Noh Hamlet ? : The Key to Unravel “Noh” 『能ハムレット』とは?「能

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融合文化研究 第 20 号
February 2014
Noh Hamlet ? : The Key to Unravel “Noh”
A Lecture at the University of Chester, UK, 15th October, 2013
『能ハムレット』とは?「能」鑑賞の鍵
UEDA Munakata Kuniyoshi
上田(宗片)邦義
Abstract:
これは 2013 年 10 月 15 日、英国チェスター大学における筆者の『英語能ハムレット』独吟独舞
公演に配布された『能ハムレット』鑑賞資料の一部である。能はドラマか、それともオペラか、あるいはバレ
ーか。そのいずれでもなく、そのすべてである。能は、謡いと舞いと劇を基本とする総合芸術。14・5 世紀に
禅の影響下、観阿弥・世阿弥父子によって大成された日本最初の演劇戯曲で精神性を尊重する。今は広く世界
で鑑賞される詩劇となった。緊張感や簡素・静寂・幽玄の美、秘すれば花、が尊重される。歌舞伎がもっぱら
この世を扱うのに対し、能の関心は来世に及ぶ。それゆえ「生か死か、それが最大の問題」であるハムレット
は能の主人公に相応しい。だが長い間、夏目漱石の提唱にもかかわらず、シェイクスピア能は生まれず、また
一音一音を強く謡う謡いは、単語の一音節を強く発音し、子音が多い英語では不可能と考えられてきた。宗片
は好きなシェイクスピアの英語のせりふを、好きな謡いの節で謡いたかった。そして 1980 年代についに英語
謡曲は実現した。『英語能ハムレット』である。さて、能を理解する鍵は主題への興味とともに想像力を働か
せることである。特に独吟独舞の場合は、ハムレットのせりふも、オフィーリアのせりふも、さらに地謡も一
人で謡いながら舞うため、だれのせりふか、聞き分けなければならない。また、舞台正面に小袖(着物)が出
されたら、「ああ、あれはオフィーリアかもしれない。すでに埋葬されたオフィーリアかも」などと想像をた
くましくすること」「難解とされる能鑑賞の鍵は想像力」
。後で質問に答え、皆で祝言の謡い「高砂」を謡う。
Key words: Noh, Zeami, Zen Buddhism, Shakespeare, Noh Hamlet, English Noh
能、世阿弥、禅、シェイクスピア、
『能ハムレット』
、英語能
―――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――――
Lecture:
・What is Noh? Is it drama, opera or ballet? None of these and all of these. Noh is a composite art based on
the three elements: singing, dancing and drama.
・The Japanese life and culture in the middle ages, 13th , 14th , and 15th centuries, were strongly influenced
by Zen Buddhism, which was imported from India through China in 12th and 13th centuries.
It is
known that Zeami, the founder of Noh, practiced Zen, whose purpose is to experience a spiritual
enlightenment.
In spite of such facts, Noh is today a poetic opera which may be appreciated
universally.
・There are three traditional theatre arts in Japan: Noh, Kabuki, and Bunraku puppet theatre.
founded in
14th
Noh was
century by Kan’ami and Zeami, father and son, as spiritual type of drama. Kabuki and
Bunraku are scions of Noh, both beginning in 17th century as more or less mundane compared with
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上田邦義
『能ハムレット』とは?「能」鑑賞の鍵
Noh.
・Noh is an intense dance drama―where intensity is expressed in quiet, controlled movement, where
silence can be more significant than speech or music, and its aesthetic communication with the
audience avoids anything overt.
The quality aimed at, at all times, is subtlety.
Zeami said, “Keep it
secret, and it is the flower.” The actor’s seeming lack of expressiveness nevertheless aims to move the
audience. The experience of Noh could be the experience of a lifetime.
・Noh is a drama whose texts are highly poetic, and whose presentation must be in every point beautiful.
And Noh is concerned with not only this world but the world from where no traveler returns.
・Such drama must be the perfect theatre form in which to present a man whose obsession is “nobleness”
―as in the soliloquy:
To be or not to be, that is the question;
Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,
Or to take arms against a sea of troubles,…
・Noh singing requires to sing each syllable of every word stressed, prolonged, and meaningful. Noh
singing in English, therefore, seems impossible, as was taken for granted until the 1970s.
・I wished to sing my favourite lines of Shakespeare in my favourite Noh melodies. I wished to adapt
Hamlet into a Noh play. It was impossible until 1980. But one day I noticed….
・The key to unravel Noh is to work your imagination. In order to appreciate Noh, it is imperative that you
work your imagination.
Noh Hamlet (The text as One Man Show by Kuniyoshi Munakata, October 15, 2013)
Hamlet: O, that this too too solid flesh would melt,
ハムレット: ああ、この余りにも固い肉体が溶けて
Thaw and resolve itself into a dew !
