10.07.2017 Views

Tokyo Weekender July 2016

Breaking the rules of kimono – a new book shatters antiquated views of this traditional garment. Plus: The boys for sale in Shinjuku Ni-chome, best sake of 2017, Japan's new emperor, and what really goes on inside "Terrace House."

Breaking the rules of kimono – a new book shatters antiquated views of this traditional garment. Plus: The boys for sale in Shinjuku Ni-chome, best sake of 2017, Japan's new emperor, and what really goes on inside "Terrace House."

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

JULY 2017<br />

Japan’s number one English language magazine<br />

BREAKING THE<br />

RULES OF KIMONO<br />

A NEW BOOK SHATTERS<br />

ANTIQUATED VIEWS OF THIS<br />

TRADITIONAL GARMENT<br />

PLUS: The Boys for Sale in Shinjuku, Best Sake of 2017, Japan's New Emperor, and What Really Goes on Inside "Terrace House"


To all investors and customers of The Parkhouse series:<br />

The Mitsubishi Jisho Residence overseas<br />

sales team is on hand for all your needs<br />

For the most up-to-date information about Mitsubishi Jisho<br />

Residence's new real estate projects, please visit our<br />

English website at www.mecsumai.com/international/en<br />

For inquiries, please email mjrtph@mec-r.com<br />

Live in a Home for Life. The Parkhouse


34<br />

26<br />

32 36<br />

radar<br />

THIS MONTH’S HEAD TURNERS<br />

8 AREA GUIDE: YURAKUCHO<br />

This old-school neighborhood has a few<br />

modern surprises up its sleeve.<br />

14 STYLE<br />

Ready for a summer romance? Get your<br />

spark back with some flirtatious swimwear<br />

18 BEAUTY<br />

Shake up your make-up with a full kit of<br />

organic, natural cosmetics.<br />

20 TRENDS<br />

We stop by Japan's Sake Competition to find<br />

out which are the top tipples for 2017.<br />

22 THE CONCIERGE<br />

Editor's picks from our roundup of top restaurants,<br />

salons, and services in the city.<br />

in-depth<br />

COFFEE-BREAK READS<br />

26 BREAKING THE RULES OF KIMONO<br />

A new book shows off the different personalities<br />

of this very traditional garment.<br />

30 THE LIFE AND LOVE OF JAPAN'S<br />

NEW EMPEROR<br />

As Emperor Akihito prepares to step down,<br />

all eyes are turning towards his son.<br />

32 THE MISUNDERSTOOD CROWS<br />

OF TOKYO<br />

Love or hate them, the city's gigantic crows<br />

cannot be ignored. We look at their bond<br />

with Japan, and what they can teach us.<br />

34 WHAT IT'S REALLY LIKE INSIDE<br />

"TERRACE HOUSE"<br />

We chat with the stars to get the inside<br />

scoop on this mundane yet addictive show.<br />

36 BOYS FOR SALE<br />

A new documentary brings to light a particular<br />

kind of sex trade in Shinjuku Ni-chome.<br />

guide<br />

CULTURE ROUNDUP<br />

40 ART & FICTION<br />

Julian Lennon shows off his photography,<br />

and a new spy novel wends its way into<br />

North Korea.<br />

42 AGENDA<br />

An art aquarium, a dynamic percussion performance,<br />

and a Showa-era beer garden.<br />

44 TRAVEL<br />

A new market brings Niigata to <strong>Tokyo</strong>.<br />

46 PEOPLE, PARTIES, PLACES<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong>'s longest-running society column.<br />

JULY 2017


JULY 2017<br />

Publisher<br />

President<br />

Executive Producer<br />

Editor in Chief<br />

Senior Editors<br />

Creative Director<br />

Features Writer<br />

Contributors<br />

Sales Director<br />

Sales Executives<br />

Marketing Director<br />

Media Consultant<br />

Media Producers<br />

ENGAWA Co., Ltd.<br />

Takanobu Ushiyama<br />

Naoya Takahashi<br />

Annemarie Luck<br />

Alec Jordan<br />

Lisa Wallin<br />

Liam Ramshaw<br />

Matthew Hernon<br />

Vivian Morelli<br />

Paul McInnes<br />

Stephan Jarvis<br />

Bill Hersey<br />

Bunny Bissoux<br />

Takaaki Murai<br />

Hirofumi Ohuchi<br />

Kahori Terakawa<br />

Ayane Sugawara<br />

Azusa Yoshida<br />

Mari Saito<br />

Jessica Yumi Idomoto<br />

Mary Rudow<br />

Claudia Sun<br />

Yuda Chou<br />

Cover illustration (Ride on times), Model: Ryoko,<br />

Photographer/Stylist/Makeup/Editor: Akira Times<br />

Direction: Kimono Times<br />

EST. Corky Alexander, 1970<br />

SSU Bld. 1F 4-12-8 Sendagaya, Shibuya-ku<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong>, Japan 151-0051<br />

(03) 6432-9948 / (03) 6438-9432 (fax)<br />

editor@tokyoweekender.com<br />

To subscribe to the <strong>Tokyo</strong> <strong>Weekender</strong>, please call<br />

