#Shirotan
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it was yesterday but i still love my first mpreg man in 1970s
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ꨄ ~ bab cuddling shirotan 🥺🥺
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Ena Aone, Kinhoshi Koganegawa, 2nd yr and Sota Bokuto 3rd yr (2036- First name Last name)
Tarosuki Mizoguchi 2nd yr and Genki Kindaichi 1st yr (2036)
Morina-Hana Mattsukawa and Shirotan Saku 3rd yr (2036)
Khace Tomas, Akemi Taroda, Touma Chai 3rd yr (2037)
Reiko Narita and Tametakeo Ennoshita 1st yr (2037)
Mainazei Yonezawa 1st and Sara Amanai, 2nd yr (2037)
Noriko Oretoto 1st yr, Yukino Takishima 3rd yr and Haru Nakamura NB 2nd yr (2037)
Haru was made with the help of the Haikyuu!! Amino Community
Miki Nishinoya 7, Aiya Tanaka, 2nd year college (2 years out of High school)
Ruka Haiba-Yaku 1st yr and Suzuki Haiba-Kageyama 3rd yr (2036)
EVERY HQ OC CHIBIS PART 2/?
#haikyuu#haikyuu fanart#haikyuu ships#haikyuu2ndgen#haikyuu oc#haikyuu original character#haikyuu omegaverse#hq lovechild#omegaverse#aofuta#koganegawa x goshiki#bokuaka#hq mizoguchi#kinkuni#matsuhana#kinonari#ennoteru#hq yonzawa#kanoyachi#asanoya#tanakiyo#yakulev#miwalisa#kogagoshi#chibi art
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tagged by @mafuteru 🐁
i tag @boyfail @gurophism @valentinesweetheartspecial @deo
Nicknames: shishiron, shirotan, shiroron, shirochan
Sign: aquarius
Height:
good luck
Last thing googled: princess celestia 7 male stripers
Song stuck in my head: The fuckin outkast scooby doo song
Followers: 148 i wonder how many are pornbots
Amount of sleep: 9-10 hours and if I get less I rear end people
Fav song: this specific rendition of calc
Lucky number: 7 and 8
Dream job: permanently backseating my sister as her shadow (positive) or vocaloid producer
Wearing: dont do this to me I'm in the bathtub
Movies/books that summarize me: the dsm5
Fav instrument: we all know its guitar gayboy
Aesthetic: My highly curated specific blog of approximately four different colours
Fav author: if i ever start reading books again thats how you know im getting really ill.
Fav animal noise: the sheep meee from ffxiv 🥹
Random:
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毎年人気の季節限定‼️『レモンパンケーキ🍋🥞』ご来店頂きまして誠に有難うございました😊💕 お客様の投稿シェア以下 #repost @shirotan_apprentice via @PhotoAroundApp レモンの美味しい季節。 #しろたん#sirotan#shirotan#しろおやつ#今日のおやつ#レモンパンケーキ#🍋#🥞#sweets #38mitsubachi 毎年人気のレモンパンケーキ🍋🥞 テイクアウトやデリバリーも可能です♪ 【38mitsubachi 北四番丁店】 【38kitchen 勾当台店】 https://38mitsubachi.jp/ ----------------------- ・ ◆自社配達が1番お得🉐🉐🉐 【デリバリーメニュー掲載ホームページ】 https://3838389.wixsite.com/-site ↑ 持��帰りやデリバリーメニューを載せてます。 まとめて3,000円円以上、3Km圏内の方は無料宅配です。ご注文はネットから♪ ・ ---------------- ・ 【🛵出前館 38kitchen】 https://sp.demae-can.com/shop/menu/3070129 【🛵出前館 38kitchen 広域店】 https://sp.demae-can.com/shop/menu/3082830/ ・ 🚴♀️Uber eats 《38kitchen 》 https://www.ubereats.com/jp/sendai/food-delivery/38kitchen/x9cTnQLkQKqM6L2s3daFqg ・ 🚴♂️Wolt 《38kitchen 勾当台店》 https://wolt.com/ja/jpn/sendai/restaurant/mitsubachi-kitchen ・ kkday《自宅で楽しめるみつばち特製お取り寄せパンケーキ🥞》 https://www.kkday.com/ja/product/102505?cid=10794&ud1=mitsubachi01 ・ LINE @お友達登録するとお得なクーポンが貰えます🎁😊 (LINE★ID検索:@38mitsubachi ) ↓ https://line.me/R/ti/p/%4038mitsubachi ・ ------------------------- ・ #38kitchen #仙台パンケーキ #仙台駅 #pancake #カフェ #パンケーキ巡り #仙台のカフェ #パンケーキ専門店 #バターミルクパンケーキ #東北パンケーキ #仙台グルメ #仙台カフェ巡り #宮城カフェ #10段パンケーキ #萌え断 #萌え断サンド #萌え断スイーツ #萌え断パンケーキ #仙台といえば (38kitchen ミツバチキッチン) https://www.instagram.com/p/CQv0m8hDyUV/?utm_medium=tumblr