とろけてひと滴の露となってしまえばいい。さも
Or that the Everlasting had not fix’d
なくば、自殺はならぬという永遠の掟がなかった
His canon ’gainst self-slaughter! O God! God!
ならば。―おお神よ!神よ!この世のあらゆる営
How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable,
みがなんと浅ましく厭わしく無益に思えることか。
Seem to me all the uses of this world!
忌々しい、これは雑草のはびこる庭だ。成長し種を
Fie on’t! ah fie! ’tis an unweeded garden,
つけている。下等な連中がこの世を完全に支配して
That grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature
ている!ああ、こういうことになろうとは!
Possess it merely. That it should come to this!
たったふた月。いや、ふた月にもならぬ。父王が
But two months dead: nay, not so much, not two:
亡くなられて。すぐれた王であった。今の王に比べ、
So excellent a king; that was, to this,
太陽神ハイペリオンと半人半獣のサチュロスの違
Hyperion to a satyr; so loving to my mother
いだ。母をあれほど愛しておられた。強い風が母の
That he might not beteem the winds of heaven
顔に当たるのをただ見ていることはできなかった。
Visit her face too roughly. Heaven and earth!
おお、天よ!大地よ! こんなことまで思い出さね
Must I remember?
ばならぬとは。母は父にすがっていたものだ。
why, she would hang on him,
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融合文化研究 第 20 号
February 2014
As if increase of appetite had grown
まるで食べる程に食欲が増すかの如くに。それが
By what it fed on: and yet, within a month―
なんとひと月も経たぬにーああ、もうこんなことを
Let me not think on’t―Frailty, thy name is woman!―
考えるのは止そうー脆きもの、その名は女ーまだ
A little month, or ere those shoes were old
ひと月。あの時に履いた靴がまだ真新しいというに。
With which she follow’d my poor father’s body,
父の亡骸につき添った。ナオビのように泣きぬれて。
Like Niobe, all tears:―why she, even she―
その母が、正にその同じ人が。ああ、獣さえ、理性
O God! a beast, that wants discourse of reason,
を持たぬ獣でさえ、いま少し嘆き悲しんだであろう
Would have mourn’d longer―married with my uncle,
ものを。それが叔父と結婚。叔父といえば父の弟。
My father’s brother, but no more like my father
とはいえ、父とはまるで似ていない。僕があの
Than I to Hercules: within a month:
怪力無双のヘラクレスに似ていないと同様。ひと
Ere yet the salt of most unrighteous tears
月も経たぬ間に。偽りの涙の塩が、あの赤く
Had left the flushing in her galled eyes,
泣きはらした目にまだ残っているというのに。
She married. O, most wicked speed, to post
もう結婚してしもうた。何という悪どい素早さ
With such dexterity to incestuous sheets!
ー不倫の床に急ぐとは!これは善いことではない。
It is not nor it cannot come to good:
善いことが起ころうはずもない。ああ、わが胸よ、
But break my heart; for I must hold my tongue.
張り裂けてしまえ、口外は出来ぬゆえ。
The lines to follow are the same as printed on pp.
以下、『融合文化研究』19 号、7-9ページ掲
7 - 9 in The ISHCC Bulletin No. 19, performed in
載(2012 年 12 月マンチェスター公演)に同じ。
Manchester in December, 2012.
See References.
参考文献 (References) 参照。
From “The Post-performance Discussion”:
As I said before, Noh singing requires the singing of each syllable stressed and prolonged.
So it had
been supposed to be impossible in English.
My first attempt was realized in 1974 while I was at Harvard University.
At Emerson Hall I showed
my experimental Noh dance “Hamlet’s first soliloquy” (“O that this too too solid flesh would melt…”) in
Noh choreography, but still I could not sing Noh melody in English; I just spoke as I have shown you today.
I returned to Japan in 1975, encouraged by students and teachers to continue my study and make up a
complete Noh play “Hamlet”.
Back in Japan, around 1980 I found I was able to sing Shakespearean verse in Noh style. One day I
noticed that mono-syllabic English words can be sung in Noh style: “To be or not to be” just like in
Japanese “Ta-ka-sa-go-ya-”. Then after various trials, I found even longer words could be sung in Noh
style.
By the way, there are two ways of singing in Noh style: “Tsuyo-gin” (strong singing) and “Yowa-gin”
(soft singing). Also, both of them are sung in a rhythmic or non-rhythmic way. So, there are four different
ways of Noh singing. The Noh texts are mostly written in verse. And there are some other parts written in
prose to be spoken. (So, Noh texts are very much like Shakespearean plays, mostly in blank verse, iambic
pentameter, and some parts in prose.) I have shown you tonight these five styles of delivery in my solo
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上田邦義
『能ハムレット』とは?「能」鑑賞の鍵
performance of Noh Hamlet.