(03) 6432-9948 or email:<br />

customer-support@tokyoweekender.com<br />

For ad sales inquiries, please call<br />

(03) 6432-9948 or email:<br />

sales@tokyoweekender.com<br />

広 告 に 関 するお 問 い 合 わせ 先<br />

電 話 :(03) 6432-9948<br />

メール:sales@tokyoweekender.com<br />

Opinions expressed by <strong>Weekender</strong> contributors<br />

are not necessarily those of the publisher<br />

Published by ENGAWA Co., Ltd.<br />

4 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


@bapawn: Annemarie, your story about the<br />

documentary Boys for Sale [page 36] was gutting, but I<br />

couldn’t stop reading until I got to the end. How did you<br />

find out about the project?<br />

@mizrama: Yes, it’s a very distressing film to watch, but<br />

a very important topic to bring to light – these young<br />

boys who are being paid to sleep with older men in<br />

Shinjuku. The director of photography is a friend of<br />

mine so I knew about it from the start, when he and the<br />

executive producer were first exploring the topic.<br />

@bapawn: Emotionally, was it a difficult piece to work on?<br />

@bapawn: I think it’s good that the film touches on topics<br />

that are often kept out of public discussion in Japan.<br />

@mizrama: Agreed. Hopefully it will encourage people<br />

to examine their opinions about homosexuality, and<br />

also put a spotlight on the need for sex education.<br />

@bapawn: In a very different way, as this month’s cover<br />

goes to show, perceptions have shifted on a topic that’s<br />

quite out in the open in Japan: the kimono [page 26].<br />

I’m glad to see that the garment is being taken down<br />

from its pedestal a little, and becoming a bit more<br />

democratized.<br />

@mizrama: It has definitely stayed with me, and I<br />

do find myself thinking of the boys and wondering if<br />

they’re okay. But I think it was far more difficult for<br />

the film makers. They spent three years on the project,<br />

and hours interviewing each urisen (rent boy). Some<br />

of the stories the boys told are truly heartbreaking. But<br />

hopefully by making a documentary like this, they can<br />

help to shift certain perceptions in and of Japan.<br />

@mizrama: Me too. In our interview with Dr Sheila<br />

Cliffe [author of the book The Social Life of Kimono],<br />

it feels almost like she’s giving us permission to wear<br />

the kimono as we would everyday fashion, rather than<br />

reserve it for special occasions.<br />

@bapawn: Well then, I know what I’ll be wearing to our<br />

next office party…<br />

VISIT OUR WEBSITE<br />

WWW.TOKYOWEEKENDER.COM<br />

JOIN US ON FACEBOOK<br />

FACEBOOK.COM/TOKYO.WEEKENDER<br />

FOLLOW US ON TWITTER<br />

@TOKYO_WEEKENDER<br />

FIND US ON INSTAGRAM<br />

TOKYOWEEKENDER<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 5


6 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


WHAT’S ON OUR RADAR THIS MONTH...<br />

It's the perfect time to explore Yurakucho as a new performance theater opens its doors<br />

with a dramatic show. Plus: flirtatious summer swimwear, and the best sake of 2017.<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | | JULY 2017 | 7


AREA GUIDE<br />

UNDER THE<br />

TRACKS IN<br />

YURAKUCHO<br />

Surrounded by the extravagance of areas such as<br />

Marunouchi, Ginza, Hibiya and Shimbashi, this old-school<br />

neighborhood is something of an island extending in a narrow<br />

strip beneath the Yamanote line. But it does have a few<br />

modern surprises up its sleeve…<br />

Words by Paul McInnes. Photos by Stephan Jarvis<br />

GRUB’S UP<br />

Yurakucho is a foodie’s paradise. There are<br />

plenty of cafés, bars and restaurants catering<br />

for those with both tight and expansive budgets.<br />

Under the tracks there is the (in)famous<br />

Yakitori Alley serving up chicken skewers<br />

and watered down beer to locals and tourists<br />

alike. You can even indulge in authentic Korean<br />

barbeque, cheap ramen from ramshackle<br />

huts and pick up some fruit and veg from the<br />

wee market stalls that dot the area.<br />

The really good stuff in the form of sweaty<br />

and gargantuan burgers, however, can be<br />

found just outside <strong>Tokyo</strong> International Forum<br />

(more on TIF later). American hamburger<br />

chain Shake Shack serves up all kinds of<br />

juicy goodness, shakes and treats at its newish<br />

restaurant. Lines are to be expected but if the<br />

thought of hamburger juice running down<br />

your chin and arms turns you on then it’s a<br />

no-brainer.<br />

The slightly more refined diner should<br />

head to the legendary Shin Hinomoto (aka<br />

Andy’s) izakaya run by an Englishman who<br />

prides himself on supplying an authentic<br />

Japanese dining experience. Booze, fish and<br />

traditional dishes are enjoyed by those in the<br />

know and greedy tourists searching for the<br />

foodie Promised Land.<br />

8 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


INDULGE IN AUTHENTIC KOREAN BARBEQUE, OR<br />

CHEAP RAMEN FROM RAMSHACKLE HUTS<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 9