#repost#しろたん#sirotan#shirotan#しろおやつ#今日のおやつ#レモンパンケーキ#🍋#🥞#sweets#38mitsubachi#38kitchen#仙台パンケーキ#仙台駅#pancake#カフェ#パンケーキ巡り#仙台のカフェ#パンケーキ専門店#バターミルクパンケーキ#東北パンケーキ#仙台グルメ#仙台カフェ巡り#宮城カフェ#10段パンケーキ#萌え断#萌え断サンド#萌え断スイーツ#萌え断パンケーキ#仙台といえば
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A handsome guy graced my timeline. ( * ॑꒳ ॑*)っ⌒♡。.
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#shirota yuu#shirota yu#shirotan#minami keisuke#kei-chan#w-tezuka#tall and handsome#shirotan looking so good there
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YouTubeでしろたんテーマ曲演奏。
投稿が変だったので再投稿。
しろたんと、「しろたん しろたんがいっぱい」のテーマ曲「ふくらふわリズム」を歌いました。
フルver.が聴けます。歌詞も分かるのでみんなで歌ってください。
youtube
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(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s57MJdOA7Sg) In case y'all haven't seen this yet, have some Shirotan singing Disney music!
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@season_and_co
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Shirotan: Shirotan ga Ippai!
Rating: 2/3
Categories: animal protagonist, episodic, original work, slice of life
The daily life of a polar bear pup as he navigates his icy home and makes friends through his adventures.
S1, 24 eps
#Shirotan Shirotan ga Ippai#Shirotan#2/3#animal protagonist#episodic#original work#slice of life#1 season only#14 - 26 episodes#short episodes#medium series#anime recommendation
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Are simps still funny?
I mean, choose your fighter
#Yu Narukami#Yosuke Hanamura#Kanji Tatsumi#Naoto Shirotane#P4#persona 4#meme#simp#actually ship Yu n Yosuke but kk#Rise Kujikawa
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Musical Romeo & Juliette 2017 Osaka dai-senshuuraku (March 5, 2017) - Photo gallery Part 1
Shirotan and Daichan!!!
W TEZUKA !!!!! W TYBALT!!!! ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
Anyway...Yun...your hand lol XDD
#watanabe daisuke#daisuke watanabe#daichan#dai chan#shirota yu#yu shirota#shirotan#furukawa yuta#ikuta erika#erika ikuta#baba tooru#hirama soichi#hirama souichi#takuji kawakubo#yuusuke onuki#romeo et juliette#musical romeo and juliette 2017#musical romeo and juliette
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Sirotan might be a new favorite character
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rb and put in the tags the newest plushie that you own
#seal!!!!!!!!!!!!!#her name is phobeseal she is a shirotan pillow and plushie you can unzip her to adjust her stuffing#reeblog game#seals#my seals
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Hey there loving your blog! If I'm not imposing too much, can you talk about tohobeth? Any version and anything at all!
