- Hojo, Hideji
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▪ 1997Japanese playwright (b. 1902, Osaka, Japan—d. May 19, 1996, Kamakura, Japan), was the author of more than 200 plays and the leader of commercial theatre in Japan after World War II. His psychological dramas about average citizens appealed to mainstream audiences. Hojo studied Japanese literature at Kansai University, Osaka, supplementing the proceeds from his writing career by working for an electric company and, later, an electric railroad. In the 1930s he apprenticed under noted dramatist Okamoto Kido, developing a modern style known as shimpa ("new school"), by loosening traditional kabuki forms and broadening the roles of female characters. By 1940 he was a fulltime playwright, scoring his first great success with Kakka (1940; "Her Highness"). His popularity grew along with his critical status, and soon his plays were being performed by the stars of Japanese theatre. He found an outlet for his progressive style in the Shinkokugeki ("New National Theatre"), which was founded in 1917 but did not flourish until after World War II. His masterwork, Osho (1947, "Chess Master"), based on the true story of a chess grandmaster, was made into an acclaimed film. His last drama, Shinano no Issa (1993), was a poignant biography of the 18th-19th-century haiku poet Kobayashi Issa.
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Universalium. 2010.