FOR THOSE WITH A<br />

DEEPER INTEREST<br />

IN THE ARTS, HEAD<br />

TO THE BRAND-NEW<br />

ALTERNATIVE THEATRE<br />

ALL SAY PROST!<br />

Although no-one seems to know why there are<br />

so many German bars in the area (and even<br />

more German/Japanese-style beer halls opening<br />

soon), they have huge after-work pulling power<br />

for salarymen and women. Not cheap but selling<br />

traditional German brews such as Bitburger,<br />

Hofbrau and Franziskaner alongside sausages and<br />

sauerkraut, pubs Baden Baden and JS Lennep are<br />

magnificent if looking for an electrifying atmosphere<br />

and good ol’ knees up. Even better is that<br />

they’re located right next to each other so there’s<br />

no excuse for not missing your last train home.<br />

HAVE MONEY TO BURN?<br />

For those passionate about all things electronic,<br />

Yurakucho has a huge Bic Camera branch choc-abloc<br />

with cameras, smartphones and pretty much<br />

everything savvy urbanites require to function in<br />

this day and age. Lumine department store caters<br />

for elegant and fashion-forward ladies (brands<br />

include Alexander Wang, Tomorrowland and Marc<br />

by Marc Jacobs) while Hankyu Men’s focuses on<br />

the <strong>Tokyo</strong> dandy (and is one of only two department<br />

stores in <strong>Tokyo</strong> providing fashion solely for<br />

men). If you’re a fashionable gent then the likes of<br />

Comme des Garcons, Junya Watanabe, Undercover<br />

and Thom Browne will have you reaching for<br />

10 | JUNE 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


your gold card in no time. The area also<br />

plays host to the Muji flagship store, which<br />

incorporates a restaurant and an outpost of<br />

the Loft stationery shop. Muji is the go-to<br />

brand for the low-key and toned-down yet<br />

stylish <strong>Tokyo</strong>ite.<br />

FAMED ARCHITECTURE AND<br />

A BRAND-NEW THEATER<br />

The Rafael Vinoly-designed <strong>Tokyo</strong> International<br />

Forum is an architectural gem<br />

nestled between Yurakucho and <strong>Tokyo</strong> stations.<br />

Serving as an exhibition, conference<br />

and arts center, the space is huge and looms<br />

over Yurakucho and surrounding areas.<br />

Visitors are free to have a peek around and<br />

marvel at its magnitude and brilliance. For<br />

those with a deeper interest in the arts, the<br />

brand-new Alternative Theatre will be up<br />

your street. The wholly renovated venue<br />

will host cutting-edge, non-verbal shows<br />

by leading performers. Its inaugural show,<br />

Alata, plays until the end of August and is a<br />

futuristic, action-packed samurai tale [turn<br />

the page for our full review].<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JUNE 2017 | 11


[ PROMOTION ]<br />

A Dramatic<br />

Alternative<br />

A new performance theater in Yurakucho gives fresh life to a vintage cinema,<br />

and celebrates its launch this month with a captivating multimedia show<br />

Movie theaters are often where we go to see<br />

the extraordinary take place: dazzling special<br />

effects, actors transforming themselves<br />

before our eyes, and directors inspiring<br />

their cast and crew to bring their visions<br />

to life. Simply put, we often go to these spaces to escape,<br />

and to feel a true sense of freedom from the everyday.<br />

It’s fitting, then, that Yurakucho’s new Alternative<br />

Theatre was a movie theater in its previous incarnation,<br />

because this theatrical venue is looking to bring that<br />

same sense of the extraordinary to its audiences.<br />

Over the last nine months, what used to be a Toei<br />

Cinema has been remodeled into a 410-seat theater<br />

that will play home to a variety of shows. The space is<br />

equipped with a state-of-the-art sound system, a series of<br />

catwalks and wire stations that will allow performers to<br />

soar above the audiences, and 2,700 LEDs that will serve<br />

as a dramatic accompaniment to the action on stage.<br />

There are also certain touches that harken back to<br />

the space’s Showa origins and to Yurakucho’s historical<br />

roots as <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s Broadway. As the elevator doors open<br />

onto the lobby, the first thing you see is the vintage,<br />

crystal-bedecked pillar. This is only one of the many<br />

vintage details that can be found around the theater,<br />

and they add to a feeling of comfort that is part of the<br />

Japanese tradition of omotenashi (making guests feel as<br />

comfortable as possible), which is one of the pillars of<br />

the Alternative Theatre experience.<br />

Embracing the past while looking forward to the<br />

future is at the heart of Alternative Theatre’s mission,<br />

as Studio Alta president Kazutoshi Tanuma explains.<br />

The company has its roots in television production, but<br />

in developing the theater, they’ve had assistance from<br />

experienced hands at companies like the Theater Workshop<br />

and Mitsukoshi Party Management Company.<br />

Studio Alta’s first show is the captivating multimedia<br />

production Alata, which brings together a variety of art<br />

forms – dance, swordplay, and pantomime – to create an<br />

unforgettable theatrical experience. With international<br />

audiences in mind, the entire show will be non-verbal,<br />

and rely on the skill and artistry of cast and crew to create<br />

performances that audiences from around the world<br />

will be able to appreciate and enjoy.<br />

For the more distant future, Tanuma hopes to create<br />

more collaborative shows harnessing the skills and<br />

talents of performers from a wide variety of disciplines,<br />

but always with a focus on the non-verbal. Given their<br />

international focus, they also have a long-term goal of<br />

partnering with foreign promoters and bringing international<br />

talent to the Alternative Theatre.<br />

But Tanuma isn’t satisfied with multidisciplinary<br />

theater that breaks boundaries while reaching audiences<br />

from around the world. He’s set an even higher bar<br />

for the fledgling theater: “Ultimately,” Tanuma says,<br />

“We want to bring about an entirely new kind of<br />

entertainment.”<br />

12 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


BEHIND THE SCENES AT<br />

THE OPENING SHOW<br />

The opening day for Alata couldn’t<br />

be more fitting: <strong>July</strong> 7 is the most<br />

common day for celebrating<br />

Tanabata, a holiday that recognizes<br />

two celestial lovers, and is a time<br />

when magical things are known to happen.<br />

The title character of the play is Alata,<br />

a shogun from the Sengoku period (1467–<br />

1603). In his own time, he was charged<br />

with the duty of protecting a princess<br />

from an evil spirit. Defeated on his mission,<br />

Alata finds himself magically transported to<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong> and the year 2020. There, he meets<br />