I ALWAYS have time to talk Tohobeth. Since I feel like it would be unfair to talk about productions I haven’t personally seen, I’m going to keep my discussion mainly to the 2015-2016 production, since I have the DVD on it. My views on it aren’t as solid as they are on, say, 1789 or MA, mainly because, somewhat embarrassingly, I only got my DVD AFTER I left the States, with my mom scanning the files in and sending them on to me via GDrives. And, with my Master’s program....well. I’ve not been able to watch it anywhere near to where I usually do before forming hard opinions. (Generally speaking, it takes about....six months or so for me to REALLY settle into my opinions, though, as you can see re: Lady Bess, there are a few times where my opinions are still variable after years.)
It’s a fact well known at this point that I’m not the biggest Hanafusa Mari fan in the world, and it’s also a fact that she was recorded as Elisabeth twice, as opposed to Hana Ranno, who was double-cast in the role with her, getting a DVD of her own. Was I happy about this? No. Whenever I see Hana Ranno footage on Youtube, I feel this sort of ache in my chest because I REALLY would have loved to see her Toho Elisabeth. Maybe she wouldn’t have been a personal fave, maybe I would have actively hated her performance, but as it is, she’s acquired a semi-mythical significance to me now as The One That Fell Into Oblivion.
Such a pity she couldn’t show up on the DVD. Such a pity.
Part of why I’m so scathing, of course, is that I tend to REALLY like getting both casts so that I can see the differences between performers, and, with a musical called “Elisabeth” that obviously has Elisabeth as a protagonist...it can almost feel like getting half of what I normally get. It’s still good, I still do recommend the DVD, obviously, but also if I could go back in time to talk to some Toho execs and be like “Look, guys.....record both Sisis.”
Now, I come not to bury Hanafusa Mari, but to praise Tohobeth, so I won’t be too far on the attack here especially since, to be perfectly fair, I feel like Elisabeth is the single best Toho performance of hers I’ve seen (between Mozart, Lady Bess, Marie Antoinette, and Elisabeth). She’s been playing the role since 1996, so she has very much fine-tuned her interpretation at this point, and there are MANY people who feel like she’s the definitive Japanese Elisabeth. This is the role, more than any other single role, that made her a legend in the industry. I personally feel like she REALLY starts hitting her stride about midway through the first act and, by the start of the second act, she’s at her peak performance. The role of Elisabeth is very challenging for any actress; most Elisabeths are drawn to one of the three stages of Elisabeth’s life that we see - Some of them are very good at playing 15 year old Elisabeth, some the Young Wife/Empress, and some the older, bitter Elisabeth, and, personally, I feel like Hanafusa is best in the latter role. As an actress, she very clearly feels a draw to sadness and mourning (in both Lady Bess and Marie Antoinette, she took the sadder interpretation of both characters she played, as opposed to her costars, who separated between the low points and the high points of their lives) and Older Elisabeth gives her the chance to stay in her comfort zone. Unfortunately, when it comes to Younger Elisabeth, especially in the very beginning, I find that she can age revert herself a little TOO much, so that she plays Elisabeth-at-15 as Elisabeth-at-8, which makes her interactions with both Der Tod and Franz Josef a little bit on the uncomfortable side.
A personal highlight for Yoshio!Tod for me is his Die Schatten Länger in the first act, where he goes from sympathetic to seductive to sinister and then back to seductive. It’s an impressive performance of one of my favorite moments, if not my ULTIMATE favorite moment of the entire musical, and he does it so effortlessly. Watching him....he reminds me a little of Uwe Kröger? He isn’t quite as aloof and ageless as 1992!Der Tod, but looking at him in the role, I do get this vision of this otherworldly entity. He has this kind of floating, ethereal voice that we tend to associate with the classical Phantom of the Operas, with a very nice, smooth lower range in particular. I do also like his dynamic with Hanafusa Mari during “Wenn Ich Tanzen Will” -- She isn’t as reactive as some Elisabeths that I’ve seen, but I do still get the feeling of the two of them acting and reacting to one another, and this production is thankfully less....aggressive than certain productions. (2005, I’M LOOKING AT YOU.) I always prefer this scene as a verbal battle of wills, not necessarily Der Tod manhandling Elisabeth, and Toho delivers that.
His performance almost makes me forgive him for 2006 Marie Antoinette. Almost.
