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

EUR -
AED 4.257438
AFN 73.611946
ALL 94.654754
AMD 426.856521
ANG 2.075569
AOA 1063.638386
ARS 1665.573638
AUD 1.639536
AWG 2.086695
AZN 1.969777
BAM 1.953584
BBD 2.33605
BDT 142.379723
BGN 1.960195
BHD 0.437167
BIF 3467.391525
BMD 1.159275
BND 1.485914
BOB 8.043876
BRL 5.901638
BSD 1.159884
BTN 109.621653
BWP 15.541371
BYN 3.211157
BYR 22721.79
BZD 2.332754
CAD 1.624428
CDF 2689.51814
CHF 0.919462
CLF 0.02609
CLP 1026.839275
CNY 7.833743
CNH 7.836977
COP 3982.109625
CRC 528.300733
CUC 1.159275
CUP 30.720788
CVE 110.536962
CZK 24.115296
DJF 206.026198
DKK 7.461256
DOP 67.93345
DZD 154.043272
EGP 57.857325
ERN 17.389125
ETB 183.600203
FJD 2.589473
FKP 0.862647
GBP 0.864921
GEL 3.066281
GGP 0.862647
GHS 13.097141
GIP 0.862647
GMD 84.626709
GNF 10175.535172
GTQ 8.841048
GYD 242.624784
HKD 9.083337
HNL 30.949393
HRK 7.533786
HTG 151.478174
HUF 348.535614
IDR 20575.508265
ILS 3.387853
IMP 0.862647
INR 109.330643
IQD 1518.65025
IRR 1594003.124933
ISK 144.132697
JEP 0.862647
JMD 183.441916
JOD 0.821948
JPY 185.788888
KES 150.149504
KGS 101.378322
KHR 4651.582898
KMF 492.691657
KPW 1043.347906
KRW 1752.667295
KWD 0.357171
KYD 0.966604
KZT 565.633506
LAK 25538.828023
LBP 103813.076313
LKR 388.572582
LRD 211.161744
LSL 18.774294
LTL 3.423038
LVL 0.701234
LYD 7.390401
MAD 10.717518
MDL 20.240041
MGA 4868.954941
MKD 61.542012
MMK 2433.836376
MNT 4147.104394
MOP 9.358185
MRU 46.463794
MUR 54.63691
MVR 17.922675
MWK 2012.501698
MXN 19.94412
MYR 4.712226
MZN 74.080113
NAD 18.782477
NGN 1575.593434
NIO 42.441173
NOK 11.012475
NPR 175.393533
NZD 1.991231
OMR 0.445739
PAB 1.159884
PEN 3.956038
PGK 5.086609
PHP 69.98892
PKR 322.62413
PLN 4.228653
PYG 7077.971247
QAR 4.220343
RON 5.224894
RSD 117.169146
RUB 84.594089
RWF 1725.0012
SAR 4.349477
SBD 9.345407
SCR 16.363309
SDG 696.143853
SEK 10.886363
SGD 1.486225
SHP 0.865516
SLE 28.692394
SLL 24309.421361
SOS 662.534388
SRD 43.278085
STD 23994.651933
STN 24.808485
SVC 10.148576
SYP 128.137098
SZL 18.776638
THB 37.716433
TJS 10.752004
TMT 4.069055
TND 3.375519
TOP 2.791256
TRY 53.694406
TTD 7.879063
TWD 36.584983
TZS 3043.100318
UAH 51.945824
UGX 4291.132441
USD 1.159275
UYU 46.827286
UZS 13917.09621
VES 690.970094
VND 30519.07365
VUV 138.246819
WST 3.176082
XAF 655.213772
XAG 0.016488
XAU 0.000267
XCD 3.132999
XCG 2.090411
XDR 0.815779
XOF 654.990583
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.632026
ZAR 18.752635
ZMK 10434.880248
ZMW 20.500745
ZWL 373.286077
  • CMSC

    0.0150

    22.38

    +0.07%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.4200

    32.38

    -1.3%

  • BCC

    1.4000

    72.96

    +1.92%

  • RIO

    -1.5700

    104.17

    -1.51%

  • BCE

    -0.3850

    23.435

    -1.64%

  • NGG

    -0.9900

    81.29

    -1.22%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    52.27

    +0.1%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    18.5

    -0.7%

  • JRI

    -0.0850

    12.725

    -0.67%

  • BP

    -0.7850

    40.365

    -1.94%

  • AZN

    -0.3250

    178.385

    -0.18%

  • CMSD

    0.0480

    22.308

    +0.22%

  • BTI

    -1.6100

    59.77

    -2.69%

  • VOD

    -0.2600

    14.63

    -1.78%

'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)