Kokoro, a modern young woman with<br />

no fondness for old traditions. As Alata<br />

struggles to make his way in the modern<br />

era, he and Kokoro are pursued by the<br />

same spirit that sent Alata into the future.<br />

One of the things that makes Alata<br />

unique is its ability to tell its tale entirely<br />

without words. Whether audiences are<br />

marveling at Alata’s intense swordplay,<br />

being moved by fast-paced dance routines,<br />

or looking up to see performers on wires<br />

zooming towards the stage, there’s no<br />

language barrier and audiences from<br />

around the world will be able to follow the<br />

story without missing a beat.<br />

We were able to see part of a rehearsal<br />

for the show, and the stage positively<br />

crackles with energy as the characters<br />

brought the captivating story to life with<br />

dance, pantomime, and swordplay.<br />

The playwright behind Alata is Kensuke<br />

Yokouchi, who has penned works that range<br />

from Super Kabuki shows and large-scale<br />

plays to small, independent works. Together<br />

with director Shunichi Okamura, who has<br />

produced everyone from idol groups to<br />

DANCE,<br />

SWORDPLAY,<br />

AND PANTOMIME<br />

COME TOGETHER<br />

TO CREATE AN<br />

UNFORGETTABLE<br />

THEATRICAL<br />

EXPERIENCE<br />

kabuki actors, he has taken up the<br />

challenge of bringing a completely<br />

wordless work to dramatic life.<br />

For a theatrical piece that uses<br />

no words, music plays a crucial<br />

role, which is where the group Mili comes<br />

into focus. The band came to international<br />

attention through the hit mobile music game<br />

Deemo, and all of Mili’s album releases have<br />

hit the number one spot on Japan’s indie<br />

music chart. Their music, which manages<br />

to evoke both traditional Japan and hyper<br />

modern <strong>Tokyo</strong>, is a perfect counterpoint to<br />

this tale of a time-transplanted samurai.<br />

The two performers who will bring<br />

the lead characters to life are Elina and<br />

Yuko Saotome. Elina, who plays Kokoro,<br />

has starred on stage and screen, and has<br />

recently returned from a stint in New York,<br />

further developing her craft as a dancer.<br />

Yuki Saotome, her counterpart, made his<br />

stage debut with Japan’s leading theater<br />

troupe, Gekidan Sujaku, when he was<br />

one and a half years old. After years of<br />

performing in traditional Japanese theater,<br />

Saotome is now known as one of Japan’s<br />

quickest and most talented sword play<br />

performers.<br />

And although the celestial lovers of<br />

Tanabata, Orihime and Hikoboshi, only get a<br />

day to spend with one another, audiences will<br />

be able to enjoy the adventures of Alata and<br />

Kokoro for many months to come. It’s a show<br />

that you don’t want to miss.<br />

ESSENTIAL INFO<br />

Alata hits the stage at Alternative Theatre<br />

on <strong>July</strong> 7.<br />

Tickets: www.alternative-theatre.jp/en<br />

Address: Alternative Theatre Yurakucho<br />

Center Bldg (Yurakucho Mullion) 7F, 2–5–1<br />

Yurakucho, Chiyoda-ku.<br />

Scenes from the Alata stage rehearsal<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 13