Shirota Yu on the other hand...he’s STILL otherworldly, but in a totally different way. He isn’t immature (I’ve SEEN immature Deaths, and he’s not), he isn’t the Bastard Boyfriend Der Tod, but there’s...something almost NAIVE about him at times? Not in a way that makes him less deadly, but in a way that makes him MORE so. He’s never interacted with a human before, not on this level, it’s very obvious he has no idea how humans really function or work, and Elisabeth confuses him just as much as she intrigues him. I also think that, at various times, you can REALLY see him having the time of his life in the role, playing a very, very expressive Tod in comparison to his more refined, aloof counterpart. Take their respective approaches to the death of little Sophie.
“Oh, Elisabeth! This is so ~sad~ Here, let me console you! (This should work, right?)”
“Hm, interesting, it seems like she’s upset. This isn’t what I anticipated.”
And, at the beginning of Der Letze Tanz, which I’m including here purely because Shirotan is looking particularly memeable here.
“Hello, it’s me, and yes, I’m majestic, I know, look at me.”
“You hate death, but live as a mortal. Curious! I am very intelligent.”
He’s a little rougher than Yoshio, a little less refined (I’ve heard Yoshio Inoue’s Der Tod compared, both positively and negatively, to a European aristocrat, which is actually a little ironic since, of the two of them, Yu Shirota Fernández is technically the more “European”, but. Well. In approach...) He has a wonderful voice (honestly, if you ever want to send your eardrums to heaven, listen to his cover of Die Schatten Werden Länger with Ramin Karimloo. Thank me later), though it’s different than Yoshio Inoue’s more classical voice. I think he has a little bit of a pop influence in there. Which might SEEM like the kiss of death for a performer, but in my opinion, he does work it. (Look, I can’t say anything negative about the guy: My mom has a massive crush on him, I own his album, and also I wasn’t able to finish the one video of him immediately following Miura Haruma’s death where he tried to sing through tears because it GOT me and now I can’t see Shirotan’s face without wanting to give him a massive hug. Which I can’t. Both for geographical reasons and also social distance.) It’s actually a little hard to compare the two Tods because, while they wear the same costumes, sing the same music, act against the same actress, they take such radically different approaches that it’s hard to say “Oh, yes, this one!” or “Oh, yes! That one!” Especially since I’m not sure that Shirota Yu’s voice would have worked with Yoshio Inoue’s approach or vice versa. I ended up loving both Der Tods for various reasons. I THINK that if my copies of Elisabeth were dangling off a cliff and my archnemesis told me to pick one, I would have to end up rescuing Yoshio Inoue’s version because I tend to prefer my sleek, elegant Tods (”Tode?”) but like. I’d be in mourning. Not the least because I’d have to tell my mom about the loss of Yu Shirota’s Tod.
Speaking of crushes...look. Takanori Sato’s Franz. We know that I have a minor, unfortunate crush on his Louis XVI in Marie Antoinette, and as Franz...He did SUCH a good job with a character who is hard to make sympathetic in the limited time he has. Most audiences are rooting either for Elisabeth/Death or Elisabeth/Independence, and Franz quickly loses sympathy as the musical goes on, so an actor who can make him likeable is working against the tide there, but Takanori gives him SUCH a huge degree of warmth that I found myself rooting for Elisabeth/Franz to make things work out even though we know that it can’t.
I repeat my assessment from my Marie Antoinette write-up: #FersenDerTodWho?
Mario Tashiro...we know that I do love this man’s work. In my opinion, he has one of the single best voices in the industry. But also, in my opinion....as an actor....he just.....doesn’t have it. He tends to act like the single most one-dimensional version of a role he can get away with. In the beginning, when Franz is young and in love with Sisi during “Nichts ist Schwer” there were a few moments where I felt like I might go into a sugar coma.
They’re so cute together. Kill me now.
And, unfortunately, Franz doesn’t have enough time to REALLY show off his range, with the exception of a few low notes and the act one finale (which to be fair, he is BRILLIANT in), to the point where I did, however slightly, end up preferring Takanori Sato both vocally and acting wise. I wouldn’t say that he’s wasted in the role, because he DOES do a good job with what he’s given, but I do think that it’s hard to appreciate just what he can do from this alone.
