A feature from the July 2016 Kageki, while Tamaki was preparing for La Legende du Roi Arthur, her first show as Top Star.
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That’s RanKING! (April 2017)
In That’s RanKING!, a multi-year Kageki Top Star Q&A feature, the Top Stars rank each other based on various questions. The 2017 version of the column has questions sent in by readers.
This month’s question: Who would be best able to deal with aliens if they appeared?
Continue readingMoon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou excited for new production about ‘The Three Musketeers’
This article about the Three Musketeers press conference was published in Daily Sports Online on May 31, 2017. (Archive link here.)
Please note: The plot of ALL FOR ONE went through heavy alterations between the press conference and the show opening, so there may be differences from what is described in the article.
Moon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou excited for new production about ‘The Three Musketeers’
On the 31st, the Takarazuka Revue Moon Troupe’s Top Star, Tamaki Ryou, appeared in Takarazuka city at a press conference for the new show she will be starring in, All For One ~d’Artagnan and the Sun King~ (Takarazuka Grand Theatre, Hyogo Prefecture, July 14th to August 14th; Tokyo Takarazuka Theatre, September 1st to October 8th) and declared how enthusiastic she is.
In the show, based on Dumas’ famous classic novel The Three Musketeers, Tamaki plays d’Artagnan, a novice member of the Musketeers who is ordered to serve as the king’s opponent in fencing practice. With intrigue and action, the story is full of entertainment. “I love The Three Musketeers, and adventure shows, so I’m really looking forward to this,” she said in excitement.
She is also full of motivation since the Revue’s representative, Koike Shuuichiro, is creating the new show. “Up until now, I’ve run into many barriers that I couldn’t get over without putting in 200% effort, so that has been a plus to everything about my work. To have Koike-sensei writing my second show as Top makes me so happy!” she declared strongly.
Since the new show takes place during summer vacation, Mr. Koike says “There’s a lot to enjoy about this show, and it would be wonderful if people from many different generations came to see it.” He has hopes for attracting new fans.
The show’s setting is France in the time it was ruled by the Sun King, Louis XIV, played by Manaki Reika. After discovering the king’s secret, d’Artagnan and the Three Musketeers have to combat the intrigues of the court. Dumas’ original Three Musketeers was set in the reign of Louis XIII, but Mr. Koike has made large adjustments. Top Musumeyaku Manaki Reika’s performance as the ‘male’ king also appears to be attracting a lot of attention.
Moon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou: This year’s theme is ‘wings’
This is a lengthy interview with Tamaki Ryou, mostly about her future ascension to Top Star and the opening of the national tour (which happened just after the article was published).
The original article was written by Murakami Kumiko and has been published on a few different sites. I accessed it from Asahi Star File. (Archive link here.)
Moon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou: This year’s theme is ‘wings’
Tamaki Ryou, who has been appointed as the next Top Star of Moon Troupe, is now performing in her first National Tour lead role with current Top Musumeyaku Manaki Reika as her heroine. The tour comprises the musical Passion—Jose and Carmen, based on the novel by Merimee, and the revue show Apassionado!! 3. Her rapid ascent to succeed current Top Star Ryuu Masaki, who retires in September, only took her eight and a half years, so she stated that her theme for this year will be the character for ‘wings’. On April 9th and 10th she will be performing at the Ichikawa City Cultural Hall in Chiba Prefecture.
‘Wings.’ That is how future Top Star Tamaki Ryou represented her feelings for this year, just before the opening of her first National Tour lead.
“I want to walk and fly by myself. I don’t have any time to spare to look back. I’ll keep going forward, even if I only make it one centimeter. Since I’m getting so many new challenges this year, this year I have ‘wings’.”
Tamaki will be travelling around the country with Top Musumeyaku Manaki joining her as her partner.
“In the tour, I’m holding up the reputation of all of Takarazuka, not just Moon Troupe. But I have to do it anyway. I need to make it worthwhile for the audience members who come to watch us.”
Top Star Ryuu will be retiring after the last performance of her next show. Tamaki’s succession as Top was announced just before the opening of the tour. Since the creation of the Star system, this speed is only second to Amami Yuuki, who became Top after six and a half years. Even though Tamaki only wore feathers1 for the first time last year, she doesn’t have any spare time to be bewildered.
“Ryuu-san has amazing energy, and she learns lines and choreography really fast. She keeps an eye on both how the audience feels as well as things in the troupe. I want to learn from and be inspired by her until the very last moment before she graduates.”
