Namiki Gohei I (; 1747 â June 2, 1808) was a Kabuki playwright active in Kyoto, Edo and Osaka. He wrote over 100 plays, mostly in the genres of jidai-mono (historical) and sewa-mono (current events).
Born in the DoshÃ
Âmachi district in Osaka in 1747, Gohei was a student of the playwright Namiki ShÃ
ÂzÃ
 I. By 1775 he was already the main playwright for the Hayakumo-za Kabuki theatre in Kyoto.
Two of his plays have been translated into English, The Temple Gate and the Paulownia Crest (1778, translated by Alan Cummings) and Five Great Powers that Secure Love (1794, translated by Julie A. Iezzi), both in Kabuki Plays on Stage II: Villainy and Vengeance, 1773-1799, edited by James R. Brandon and Samuel L. Leiter.
Plays
(The following list is only a small selection of Namiki Gohei's most famous works.)
- Genpei TsÃ
«rikimaru (1764) with Namiki ShÃ
ÂzÃ
 I
- Hi-no-Moto Banzei no HÃ
Ârai (1772) with Namiki JÃ
«suke
- TenmangÃ
« Natane no GokÃ
« (1777) with Nakamura Akei and Tatsuoka Mansaku
- Ã
Âiri Kabuki no Tsuitachi (1777) with Nakamura Akei and Tatsuoka Mansaku
- Keisei Hakataori (1778)
- Kimon Gosan no Kiri (The Golden Gate and the Paulownia Crest, 1778)
- Keisei Yamato ZÃ
Âshi (1784)
- Katsuragawa Renri no Shigarami (1784) adapted from a work of Suga Sensuke
- TaikÃ
 Shinkenki (1787)
- Sewa RyÃ
Âri Yaoya Kondate (1788)
- Shima Meguri Uso no Kikigaki (1794)
- Godairiki Koi no FÃ
«jime (Five Great Powers that Secure Love, 1794)
- Suda no Haru Geisha Katagi (1796)
- Tomioka Koi no Yamabiraki (1798)
- Bandai Fueki Shibai no Hajimari (1807)
Notes
References
- Frederic, Louis (2002) Japan Encyclopedia. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, .
- Kabuki Plays on Stage II: Villainy and Vengeance, 1773-1799. (2002) University of Hawaii Press, .