It’s only fitting, after talking about Franz, that his mother should come right after him always lurking in the background, as always. And, overall....there isn’t THAT much difference, namely because Sophie, as a role, just doesn’t have that much variance in the role. And most of the fanbase is kind of. Actively rooting for her to die at any given point. There’s not that much that a given actress can really do with it. It’s nothing against them, it’s just a matter of how the role is written. I do find it interesting how both approached the death scene: Tatsuki Kohju’s Sophie is crying at the end, frightened of the afterlife as she clutches, frantically at the death angels before she slumps over, her cane falling out of her hand. As powerful as she was in life, she’s terrified of what comes beyond, as powerless as any other mortal. Suzuke Mayo tries to say something, mouthing some words, but then jerks sharply at a pain in her chest, trying to stay conscious for as long as she can but staggering backwards anyway, falling into the arms of the death angels with a look of pure relief on her face. You get the feeling that she’s been fighting for Austria for so long, made so many personal sacrifices of her own, that the chance for rest is coming as a relief to her. I THINK I prefer the latter interpretation, but honestly, both of them are solid in their own right, though I’m not sure that the role REALLY gets enough to justify a double-casting. (Also....I have to say that, while I wouldn’t necessarily get a musical just for Susuke Mayo, I’ve seen her in enough to have suitably warm feelings for her performances, so I’m already coming in with some amount of bias.)
Lucheni...I don’t REALLY pay as much attention to, compared to, say, the main trio, but he is our narrator, and both Luchenis did take very different approaches to the character. Songha’s Lucheni was...well, if he isn’t in love with Der Tod himself, he’s obsessed with him. We see him reaching out to Der Tod both at the beginning (when he appears on stage for the first time) and at the end, when Der Tod drops the knife to him. There’s a fervor to him in those scenes in particular that I tend to associate with worshippers in a Baptist Revival. Yamazaki is a little bit more subdued, in the beginning I get the feeling that he’s almost under Der Tod’s trance himself, and, in general, I think he’s a little bit more cynical, though, by the ending, he’s dropped a lot of that pretense. He looks at the knife after he’s stabbed her (Songha’s Lucheni almost lets her walk into the knife, but Yamazaki’s STABS), before a smile comes to his face as he falls down while running, finally laughing. It’s like he’s been playing things more or less subdued this entire time and this is his real BREAK, now that he finally has the opportunity to kill. With Songha’s...
He’s actually shocked. I’m not generous enough to Lucheni, as a character, to say that he really feels bad about killing ELISABETH per se, but that...he’s borderline-fetishized Death for so long, waited so long, and then, when he finally has the chance...it doesn’t live up to his expectations. A woman walked into his knife. (She walked into his knife ten times.) There’s nothing dramatic or exciting about it. One small action, and it can’t be taken back, there’s no getting away from it. He actively stumbles around stage afterwards, confused as he tries to run away, like he doesn’t know what to do now.
Of the two of them, Songha has a rougher, kind of growelly voice, to the point where I didn’t REALLY like his Lucheni all that much until I started to analyze his acting. Voice is a MASSIVE factor in whether I enjoy a performance, simply because...it’s my eardrums. I very much want to keep them intact. (For what it’s worth, Songha is NEVER rough to the degree it hurts my eardrums, but there have been a few...) It’s arguably fitting for someone who, as a character, is as rough as Lucheni, but it wasn’t to my personal taste, while Yamazaki...I mean, he’s playing Der Tod in the 20th anniversary. Whenever we get the 20th anniversary. He’s played some of the most celebrated roles in Japanese theatre. The man has RANGE and a fantastic control of the role. (Also...look. As a bisexual woman, I’m just going to say it: He’s more personally attractive to me, though the Toho Lucheni isn’t....really....designed to be attractive. If you go in expecting Takarazuka Lucheni or Serkan Kaya’s extremely pretty Lucheni...well. He isn’t. Either version of him. He looks like someone just pulled him out of a garbage can.) I did notice that both of them have quite a bit of growl in their voice during “Milch”, though, so some of this could be directorial intervention. While BOTH of them absolutely nail the high note in the Prologue, in my opinion, Yamazaki’s riffs are an absolute HIGH point for me (...okay, yeah. Literally and figuratively. I didn’t mean to make a pun. But here we are.) I do think, at the end of the day, I prefer his voice, though I think that both of them did interesting things with the role, taking what is essentially opposite approaches. I don’t think I have a really clear favorite there. One of these days, I’ll have to check out Songha’s other work to see what his voice is like in its “Natural State” so to speak since if, for example, I’d only ever heard Oka Kojiro’s voice in 1789, I’d have just assumed he only knew how to bark out his roles.
