Madame Fujima Kansuma

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JANM Digital Film Festival: Madame Fujima Kansuma

Madame Fujima Kansuma

映画上映

JANM Digital Film Festival: Madame Fujima Kansuma

FREE

Join us as we dive into films produced by the Japanese American National Museum’s Frank H. Watase Media Arts Center! We will be releasing a selection of films, some for a limited time only. Organize a (virtual) screening party with your friends or family or just get cozy and enjoy the JANM Digital Film Festival from the safety of your own home. We will also have Q&A sessions with the filmmakers and others involved in the projects.

Born May 9, 1918, Madame Fujima Kansuma is a celebrated Japanese American kabuki dancer and teacher with a career beginning in the early 1940s and spanning decades. From learning under the “God of Theatre,” Onoe Kikugoro VI, in Japan to being invited to travel across different concentration camps to perform her pieces while incarcerated during World War II, she has dedicated her life to sharing the culture of kabuki and Japanese heritage in the United States. She has received a number of awards: most notably the Order of the Precious Crown, Apricot, by the Japanese government in 1985, and the National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1987.

In 2018, at 100 years old, she was the choreographer for the Los Angeles Nisei Week Parade. In the same year, the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center hosted a birthday celebration for which this film was produced. Madame Fujima Kansuma continues to teach and choreograph along with her daughter, Miyako Tachibana, who also became a master kabuki dancer and teacher. Madame Kansuma’s legacy continues through her and the hundreds of students with whom she has crossed paths.

Madame Fujima Kansuma will be released on JANM’s YouTube channel on Friday, June 19. Watch the film and then join us for a Q&A on the legacy of Madame Kansuma with daughter Miyako Tachibana, longtime student June Berk, and filmmaker Yuka Murakami on Friday, June 26, at 6 p.m. (PDT).

Learn more about Madame Kansuma and the film.

Funding has been provided by California Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as a part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act economic stabilization plan of 2020.

Free

2020年06月19日(金)

11:00 AM ~ 12:00 PM PDT

We encourage you to subscribe to our YouTube channel so you will be notified when the video is streaming live. You can also follow us on social media (Facebook | Twitter | Instagram).

FREE

Join us as we dive into films produced by the Japanese American National Museum’s Frank H. Watase Media Arts Center! We will be releasing a selection of films, some for a limited time only. Organize a (virtual) screening party with your friends or family or just get cozy and enjoy the JANM Digital Film Festival from the safety of your own home. We will also have Q&A sessions with the filmmakers and others involved in the projects.

Born May 9, 1918, Madame Fujima Kansuma is a celebrated Japanese American kabuki dancer and teacher with a career beginning in the early 1940s and spanning decades. From learning under the “God of Theatre,” Onoe Kikugoro VI, in Japan to being invited to travel across different concentration camps to perform her pieces while incarcerated during World War II, she has dedicated her life to sharing the culture of kabuki and Japanese heritage in the United States. She has received a number of awards: most notably the Order of the Precious Crown, Apricot, by the Japanese government in 1985, and the National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1987.

In 2018, at 100 years old, she was the choreographer for the Los Angeles Nisei Week Parade. In the same year, the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center hosted a birthday celebration for which this film was produced. Madame Fujima Kansuma continues to teach and choreograph along with her daughter, Miyako Tachibana, who also became a master kabuki dancer and teacher. Madame Kansuma’s legacy continues through her and the hundreds of students with whom she has crossed paths.

Madame Fujima Kansuma will be released on JANM’s YouTube channel on Friday, June 19. Watch the film and then join us for a Q&A on the legacy of Madame Kansuma with daughter Miyako Tachibana, longtime student June Berk, and filmmaker Yuka Murakami on Friday, June 26, at 6 p.m. (PDT).

Learn more about Madame Kansuma and the film.

Funding has been provided by California Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) as a part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act economic stabilization plan of 2020.

We encourage you to subscribe to our YouTube channel so you will be notified when the video is streaming live. You can also follow us on social media (Facebook | Twitter | Instagram).

This program is presented in partnership with Tadaima! A Community Virtual Pilgrimage by Japanese American Memorial Pilgrimages. The film was produced for the program Fujima Kansuma: 100th Birthday Celebration, a co-presentation of the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center, Japanese American National Museum, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, and the Alliance for California Traditional Arts. It received federal support from the Smithsonian Asian Pacific Initiatives Pool, administered by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center.

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