In the play being performed with the tour, Passion, Jose, an earnest young man, meets his destined woman, played by Manaki, only to have her toy with him.
“Before starting rehearsals, my head was crammed [with ideas], but that just seems like mere role-building now. I want to perform in an honest, natural way.”
Tamaki was raised in Moon Troupe2. She has been paired with Manaki before, in a junior performance.
“She is a sensitive performer with a lot of heart. She has a large presence. I want to be able to take what she offers. Responding to what she does is a large part of it. She has a really fresh approach to things.”
On the other hand, the revue show, in accordance with its Spanish title, is full of ‘zealous’ enthusiasm.
“I want to present energetic ‘zeal’. The years an otokoyaku has put in really show. But even if your skill increases, what you have inside doesn’t change. To make the meaning of that clear, whatever you have now, you should give all of it. I want to see how much I can release myself onstage.”
She’s prepared to take center stage before the standard time of maturation, the ‘10 years to otokoyaku’3. “If I think about how I was a year ago, I’ve become a lot stronger. I was too conscious then of ‘how an otokoyaku should be’.” Because of overthinking it, there were times when she couldn’t simply enjoy herself on stage.
“By now there’ve been a lot of moments where I just thought I was having fun,” Tamaki said with a laugh. She’s broadened into an ideal otokoyaku.
“I started to think I couldn’t present attributes like ‘passion’ and ‘broad-mindedness’, words like that. There’s definitely some aspect that only I can bring out. I want to be an ‘otokoyaku-like otokoyaku.’ That’s my unchanging base.”
The masculine physique she was blessed with is her strongest point. She has an air of unpolished sensuality.
“Personally I love that sharp, ultra-otokoyaku feeling from the Latin atmosphere. I’d like to go down that route and wear sharp suits and a tough atmosphere until the very end.”
Tamaki refers to the performances of actors and theatre performers such as Kamikawa Takaya, Tsutsumi Shinichi, Namase Katsuhisa, and Abe Sadao. Raised as the heir of Moon Troupe, she will now fly even higher.
1 – The large parade feathers are reserved for the highest ranking members of the troupe.
2 – Meaning she was first assigned to the troupe and stayed there without transfers.
3 – An industry saying regarding how long it takes to master the art of otokoyaku performance.
Moon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou becomes most junior supporting star
This article about Tamaki Ryou’s ascension to second supporting star was published by Daily Sports Online on November 13, 2015. (This was prior to Ryuu’s announcement of her own retirement, but her quotes in the article seem to foreshadow it.)
Moon Troupe’s Tamaki Ryou becomes most junior supporting star
On the 17th, when the first day of performances of Takarazuka Revue Moon Troupe’s “Manon/Golden Jazz” took place at the Takarazuka Grand Theatre in Hyougo prefecture, Tamaki Ryou appeared onstage as second supporting star. Up until then, she had shared the position of supporting star with Nagina Ruumi and Miya Rurika, but during the finale she was dressed differently from all the other troupe members in an eye-catching spangled suit, and descended the stairs with Top Star Ryuu Masaki and Top Musumeyaku Manaki Reika wearing huge feathers.
Tamaki debuted in 2008: it has been 8 years since her debut, making her ken-8. Joining Flower Troupe’s Serika Toa (ken-9), Snow Troupe’s Nozomi Fuuto (ken-13), Star Troupe’s Kurenai Yuzuru (ken-14) and Cosmos Troupe’s Makaze Suzuho (ken-10), Tamaki’s appointment makes her the most junior second supporting star in all the troupes.
Tamaki is 172 cm in height, and her strong point is her dynamic dancing. So far, she has had 3 junior performance leads as well as Bow Hall lead roles. After graduation from junior performance roles, it was clear that the company had high hopes for her as she played Amami Yuuki’s role in the restaging of “Puck”. She has made marked improvement in singing and acting, and now she has officially become second supporting star.
Starting March of 2016, she will be playing the lead role in the national tour of “Passion–Jose and Carmen/Apassionado!! III” with Manaki as her partner.
Current Top Star Ryuu gave a hint of her confidence in the improvement this would make for the troupe, commenting “right now there are lots of positions for young actresses. It’s time for Moon Troupe to change.”
That’s RanKING! – February 2017
In That’s RanKING!, a multi-year Kageki Top Star Q&A feature, the Top Stars rank each other based on various questions. The 2017 version of the column has questions sent in by readers.
This month’s question: Who would be best at building a snowman?
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