One role that wasn’t double-cast but that I WOULD like to draw attention to anyway is Furukawa Yuta as Rudolf. My friend @chibimyumi‘s already written some wonderful meta on Furudolf that I highly recommend, and there’s very little that I can really add except to say that he’s probably my personal take on the role, mainly because, while he IS sympathetic, that isn’t the entirety of his character. He isn’t just a pawn in Der Tod’s game,though Der Tod is unquestionably manipulating him, but a character in his own right. I’ve noticed in the Elisabeth fandom...it can be quite common to go “POOR WOOBIE RUDOLF” and....yes, he did have a very tragic life, but there was more to his life than just the tragedy. He had a life and a personality outside of that (that and....the general erasure of the 17 year old girl who died by his side, but it’s hard to be too harsh on the fandom for that when the musical itself kind of skips over that.)
Now, on those notes, there’s one thing that...I don’t want to talk about, but I feel like it’s an elephant in the room if I don’t.
Namely, Hass.
I don’t like talking about this scene, mainly because it’s deeply uncomfortable subject matter, and it’s deeply controversial subject matter that, as a goyische white person, I really am out of my depth in talking about. There’s a reason why “Hass” was censored from the Zuka, and I know that some fans have gotten hooked on the Zuka, only to go to the German or the Toho, and have subsequently found themselves shocked and/or traumatized. I understand that it’s meant to be deeply uncomfortable, and the Toho DOES show Rudolf actively getting them to stop, which further solidifies the idea in Die Schatten Werden Länger of Rudolf WANTING to stop things from getting out of control, but he can’t. The Toho is also a little bit more brutal than I’m used to, showing an explicit attack on a Jewish man. It’s the kind of thing that, especially in the German and Austrian productions, was meant to give the audience a wake-up call and remind them of their own past, as a country, but can be traumatizing for any Jewish fans or fans of color who might be watching. Especially given that Lucheni, who we tend to associate as a jerk, yes, but as our more-or-less likeable narrator, is actively taking part. I know what they were going for, but also there’s a reason why I never stream this production without a warning ahead of time, and I also tend to end up skipping this scene.
The staging is very nice, probably one of the more intricate Toho stagings I’ve seen, with a lot of props and backgrounds moving around, often mid-song, as well as projections in scenes such as Die Ersten Vier Jahre in order to show the passage of time.
The costuming is, predictably for Toho, fantastic, lavish without being quite as sparkly as their Takarazuka counterparts, having quite a few nice velvet numbers in there. The costuming of Elisabeth is so iconic it seems pointless to discuss outfits like the Sternenkleid or the coronation outfit, but I think this production does well on even some of the non-iconic ensembles. See:
And...you know, I said no iconic numbers, because they tend to be all people talk about, but like. One Sternenkleid pic. Because it’s what she deserves.
Is it Too Soon to say that I’d stab her for that wardrobe alone? Because damn. And that’s not even touching the jewellery.
I want.
Overall, I believe this is probably my favorite production of Elisabeth. Toho really knocked it out of the park, and it’s a good compromise between the Takarazuka and the original Austrian in many, many ways (I do love them, for example, keeping Der Tod’s presence in Alle Fragen Sing Gestellt from the Takarazuka) while also making a production that’s distinct and stands on its own two feet. I really would like to have another proshot of the 2019-2020 cast, whenever the Japanese theatre community is in a more stable place, because I really, really would like to see Manaki Reika, Yamazaki, and Furukawa Yuta’s takes on their new roles, because I feel like they could be really, really solid and I’ve heard fantastic things about at least Chapi and Furukawa Yuta (nothing against Yamazaki, just that I don’t know anything about his take on Der Tod.)
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