STYLE<br />

GUCCI HEADBAND<br />

According to the runways, headbands go in<br />

and out of style, but according to our own<br />

rules, they’re always appropriate, especially<br />

during summer. Hot and muggy Japanese<br />

summers require extra steps to stay cool,<br />

and headbands are a must-have to fix a frizzy<br />

mane and to get that fringe away from your<br />

forehead. This silk Gucci headband is adorned<br />

with the house’s Flora snake print, which<br />

features a serpent winding its way around<br />

bouquets of flowers. Both naughty and nice,<br />

it’s begging to be stashed in your handbag for<br />

impromptu beach trips. gucci.com<br />

GET YOUR SPARK BACK WITH<br />

OUR ROUNDUP OF FLIRTATIOUS<br />

SWIMWEAR AND HEAD-TURNING<br />

POOLSIDE ACCESSORIES<br />

Compiled by Vivian Morelli<br />

ARAKS BIKINI<br />

New York-based label Araks uses the most<br />

luxurious Italian fabrics to create effortlessly<br />

chic lingerie and swimwear. While the brand<br />

is mostly known for its sleek undergarments,<br />

it’s worth having a look at their swimsuit<br />

collection. We especially love this red, plum<br />

and pink color-block bikini that combines a<br />

flattering triangle top and low-rise briefs. The<br />

sculpting, stretchy fabric is even woven with<br />

SPF 50+ protection, adding extra shielding<br />

to complement all that sunscreen you’ve<br />

already slathered on. araks.com


MISSONI SWIM SHORTS<br />

Renowned for its patterned knitwear, Missoni does<br />

everything ranging from clothes, home decor and<br />

– you guessed it – swimwear. The Italian house<br />

cleverly transformed its iconic woven chevron<br />

pattern into print form for this pair of slim-fit<br />

swim shorts. Cut from lightweight shell, they come<br />

in a few different color combinations, but this<br />

tonal blue version is our favorite. The drawstring<br />

at the waistband even comes with the signature<br />

multicolored zigzag motif, for a full Missoni effect.<br />

missoni.com<br />

THOM BROWNE<br />

SWIM SHORTS<br />

Designer Thom Browne is known for his playful<br />

yet edgy designs. For his 2017 spring collection,<br />

his inspiration was the classic movie Jaws. These<br />

swim shorts pay homage to the 1975 flick with<br />

appliquéd sharks and bitten surfboards in red,<br />

navy and white, which are also the brand’s<br />

signature colors. Crafted in Italy from quick-drying<br />

shell, they’re both comfortable and stylish, and<br />

they will make for a good conversation starter at<br />

the beach. thombrowne.com<br />

STELLA MCCARTNEY<br />

SWIMSUIT<br />

Take a plunge without having to worry<br />

about whether your bikini top will stay on<br />

– this is just one of the pluses of wearing<br />

a full-piece swimsuit. They’re also just a<br />

lot more flattering. One-piece suits have<br />

been all the rage over the past few years,<br />

and this Stella McCartney number is the<br />

perfect balance of trendy and practical.<br />

The one-shoulder design is free of clasps<br />

or fastenings for a streamlined fit, and the<br />

vivid animal print is one of the designer’s<br />

signature patterns – let it be yours, too.<br />

stellamccartney.com<br />

MAISON MARGIELA SUNGLASSES<br />

Sunglasses are undoubtedly at the top of the “essential summer accessories”<br />

list. Not only does a pair of stylish frames instantly spruce up an outfit, a good<br />

set of lenses also protects your peepers against harsh sun rays. This pair from<br />

Maison Margiela is a fresh change from the classic aviators: it comes with<br />

a chunky round frame (this season’s trending look), featuring a silver-hued<br />

