- Source: Hiroshi Koike
Hiroshi Koike (小池博史 Koike Hiroshi born on 25 January 1956, in Japan) is a Japanese director, playwright and choreographer. After his former performing arts company Pappa TARAHUMARA was dissolved in 2012, he formed the Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project (HKBP). In June, 2023, they added the word, Odyssey, to the organization's name to reflect the director's vision of creating art - Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project -Odyssey.
He has conducted physical acting training workshops based on his original method titled “slow movement” all over the world. Up to date, Hiroshi Koike has directed 55 works with Pappa TARAHUMARA and 33 works with Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project -Odyssey.
Early life and career
Koike was born in Hitachi-shi, Ibaraki. When he came to Tokyo, in order to take a college entrance examination for the department of architecture, he was shocked when he saw a film directed by Federico Fellini. That experience led Koike to pursue film making. While studying sociology at Hitotsubashi University, he started to produce a play, rather than a film, because he was told that "movies and theater are the same" by his friends, and ended up hosting a student theater company.
After graduating from university, he worked as a TV director of documentary programs, but left the company after two years. In 1982, he founded Pappa TARAHUMARA with Ogawa Mariko and other friends from college. In 1995, Koike established a school for performing arts, PAI, of which he is the president. Koike was involved in all 55 productions of the group as the director, playwright, and choreographer for 30 years until 2012.
After the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, he decided to dissolve the group in 2012; Koike claimed feeling trapped by Japan and Japanese cultural administration spurred his decision. In the same year, the group held the Papa-Tara Final Festival. In June, soon after the dissolution of Pappa TARAHUMARA, he established the Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project (HKBP). From 2013 through 2021, HKBP produced a theatrical adaptation of the ancient epic Mahabharata with artists from various Asian countries. Other productions of HKBP include The Restaurant of Many Orders, which is based on Kenji Miyazawa's novel, World Series, and "The Firebird Project". The productions tackle the question of what it means to be a human being and how to live in harmony with the world and each other.
Koike's productions have been highly acclaimed worldwide and have been invited by several international festivals and theaters such as the Next Wave Festival at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Koike's works have been performed in 40 countries. In addition to his work with many international artists and productions all over the world, he has also conducted workshops for professional artists and citizens.
Koike has served Tsukuba Art Center as the artistic director from 1997 to 2004, the Asian Performing Arts Forum as a member of the executive committee in 1998, and Japan Foundation as the member of the Special Donation Council from 2005 to 2011.
Slow movement
By converting every movement to a speed of 1/100 or less of the daily speed and communicating in a slow movement, it is said to deepen the awareness of one's "body"; this method is called "slow movement". From the idea that "the brain that thinks and the mind that feels, the internal organs and muscles, the arms, the legs, the head, etc. are all included in the 'body', 'feel the whole' body 'and feel others and things'". In addition, based on this method, many workshops for professionals and citizens are held in Japan and overseas.
Major works
= Pappa TARAHUMARA
=1982 In Honor of the Fragile Thing
1983 Opera in the Dark, La Mangeuse – The Woman Who Eats, Typo – A Life in 5,400 Seconds
1984 Sleep in the Sun, The Black Solar Game, Colors’ Dance
1985 Mary in Blue, Picnic on the Shore
1986 MONK
1987 Pocket of Fever, ALEJO – To Praise the Wind
1988 Zoo of the Sea
1989 Parade
1991 Stone Age
1992 The Bush of Ghost
1994 AO-Blue
1995 Archeology of MACBETH
1996 KUSAMEIKYU – Water Moon Mirror Flower *collaborative project with Zuni
1997 SHIP IN A VIEW, Island
1998 Spring Day
2001 WD, Love Letter
2002 Birds on Board, The Sound of Future SYNC
2003 Blue Brain Bull, Street of Crocodiles Project 1, Spring in Kuala Lumpur
2005 Three Sisters, Heart of Gold-One Hundred Years of Solitude
2006 My Blue Sky, Pappa TARAHUMARA's "Cinderella"
2007 Tokyo⇔Buenos Aires LETTERS
2008 New “Cinderella”, Gulliver& Swift-Writer Jonathan Swift's Cat Cooking Recipes-
2009 Garibaba's strange World, Punk Don Quixote
2010 Nobody, NO BODY, Swift sweets, Snow White
2011 Between the Line
= Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project
=2012 The Restaurant of Many Orders
2013 Mahabharata Part 1
2014 Milky Way Train, Odyssey of Wind
2015 Mahabharata Part 2, Mahabharata Part 2.5
2016 Mahabharata Part 3
2017 World Conference, Mahabharata Part 4
2018 2030 World Drifting, Strawberry Fields
2019 Vagabond~SAKURAGAWA, Endless BRIDGE~The Mhabharata, Fools on the Hill
2020 Seven Nights' Dream
2021 The Mahabharata~Chapter of Desire/Chapter of Tempest
2022 KOSMOS (coproduction with Grotowski Institute)
2023 WE - Entrance and World's Exit
2023 SOUL of Odyssey (coproduction with Kuala Lumpur Shakespeare Players)
2024 N/KOSMOS (coproduction with Grotowski Institute)
2024 Breath TRIPLE
Publications
Long Goodbye – Pappa TARAHUMARA and Its Era (Seigensha Art Publishing, 2011)
Listen to the Body (Shinchosha, 2013)
What's Performing Arts? (Suiseisha, 2017)
The Journey to the Night and the End of the World – The Collection Book of Hiroshi Koike's Works (Suiseisha, 2017)
References
External links
Official website for Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project
Official website for Pappa TARAHUMARA
Official website of Papa-Tara Final Festival
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Yuriko Koike
- Fujiko Fujio
- Ninja Cilik Hattori
- Anime
- Tsundere
- Amachan
- Cerezo Osaka
- Daftar aktor dan aktris sulih suara Indonesia
- Ecchi
- Daftar karakter Kapten Tsubasa
- Hiroshi Koike
- Sponge
- Sreejith Ramanan
- Miyuki Ueta
- Yuriko Koike
- Ghouls 'n Ghosts
- Hiroshi Nakamura (dissident)
- Street Fighter (video game)
- Seijuu Sentai Gingaman
- 2017 Kibō no Tō leadership election