Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'A way of life': The Japanese dancer conquering Spain's flamenco scene

EUR -
AED 4.333486
AFN 78.161055
ALL 96.735966
AMD 450.469935
ANG 2.112645
AOA 1082.044248
ARS 1715.069236
AUD 1.773437
AWG 2.12692
AZN 2.012658
BAM 1.961657
BBD 2.376224
BDT 144.181721
BGN 1.960418
BHD 0.444845
BIF 3498.141012
BMD 1.179983
BND 1.521097
BOB 8.152099
BRL 6.434099
BSD 1.179788
BTN 107.214943
BWP 15.582063
BYN 3.457421
BYR 23127.670746
BZD 2.372814
CAD 1.620795
CDF 2654.96199
CHF 0.936077
CLF 0.027463
CLP 1077.537751
CNY 8.315637
CNH 8.297913
COP 4522.144021
CRC 588.740402
CUC 1.179983
CUP 31.269555
CVE 110.596156
CZK 24.319809
DJF 210.09106
DKK 7.470945
DOP 75.806343
DZD 152.763006
EGP 55.96814
ERN 17.699748
ETB 183.149316
FJD 2.718976
FKP 0.881913
GBP 0.878167
GEL 3.18004
GGP 0.881913
GHS 13.568109
GIP 0.881913
GMD 86.781457
GNF 10259.720486
GTQ 9.03467
GYD 246.829664
HKD 9.17985
HNL 31.084813
HRK 7.540916
HTG 154.511341
HUF 385.20493
IDR 19657.163153
ILS 3.794053
IMP 0.881913
INR 107.271152
IQD 1545.614907
IRR 49689.093028
ISK 148.005086
JEP 0.881913
JMD 189.367018
JOD 0.836563
JPY 182.372288
KES 151.922486
KGS 103.188913
KHR 4723.964724
KMF 495.592785
KPW 1061.985177
KRW 1736.027037
KWD 0.361594
KYD 0.983207
KZT 608.137743
LAK 25560.560721
LBP 105651.120019
LKR 365.230508
LRD 208.827324
LSL 19.812384
LTL 3.484183
LVL 0.71376
LYD 6.39214
MAD 10.796837
MDL 19.867732
MGA 5329.75553
MKD 61.56795
MMK 2477.688651
MNT 4185.213959
MOP 9.453646
MRU 46.792714
MUR 54.18498
MVR 18.174583
MWK 2045.747526
MXN 21.160173
MYR 4.820821
MZN 75.400794
NAD 19.813058
NGN 1713.984446
NIO 43.418166
NOK 11.981856
NPR 171.544109
NZD 2.03363
OMR 0.453715
PAB 1.179788
PEN 3.974232
PGK 5.016019
PHP 69.020789
PKR 330.648853
PLN 4.218263
PYG 7924.661504
QAR 4.301744
RON 5.093163
RSD 117.384851
RUB 93.744146
RWF 1717.778001
SAR 4.425955
SBD 9.628716
SCR 16.040231
SDG 709.757255
SEK 10.939902
SGD 1.519217
SHP 0.885293
SLE 28.378283
SLL 24743.662064
SOS 674.293309
SRD 45.639391
STD 24423.269891
STN 24.57264
SVC 10.323913
SYP 13048.810003
SZL 19.795518
THB 37.040084
TJS 10.842352
TMT 4.129941
TND 3.445387
TOP 2.841117
TRY 50.401561
TTD 8.00366
TWD 37.073653
TZS 2914.55868
UAH 49.756986
UGX 4200.542005
USD 1.179983
UYU 46.157818
UZS 14305.714092
VES 315.574413
VND 31086.657439
VUV 143.322905
WST 3.279542
XAF 657.901853
XAG 0.018487
XAU 0.000272
XCD 3.188963
XCG 2.126286
XDR 0.81912
XOF 657.927018
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.367164
ZAR 19.728947
ZMK 10621.267027
ZMW 27.10613
ZWL 379.954109
  • CMSC

