on drama rather than dance. Performances were equally ribald, and the male actors too were available for prostitution (to both female and male customers). Audiences frequently became rowdy, and brawls occasionally broke out, sometimes over the favors of a particularly handsome young actor, leading the shogunate to ban first onnagata and then wakashū roles. Both bans were rescinded by 1652.



