The Jewish Chronicle

A Japanese fantasy spirits into the West End

- London Coliseum | ★★★★✩ Reviewed by John Nathan OLLOWING THE RSC’s superb adaptation of Studio Ghibli’s

FMy Neighbour Totoro, which arrives in the West End next year, comes this Japanese adaptation of film director Hayao Miyazaki’s best known and Oscar-winning animated feature of 2001.

Every show must stand on its own terms, but it would almost be an act of wilful neglect not to watch the originals before seeing these gorgeous adaptation­s.

This one, directed by Les Miserable’s very own John Caird, was first seen in Japan in 2022 and because it is performed in the language of the story’s creators (surtitles are projected above and on each side of the stage) is a rare example of the Japanese imaginatio­n landing on a West End stage.

To set the scene for those who have yet to see the film, the story (adapted here by Caird and Maoko Imai) concerns Chihiro (played by Kanna Hashimoto on the performanc­e I saw), the young daughter of parents who are moving to a new house in the mountains. After the dad decides to take a shortcut they find themselves at the entrance to a hidden city populated by fantastica­l gods, although Chihiro’s dad thinks its an abandoned theme park.

The parents encounter a restaurant of delicious food, which they cannot resist, and ignoring their daughter’s pleas to return to the car the adults gorge themselves on the least kosher-looking meal it is possible to imagine until they literally turn into pigs.

It was this transition which for years put my daughter off watching the movie. But the point of seeing the film ahead of the show

is in wondering how on earth Miyazaki’s visions can be translated to the stage.

The methods used here are as traditiona­l kabuki. Puppets and costumes combine with topdrawer stagecraft to conjure the most outlandish sequences, such as when the head of Yubaba (Romi Park), the old witch-like woman who runs this other-wordly world, fills her room when she becomes angry. This is done with head parts arriving from all angles, carried by near-invisible stagehands, until they combine like the reverse of an explosion into a giant version of Yubaba’s face.

Among the most successful transforma­tions is Yubaba’s petlike companion Kashira, which is made up of three green bouncing heads. They are mesmerisin­gly played by Yuya Igarashi, a fundoshi – or loincloth – artist whose painted green head forms one element of Kashira while the other two are supported at the end of Igarashi’s arms. He must have Olympian levels of fitness to make these three bouncing noggins travel across the Coliseum’s huge stage.

My favourite, however, is the spirit NoFace, a mournful and almost mute column of darkness topped by a white mask with an inscrutabl­e expression. Played by the dancer Hikaru Yamano this sinister and oddly vulnerable entity glides across the city and up steps with inhuman balance that speaks of Yamano’s exquisite talent as a dancer.

Where the evening falters is that at three hours it is significan­tly longer than the film that inspired it. But don’t let that put you off. It adds to the sense of a production that has made no compromise­s in creating some of the most astounding sights you will see on a stage.

 ?? PHOTO: JOHAN PERSSON ?? Eventful short-cut: Kanna Hashimoto and Mari Natsuki
Puppets and costumes combine with top-drawer stagecraft to conjure the most outlandish sequences
PHOTO: JOHAN PERSSON Eventful short-cut: Kanna Hashimoto and Mari Natsuki Puppets and costumes combine with top-drawer stagecraft to conjure the most outlandish sequences

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