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Fuji Musume (藤娘, The Wisteria Maiden) is a kabuki dance with lyrics written by , choreography by and music by , first performed in 1826. Originally part of a set of five different dances performed as a sequence, Fuji Musume is the only one that has survived. The first time these dances were staged in 1826 at the Nakamura-za in Edo, actor Seki Sanjuro II performed all of them as part of his farewell performance. Fuji Musume remains a popular and famous dance in the kabuki repertoire.

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  • Fuji Musume (en)
  • 藤娘 (ja)
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  • 藤娘(ふじむすめ)は、 1. * 大津絵の画題。娘が黒の塗り笠に藤づくしの衣装で藤の花枝をかたげている姿。 2. * 大津絵に題をとった歌舞伎舞踊(日本舞踊)の演目、及びその伴奏の長唄。 藤娘の姿は多くの日本人形や羽子板の押絵にも用いられている。 (ja)
  • Fuji Musume (藤娘, The Wisteria Maiden) is a kabuki dance with lyrics written by , choreography by and music by , first performed in 1826. Originally part of a set of five different dances performed as a sequence, Fuji Musume is the only one that has survived. The first time these dances were staged in 1826 at the Nakamura-za in Edo, actor Seki Sanjuro II performed all of them as part of his farewell performance. Fuji Musume remains a popular and famous dance in the kabuki repertoire. (en)
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  • (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Fuji_Musume_(Wisteria_Maiden).jpg
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  • Seki Sanjuro II playing the Wisteria Maiden at the Nakamura-za, print by Utagawa Kunisada (en)
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  • Wisteria Maiden (en)
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  • Fuji Musume (藤娘, The Wisteria Maiden) is a kabuki dance with lyrics written by , choreography by and music by , first performed in 1826. Originally part of a set of five different dances performed as a sequence, Fuji Musume is the only one that has survived. The first time these dances were staged in 1826 at the Nakamura-za in Edo, actor Seki Sanjuro II performed all of them as part of his farewell performance. One of many revisions to the play, playwright and actor created a new, more supernatural version of the dance, staged for the first time in March 1937 at the Kabuki-za. In this version, the maiden becomes the spirit of the wisteria. The next year, performances of the dance by at the Minami-za in Kyoto and at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo, helped popularized the dance. Fuji Musume remains a popular and famous dance in the kabuki repertoire. (en)
  • 藤娘(ふじむすめ)は、 1. * 大津絵の画題。娘が黒の塗り笠に藤づくしの衣装で藤の花枝をかたげている姿。 2. * 大津絵に題をとった歌舞伎舞踊(日本舞踊)の演目、及びその伴奏の長唄。 藤娘の姿は多くの日本人形や羽子板の押絵にも用いられている。 (ja)
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character in play
  • Wisteria Maiden
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