snakeskin effect. Dress down when you wear them and let them take the<br />

spotlight they deserve. maisonmargiela.com


[ PROMOTION ]<br />

HOW NIPPON FORM<br />

CAN TRANSFORM<br />

YOUR HOME<br />

Photos by Chris Mollison<br />

Head to the fifth floor of<br />

LIVING DESIGN CENTER<br />

OZONE to discover a range<br />

of furniture and homeware<br />

that will infuse your décor<br />

with both contemporary<br />

design and a touch of<br />

traditional craftsmanship<br />

For 20 years, Nippon Form<br />

has sought to provide ideal<br />

pieces that reflect the evolving<br />

lifestyles of modern society.<br />

Their selection of furniture<br />

and homewares retain the strengths of both<br />

traditional culture and innovative modernity,<br />

making for a collection that neatly unites<br />

functionality and style. Visitors will find<br />

practical items with a combination of Japanese<br />

and Western influences, harmonizing<br />

beautiful design and purpose.<br />

SHOWROOM STRATEGY<br />

The Nippon Form showroom gives visitors a<br />

complete idea of how an interior would look,<br />

while also allowing you to feel the texture of<br />

fabrics and wood surfaces firsthand. Though<br />

the showroom is compact, this makes it easier for those<br />

living in small spaces to imagine how to maximize said<br />

space. Knowledgeable staff are on call to advise on<br />

usage, storage and design options, as well as how to care<br />

for items to ensure they last for generations.<br />

MINIMALIST BUT FUNCTIONAL FURNITURE<br />

Create a calming space by filling your home with<br />

simple, practical pieces of furniture that don’t require a<br />

compromise on design. Natural wood furnishings offer<br />

a sturdy, traditional feel to contemporary construction,<br />

especially when combined with coarse fabrics. Taking<br />

Japan’s sometimes miniscule living areas into account,<br />

16 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


HOW TO KEEP YOUR<br />

HOME COOL FOR<br />

SUMMER<br />

MANY ITEMS<br />

ARE CRAFTED TO<br />

FIT NEATLY INTO<br />

SMALL SPACES<br />

Few places emphasize the<br />

change of the seasons as much<br />

as Japan, and Nippon Form is<br />

no exception. The Prep Your<br />

Place for Summer Living event,<br />

which is on during regular<br />

opening hours at the showroom,<br />

promotes various ways<br />

to keep your home feeling<br />

naturally cool in the otherwise<br />

oppressive city summer heat.<br />

Wicker chairs and tables,<br />

woven rush accessories,<br />

bamboo baskets, wind chimes,<br />

and paper fans are just a few<br />

of the special seasonal items<br />

available during this limited<br />

time. Event ends August 6.<br />

bright aquamarine and magenta – offer aesthetic<br />

charm for any interior.<br />

many sofas and chairs are crafted to either<br />

neatly fit into small spaces, or have a multifunctional<br />

purpose so as to make the most<br />

of a compact room.<br />

DESIGNER ITEMS x QUALITY<br />

CRAFTSMANSHIP<br />

A unique addition to your home in form<br />

and function, as well as a dash of color can<br />

change your interior completely. Here, Nippon<br />

Form excels with an extensive selection of<br />

high-end interior products, including glassware,<br />

tableware, and even lighting fixtures. The<br />

Guinomi series of hand-cut shot glasses from<br />

Kamata Kiriko delivers a new perspective to a<br />

traditional craft. The glasses gleam with indigo<br />

accents and the curved patterns conjure up<br />

images of water and waves. Another one-of-akind<br />

item is the nanbu tetsubin cast-iron kettle,<br />

a craft with a history dating back hundreds of<br />

years. These sturdy items from Iwate require the<br />

utmost care to create, but will last generations.<br />

Their playful pop-inspired colors – including<br />

ONE-OF-A-KIND GIFTS<br />

Although furniture is a large part of Nippon<br />

Form’s selection, there are plenty of smaller<br />

home decor items and accessories to please both<br />

the eye and the wallet for the casual souvenir<br />

shopper. Furoshiki cloths are both practical and<br />

compact gift items that showcase contemporary<br />

patterns on traditional fabric. Chopsticks, lacquerware<br />

bowls, small porcelain accessories – a<br />

cornucopia of items are available to explore and<br />

enjoy, making this the place to find a one-of-akind,<br />

high-quality gift to take home.<br />

NIPPON FORM, LIVING DESIGN<br />

CENTER OZONE<br />

5F Shinjuku Park Tower, 3-7-1<br />

Nishishinjuku, Shinjuku-ku<br />

Tel: 03-5322-6620<br />

Web: www.ozone.co.jp/nipponform<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 17


