Just a handful of children tread the boards in the ranks of Japan's kabuki actors, part of a tradition that is hundreds of years old
Like most 10-year-olds in Japan, Maholo Terajima enjoys baseball and video games, but recently his schedule has also included lessons in swordfighting, choreography and fan dancing — preparations for his kabuki debut. The French-Japanese child made his first appearance to rapturous applause this week under his new stage name, Onoe Maholo, at Tokyo's Kabuki-za theatre, the storied home of the classical artform.
He joins just a handful of children who tread the boards in the ranks of Japan's kabuki actors, part of a tradition that is hundreds of years old.
"Practice is hard," the soft-spoken Terajima said, conceding he is sometimes jealous of friends who don't have hours of training after school.
"I need to make sure not to get the choreography or the lines wrong, or to forget movements for a fighting scene."
Balancing school and kabuki is "tough", he added. "But I'll do it."