Ichikawa Ennosuke II (二代目市川猿之助) (actor 05/21/1888 – 06/12/1963)

Ichikawa En'ō I (初代市川猿翁 from 5/1963 to 6/12/1963)
Ichikawa Danko I (初代市川団子 from 10/1892 to 9/1910)
Kinoshi Masayasu
Ichikawa Ennosuke II (二代目市川猿之助 from 10/1910 to 4/1963)

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Biography:

This actor held this name from October 1910 to April 1963. His father was Ichikawa Danshirō II (1855-1922).

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Kevin Wetmore wrote this entry for the Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism:

"Ichikawa Ennosuke II was a kabuki actor in the Meiji, Taishō, and Shōwa eras who collaborated with artists in the modern drama movement and was instrumental in the Shin Buyō [New Dance] movement. He is regarded as a progressive, even radical artist who reinvigorated kabuki through innovation, and modern and Western influences."

"Born Kinoshi Masayasu, the son of Ichikawa Danshirō II, he began performing child roles in kabuki at an early age, debuting at the Kabuki-za in Tokyo in 1892 under the name Ichikawa Danko I. He spent the next two decades performing traditional kabuki. He also joined Ichikawa Sadanji II and Osanai Kaoru’s Jiyū Gekijō [Free Theater], in 1909, participating in the early development of shingeki. In 1910 he took the name Ichikawa Ennosuke II and performed in plays by modern and shin-kabuki playwright Okamoto Kidō."

"In 1919 Ichikawa travelled to the United States and Europe to experience Western theater and dance. The productions he encountered profoundly shaped his understanding of performance and fired his imagination. Upon his return to Japan he began experimenting with fusions of modern and traditional forms. In September 1919 he premiered an adaptation of the play Sumidagawa [The Sumida River] influenced by Russian ballet. In 1920 he joined other modernist artists to form Shunjūza, a study group and artists’ collective including Osanai Kaoru, Ichikawa Sadanji II, Bandō Jusaburō III, Ichikawa Sumizō VI, and Ichikawa Shōchō II, the last three all kabuki actors, to present plays by Tanizaki Jun’ichiro, Kikuchi Kan, and Okamoto Kidō."