Mexico City /
It was hypnotic. Also exciting. The Japanese theater and dance show that opened the third – and last – week of the 52nd International Cervantino Festival, Hiroshima Kaguraamazed the attendees who filled the Alhóndiga de Granaditas, because the two productions that made it up, Tsuchigumo and Yamata-no-Orochithey were colorful, synchronized, historical. More than one viewer said ‘perfection’.
He Kagura It is, according to the Cervantino website, “a form of dance-theater that means entertainment of the gods.” This ancient artistic representation came to Guanajuato to amaze with two legends that make up the identity of the Japanese country: Tsuchigumothe story of a spider-demon who, out of ambition, wants to kill Raiko Minamoto, a member of royalty. AND Yamata no Orochiwhich tells the epic of the god Susanoo when he defeats an eight-headed snake to avoid the sacrifice of a young woman.
In both stories, the artists execute in a masterful way, for example: that cadence and accuracy so that, between turns when they are fighting with the spider-demon, they do not stumble or collide with each other. Or when the god Susanoo, armed only with his blessed sword, rips off the fierce and sparkling heads of the snake.
hc