Protected: Week 4: Lament in the Night
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In commemoration of the 10th anniversary of the Northern Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Nuclear Disaster of 2011, OTONOWA will share music and reflections from their tours 2013-2019.
OTONOWA, or “sound circle”, is the ever-evolving musical creation of legendary jazz drummer Akira Tana. What began with a trio formed to play a benefit for victims of the Northern Japan Earthquake and Tsunami disaster of 2011, has emerged as an ensemble and a cause. OTONOWA has travelled year after year to share the healing power of music, to connect with the survivors and to support on-going rebuilding efforts in the Tohoku region.
OTONOWA musicians – Akira Tana (drums), Art Hirahara (piano), Masaru Koga (shakuhachi, saxophone, flute), and Noriyuki Ken Okada (bass), offer a unique sound melding American jazz craft to interpret traditional Japanese folk melodies of their ancestry. Guests: Saki Kono (vocals) and Takahiro Dai (trumpet).
“The quartet – recently returned from a goodwill tour of northern Japanese villages devastated by the 2011 tsunami and earthquake – gave a performance that seemed love-filled and compassionate. At times it felt like a lullaby . . . It was exquisite.” _ San Jose Mercury
“2011’s terrible earthquake and tsunami in Japan were to become a crucible for Otonowa, which launched this brotherhood of Japanese-American jazz luminaries into a program of touring and recording to raise both funds and spirits for the survivors. You’ll hear unique melodies you’ve never heard in highly original settings you’re unlikely soon to forget.” – Stanford Jazz Workshop
The program is hosted by J-Sei in conjunction with its 30th Annual Crab Feed. RSVP on Eventbrite for this free virtual program, “Coming Full Circle: Otonowa“.
Main Photo: Akira Tana, Art Hirahara, Saki Kono, Ken Okada, Masaru Koga
Photo credit: Gabi Nakashima
Movie fans might be amazed to learn that a Japanese man was one of the biggest stars of Hollywood’s silent film era of the 1910s and early 1920s. Several years before Rudolph Valentino made his film debut, Sessue Hayakawa was the highest-paid performer of his day and rivaled other stars such as Charlie Chaplin in popularity with audiences — particularly white women, who screamed and swooned over his smoldering screen presence. In addition, his acting performances stood out for their sensitivity and restraint compared to the hammy overacting of the day. More than 100 years later, Sessue Hayakawa’s stardom at his peak remains unprecedented.
Yet, Hayakawa also had to deal on- and off-screen with racial prejudice and stereotypes at a time of extreme anti-Asian discrimination and growing anti-Japanese sentiment. Reactions from Japanese American communities and movie audiences in Japan were mixed as well, due to the limited and problematic types of roles that he was allowed to play.
Join us to watch a Sessue Hayakawa movie together (silent film with English intertitles; about one hour long), followed by a discussion with noted scholar and expert Professor Daisuke Miyao.
RSVP with “Feb Movie Night” in the subject line.
Daisuke Miyao is Professor and Hajime Mori Chair in Japanese Language and Literature at U.C. San Diego. He is the author of Sessue Hayakawa: Silent Cinema and Transnational Stardom (2007), which won the Book Award in History from the Assoc. of Asian American Studies and the John Hope Franklin Book Award from Duke University. His most recent book is Japonisme and the Birth of Cinema (Duke Univ. Press 2020).
For movie night, you can order a specially made obento from My Friend Yuji.
This month’s offering is:
Wafu Miso Beef Curry
(Japanese-style miso curry with braised beef, mixed vegetables and homemade pickles)
Click on the button below to place your order. The price is $18 per bento. Please order early; quantities are limited.
To order: When you click on the button below, it will take you directly to a pop-up order form on the My Friend Yuji webpage, where you first select a pickup time. The next window will allow you to select the number of bento (click the “plus” sign to increase the number), and select your pick-up time, then click the “View order” bar at the bottom to complete your order and pay.
You can pick up your bento at the selected pick up time at J-Sei on Friday, Feb. 12. Please remember to wear a mask and observe social distance protocol. Thank you!
Thanks to you, J-Sei At the Movies recently celebrated its third anniversary! We look forward to more creative programming with educational and inspiring Japanese and Japanese American films. We are especially grateful for the up close and personal chats with filmmakers as we learn so much from the exchange.
We love having a growing and enthusiastic audience. You are the best! We welcome any donations to help us offset costs for Movie Night. Thanks for considering this.