BEAUTY<br />

Words by Annemarie Luck<br />

Time for a make-up shake up: toss out the old and fill your<br />

beauty bag with these natural and organic brands instead<br />

LIPSTICK BY NATURAGLACE<br />

Using organic plant extracts, minerals<br />

and essential oils, Japan-made<br />

Naturaglacé products are 100%<br />

natural. With a base of olive oil and<br />

jojoba oil, this Rouge Drop Moist<br />

lipstick goes on smoothly, melting<br />

onto the lips, and moisturizing while<br />

providing a chic berry hue.<br />

¥3,200, www.naturaglace.jp<br />

FOUNDATION BY<br />

TV & MOVIE<br />

One of Japanese brand<br />

TV & Movie’s bestsellers,<br />

the 10 Min Mineral Powder<br />

Foundation not only<br />

protects your skin with<br />

SPF40 but also naturally<br />

adjusts to suit your skin<br />

tone. Best of all, it’s not<br />

dry like regular powder<br />

foundation as it contains<br />

natural oils including<br />

argan oil, olive oil and<br />

camellia oil. ¥5,500,<br />

www.tv-movie.co.jp


EYESHADOW BY<br />

ALIMA PURE<br />

Founded in Portland, Alima Pure<br />

believes in “minimal ingredients<br />

for maximum impact.” This proudly<br />

carbon-neutral brand incorporates<br />

pure mineral pigments, nourishing<br />

plants oils, and soothing botanicals<br />

in their luxurious range. Their<br />

Luminous Shimmer Eyeshadow is<br />

available at Cosme Kitchen branches<br />

in <strong>Tokyo</strong>, and our first choice for<br />

summer is this beautifully subtle<br />

Chai color. ¥2,376, alimapure.com,<br />

cosmekitchen.jp<br />

MASCARA BY<br />

AQUA ORGANIC<br />

Japanese brand Aqua Organic<br />

was founded in 2014 and<br />

uses fresh fruit extracts in<br />

their natural cosmetics. Even<br />

this mineral mascara, which<br />

lengthens and separates<br />

lashes beautifully, contains<br />

extracts including grapeseed,<br />

yuzu fruit, and loquat leaf.<br />

¥2,700, aqua-cosme.com<br />

BLUSH BY MIMC<br />

Created by Kotobuki Kitajima, MIMC<br />

uses 100% mineral and organic ingredients,<br />

and aims to “take care of your skin<br />

with make-up.” Look out for their 2017<br />

S/S 10th Anniversary Collection, which<br />

features this pressed Bio Moisture Cheek<br />

color made from minerals, plant serums<br />

and natural dye. ¥3,800, www.mimc.<br />

co.jp/2017sscollection.php<br />

EYESHADOW BY<br />

ZUII ORGANIC<br />

Whether you prefer a smoky<br />

eye or a pop of color on<br />

your lids, this new Certified<br />

Organic Duo Eyeshadow<br />

Palette range by Australian<br />

brand Zuii satisfies all tastes.<br />

The brand’s unique talc-free<br />

blend of rose, chamomile and<br />

jasmine powders are enriched<br />

with natural vitamins and<br />

minerals. We can’t wait to try<br />

the purple Pout Grape duo.<br />

¥4,800, www.zuiiorganic.com.<br />

For a list of stockists in Japan,<br />

visit www.zuii.jp


TRENDS<br />

THE SAKE<br />

AWARDS<br />

Words by Alec Jordan<br />

Last month we stopped by Sake Competition 2017 to find out<br />

which are the top tipples to taste this year<br />

For a beverage with such a long<br />

history (nearly 2000 years!),<br />

sake’s ingredients are as simple<br />

as can be: rice, water, a special<br />

type of mold known as kōji,<br />

yeast, and in some cases, distilled alcohol. But<br />

from these basic materials, a countless variety<br />

of different sakes have been brought to life,<br />

generations of brewing families have passed<br />

down secret recipes over the years, and a long<br />

and flavorful history continues to develop.<br />

It was with this spirit at heart that Japan’s<br />

Sake Competition was begun. Drawing sake<br />

brewers from around Japan and beyond, the<br />

2017 awards, held in early June, saw a panel<br />

of beverage connoisseurs – including none<br />

other than Hidetoshi Nakata – appraising<br />

more than 1700 sakes produced by 453 different<br />

sake brewers. There were eight awards<br />

categories, and we’re sharing the top three<br />

sakes in each – whether you’re new to nihonshu<br />

or you’re a long-time fan of the tipple,<br />

you’ll want to add these to your shopping list.<br />

More info at www.sakecompetition.com<br />

20 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


JUNMAI<br />

JUNMAI<br />

DAIGINJO<br />

This type of sake has had no extra distilled<br />

alcohol added during its brewing, and is<br />

known for its rich, full flavor.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Zaku, Honotomo, Shimizu Seizaburo<br />

Shoten (Mie) 2 ND Zaku, Gennotomo, Shimizu<br />

Seizaburo Shoten (Mie) 3 RD Ugonotsuki,<br />

Tokubetsu Junmai, Aihara Brewery<br />

(Hiroshima)<br />

JUNMAI<br />

GINJO<br />

A full, complex flavored sake made from<br />

rice that has been polished until at least 50<br />

percent of the grain has been removed.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Kaiun, Junmai Daiginjo, Doi Brewery<br />

(Shizuoka) 2 ND Tokaizakari, Junmai<br />

Daiginjo, Tobindori, Koizumi Brewery<br />

(Chiba) 3 RD Hououbiden, Beccho Shiko,<br />

Kobayashi Brewery (Tochigi)<br />

GINJO<br />

SPARKLING<br />

SAKE<br />

Made without the addition of distilled alcohol.<br />

Known for its complex flavor, which often has<br />

fruity and flowery notes.<br />

Produced using distilled alcohol, which can<br />

make for very interesting flavor profiles. These<br />

sakes are highly fragrant with subtle flavors.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Raifuku, Daiginjo, Shizuku, Raifuku<br />

Brewery (Ibaraki) 2 ND KID, Daiginjo, Heiwa<br />

Brewery (Wakayama) 3 RD Miinokotobuki,<br />

Daiginjo, Kannokura, Miinokotobuki<br />

Brewery (Fukuoka)<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Tosashiragiku, Junmai Ginjo,<br />

Yamadanishiki, Sento Sake Brewery (Kochi)<br />

2 ND Katsuyama, Junmai Ginjo, Ken, Katsuyama<br />

Brewery (Miyagi) 3 RD Bijofu, Junmai Ginjo,<br />

Yataro, Hamakawa Shoten (Kochi)<br />

SUPER<br />

PREMIUM<br />

Sparkling sake gets its bubbles from one of<br />

three ways: carbonation, tank fermentation,<br />

or bottle fermentation.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Nanbu Bijin, Awa Sake Sparkling,<br />

Nanbu Bijin Brewery (Iwate) 2 ND Shu Shu,<br />

Happoseishu, Koganei Brewery (Kanagawa)<br />

3 RD Suzune, Happoseishu, Ichinokura<br />

Brewery (Miyagi)<br />

LABEL<br />

DESIGN<br />

DINERS CLUB<br />

YOUNG BREWERS’<br />

ENCOURAGEMENT<br />

AWARD<br />

These three winners caught<br />

judges’ eyes as well as their<br />

taste buds.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Echigo Tsurukame, Junmai Daiginjo,<br />

Koshiwa, Echigo Tsurukame Brewery<br />

(Niigata) 2 ND Yamagata Masamune,<br />

Okanjunmai, Mitobe Brewery (Yamagata)<br />

3 RD Miyakanbai, Extra Class Junmai Daiginjo,<br />

Sanmai Hasshi, Kanbai Brewery (Miyagi)<br />

These sakes represent the very best that a<br />

brewer can achieve – and they have a price<br />

tag to match.<br />

THE WINNERS:<br />

1 ST Shichiken, Junmai Daiginjo, Onakata,<br />

Tobingakoi, Yamanashi Meijo Brewery<br />

(Yamanashi) 2 ND Kiwamihijiri, Junmai<br />

Daiginjo, Tenka no Shisei, Miyashita<br />

Brewery (Okayama) 3 RD Katsuyama, Junmai<br />

Daiginjo, Ren, Katsuyama Brewery (Miyagi)<br />

This prize goes in support of young brewers<br />

– those who are 35 years or younger.<br />

THE WINNER:<br />

This year the prize went to Mr Kitahara<br />

from Yamanashi Meijo Brewery in<br />

Yamanashi Prefecture, whose Shichiken<br />

Junmai Daiginjo won the top prize in the<br />

Super Premium category. As a part of the<br />

award, Yamanashi Meijo Brewery will<br />

receive PR and sales support.<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 21