Incidentally, if you compare the texts of Zeami and Shakespeare, the representative dramatists of the
East and West, you could write your MA thesis, and if you compare their dramaturgies, you might be able
to write even a doctoral dissertation.
Now, Zeami, the founder of Noh in the 14th century, said repeatedly that the two essential elements of
Noh are singing and dancing. In other words, all other elements, such as Noh orchestra music, or
gorgeous costumes and various masks, or props and stages and so on, are of secondary importance. The
most important hand prop is the fan. The folding fan was invented in Japan, perhaps some time in the
eighth century.
In Noh, “dancing” means all movements, including still standing and slow walking as if sliding. Of
course there are genuine dances as you have seen one before the last scene of the play.
Tonight I used shakuhachi (bamboo flute) music for the dance. Shakuhachi has not been used in Noh
orchestra after the age of Zeami for five or six centuries, but I love the spiritual or religious sound and
sometimes I collaborate with shakuhachi players. Tonight’s piece was composed and played by an
American artist, Marcus Grandon.
Ernest Fenollosa said in one of his papers posthumously edited by Ezra Pound, “All the slow and
beautiful postures…lead up to the climax of the hero’s dance.” Arthur Waley was mostly concerned with
giving the dramatic text of Noh to the Western reader in essentially literary terms.
I intended to show you tonight only the essence of Noh: the poetic text, its Noh style singing and Noh
style dancing.
And I sang all lines, not only of Hamlet but the chorus and Ophelia and Horatio.
That
was the reason you were expected to exercise your imagination. The key to unravel Noh is to work your
imagination. In order to appreciate Noh, it is imperative that you work your imagination.
Zeami, in his first thesis, Fuushi-Kaden or Flower Transmitting Thesis, written in the beginning of the
15th century, says that the purpose of Noh is to promote the happiness and longevity of all people, men and
women, high and low.
The Comment after the performance:
Thank you so much for your performance of Noh Hamlet. This was an unforgettable theatrical version
of Hamlet. As a spectator I was both drawn in to the work and challenged by it. The rhythm of the whole
performance gave me time to really exercise my imagination, to connect with Shakespeare's verse in a
starkly intimate way. The line that went straight to my heart was 'All that lives must die.' I have read and
listened to this many times, but never heard it in the way I heard it that night.
The post-performance discussion was very much appreciated and we would very much welcome you
back to perform next time you are in the UK. I have put a short clip of the work on the Facebook pages of
your Centre for Research in to Education and creativity through Arts Practice (RECAP)
https://www.facebook.com/creativityresearch?bookmark_t=page
http://www.chester.ac.uk/recap
All best wishes, Allan Owen, The University of Chester
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融合文化研究 第 20 号
February 2014
References:
George Brandt & Kuniyoshi Munakata: “Some Notes on Noh Dancing”, Theatre Research International,
Vo.7. No.1 (winter 1981/82), Oxford U. P.
Kuniyoshi Munakata: Hamlet in Noh Style, Kenkyusha, 1991
Kuniyoshi Munakata Ueda: “Some Noh Adaptation of Shakespeare”, Performing Shakespeare in Japan,
ed. Minami, Caruthers, Gillies, Cambridge U. P., 2001
Kuniyoshi Ueda: Noh Adaptation of Shakespeare, Hokuseido, 2001
Kuniyoshi Ueda: “Noh Hamlet in Japanese: Script Used for the Premiere”, The ISHCC Bulletin, No. 5,
2005
Kuniyoshi Ueda: “Noh Hamlet: An English Translation of the Japanese Version Noh Hamlet 2004”, The
ISHCC Bulletin, No.7, 2006
Kuniyoshi Ueda: “Noh: King Lear Premiered by Madam ADACHI Reiko”, The ISHCC Bulletin, No.10,
2007
Vallaincourt MATSUOKA Amy: “Noh: King Lear”, The ISHCC Bulletin, No. 11, 2008
Kazumi YAMAGATA: “On an Appreciation of the Noh Play King Lear”, The ISHCC Bulletin, No.13, 2009
Mari BOYD: “Spiritual Plenitude in Noh: King Lear”, The ISHCC Bulletin, No. 16, 2011
Motoo KAWATA: “An Inquiry into the Birth of Noh Hamlet---Zen as the MIRROR of Shakespeare---”, The
ISHCC Bulletin, No. 17, 2011
Kuniyoshi Munakata Ueda: “Script: Hamlet in Noh Style as a Solo Performance”, The ISHCC Bulletin,
No.19, 2013
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