    0.0600

    23.36

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.3860

    48.854

    -0.79%

  • NGG

    -0.4800

    75.55

    -0.64%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    40.94

    -0.34%

  • VOD

    0.0320

    12.732

    +0.25%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2500

    14.65

    -1.71%

  • RBGPF

    3.3200

    81

    +4.1%

  • RIO

    0.3400

    76.16

    +0.45%

  • BCE

    -0.1000

    23.51

    -0.43%

  • BTI

    -0.2800

    57.46

    -0.49%

  • AZN

    -0.9600

    90.6

    -1.06%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    23.39

    +0.11%

  • BP

    -1.3700

    33.88

    -4.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0050

    13.555

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    1.3900

    76.72

    +1.81%

'A way of life': The Japanese dancer conquering Spain's flamenco scene
'A way of life': The Japanese dancer conquering Spain's flamenco scene / Photo: CRISTINA QUICLER - AFP

'A way of life': The Japanese dancer conquering Spain's flamenco scene

Japan's Junko Hagiwara has caused a stir in Spain's traditional flamenco world by unexpectedly winning the prize for best dancer at the country's leading flamenco festival -- the first foreigner to do so.

Text size:

The announcement that the 48-year-old -- who performs under the stage name "La Yunko" -- was awarded the honour at the closing ceremony of August's "Cante de las Minas" festival in the southeastern town of La Union was met with a mixture of applause and some jeering.

"I was very surprised, I could not believe it. I believed it but I did not believe it," she told AFP by phone from the southern city of Seville, where she has lived for over two decades when asked about her reaction to getting the award.

Hagiwara, who was born in Kawasaki near Tokyo, said she did not notice the jeers because she "went blank" when her name was announced as the winner.

"When I dance, I don't think I am a foreigner, that I am Japanese. I don't think that. It doesn't occur to me. I am simply on stage, I listen to the guitar, the singing and what I feel I express in my dancing," she added.

Created in 1961, the "Cante de las Minas" festival is considered to be the world's most important annual flamenco festival. It features prizes for best singing, guitar playing and musical instrument performance in addition to dance.

Critics were unanimous in their support for Hagiwara.

"I liked her more than her competitors for three reasons: her classicism, the fact that she did not dance for the gallery, that is, for the public, and, finally, her good training," flamenco critic Manuel Bohorquez wrote in online newspaper Sevilla Info.

- 'Way of life -

Hagiwara said she became fascinated by flamenco -- a centuries-old art form that combines rhythmic hand clapping, stamping feet and impassioned singing -- at age 14 when she watched a gymnastics championship in which a Spanish competitor used the genre's guitar music.

"I loved the flamenco guitar, the sound and the melody, the rhythm," she said.

There was no internet at the time to help her explore her new interest, so she went to a shop that rented records and borrowed the only available flamenco CD.

"I listened to it, but there was no guitar, it was just singing," she recalled.

"Flamenco performers often have a very hoarse voice, very deep, and it scared me," she added while laughing.

Hagiwara went on to study pedagogy at Waseda University in Tokyo, where she joined a flamenco club, and started to take flamenco lessons.

But she felt she needed more.

In 2002 she decided to take the dramatic move across the world to Seville, capital of the southern region of Andalusia and the cradle of flamenco, to pursue her passion.

She made the move despite objections from her parents.

"In Japan, you can learn technique, choreography, but, of course, flamenco is culture, it's a way of life," she said.

"My father got very, very angry. He did not speak to me for three months. And my mother said 'how shameful, how shameful'," Hagiwara said.

- Culture shocks -

In Spain, she dedicated herself to flamenco, learning to dance with the best teachers, became fluent in Spanish and married an Andalusian man from the coastal town of Tarifa.

She gradually made a name for herself as a performer in Seville, and has also taught flamenco.

As is the case with many foreigners, she was surprised at first by the lively way locals talked to each other.

"I thought everyone was fighting!" Hagiwara said.

There were other differences.

"In Japanese culture, we place a lot of value on hiding the feeling, and in flamenco, you have to show it. In Japan it is for the inside, and in flamenco it is for the outside," she said.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)