Looking for a great place to eat, shop, sleep or play in <strong>Tokyo</strong>? Welcome to <strong>Weekender</strong>'s<br />

roundup of recommended restaurants, hotels, stores, salons and more. Here, we share<br />

this month's editor's picks, but for the full lineup – as well as reader discounts and<br />

special offers – simply head to www.tokyoweekender.com/the-concierge<br />

Elana Jade Club 360<br />

HEALTH, BEAUTY & FITNESS | EDITORS CHOICE<br />

Choose a healthy alternative to tanning without the hidden<br />

downsides! Eco Tan colors do not contain synthetic food<br />

coloring, and are derived from cacao, herbs, flower<br />

extracts, fruit extracts and chamomile from our Mother<br />

Earth. Home care products, including self tanning, are also available.<br />

Please see our website tanning page for tips on how to keep your tan<br />

longer! Special offer: Enjoy a full-body spray tan for ¥5,000 (normal<br />

price ¥7,000), valid until <strong>July</strong> 31.<br />

www.elanajade.com<br />

03-6453-9319<br />

4F NS Azabu Juban Building, 3-6-2 Azabu Juban, Minato-ku<br />

Club 360 is <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s premier fitness and rehabilitation<br />

center, offering personal training, physiotherapy, sports<br />

massage, exercise classes, boxing and various classes for<br />

children. Programs are tailored to suit you, and all trainers<br />

are highly qualified. Special offer: Get in shape this summer<br />

with Club 360’s four-week unlimited class special. Only ¥30,000<br />

and you get access to over 20 classes per week!<br />

www.club360.jp<br />

03-6434-9667<br />

B1 Cma3 Building, 3-1-35 Motoazabu, Minato-ku<br />

HEALTH, BEAUTY & FITNESS | EDITORS CHOICE<br />

HOTELS | EDITORS CHOICE<br />

Zagyosoh<br />

Founded 50 years ago,<br />

Zagyosoh – which is set within<br />

Izu’s Ukiyama hot spring<br />

district as well as the Fuji<br />

Hakone National Park – has transformed<br />

over the years from a small<br />

four-room traditional inn to a luxury<br />

resort spanning 16,528 square meters.<br />

It’s the first Abba Resort in Japan, and<br />

as of 2017 it’s also the first and only<br />

Japanese ryokan to be accepted as a<br />

member of the prestigious Small Luxury<br />

Hotels of the World (SLH) group.<br />

rzagyosoh.com/en<br />

0557-53-1170<br />

1741 Yawatano, Ito-shi, Shizuoka<br />

22 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


Fujimoto Dental Clinic<br />

At this Ginza-based clinic, which was founded in 1981, you’ll<br />

not only receive world-class specialist restorative and periodontal<br />

dental care, but you’ll also be in the expert hands<br />

of Dr Kohei Fujimoto. He is fluent in English, a graduate of<br />

the University of Washington’s Graduate Periodontics Program, and<br />

certified as a Diplomate of the American Board of Periodontology.<br />

Appointments can be made via phone.<br />

Owl Café Search<br />

Japan is famed for its wide variety of animal cafés, with owl<br />

cafés being one of the latest to join the lineup. This new<br />

website provides all the information you need on where to<br />

find one of these feathery creatures to pet while sipping on a<br />

cuppa. Launching their English site this month, Owl Café Search lets<br />

you search by area, and includes details such as price, opening hours,<br />

and contact info for each café listed.<br />

ABOUT TOWN | EDITORS CHOICE<br />

www.owlcafe-search.com<br />

ABOUT TOWN | EDITORS CHOICE<br />

www.fujimoto-dental.com<br />

03-5551-0051<br />

4F Kami-Pulp Kaikan, 3-9-11 Ginza, Chuo-ku<br />

WANT TO FEATURE YOUR ESTABLISHMENT IN THE CONCIERGE?<br />

For ad sales enquiries, please call 03-6432-9948 or email sales@tokyoweekender.com<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 23


WE ASKED HOW YOU<br />

FEEL ABOUT JAPAN'S<br />

BATHING CULTURE.<br />

HERE'S WHAT<br />

YOU SAID...<br />

high-tech functions<br />

The top-rated feature of<br />

Japanese baths eg. auto water<br />

reheating. Meanwhile, 109<br />

people said Japanese baths<br />

should be longer and larger.<br />

The number of respondents<br />

who said that their bathroom<br />

back home contained a bath<br />

tub, shower and toilet in the<br />

same room (unlike in Japan).<br />

In April, The Noritz Group, one of Japan's leading<br />

water heater companies, asked <strong>Tokyo</strong> <strong>Weekender</strong><br />

readers to take a short survey to share your opinions<br />

and experiences with regards to the bathing customs<br />

of Japan, including at home, sento (public baths), and<br />

onsen (hot spring baths). From over 600 responses,<br />

we've whittled down the data to bring you the<br />

insightful – and sometimes entertaining – results.<br />

biggest changes since<br />

moving to japan<br />

1. I bathe more often<br />

2. I bathe at night now<br />

3. I bathe for longer<br />

Were surprised to learn that Japanese<br />

people commonly share bath water and<br />

bath time with family members. 70% of<br />

respondents said they bathe alone.<br />

TOP READERS’<br />

COMMENTS<br />

AND NOW FOR YOUR MOST<br />

ENTERTAINING SUGGESTIONS…<br />

"The sound of the bath<br />

controller is too loud; every<br />

time we use it our dog barks<br />

like crazy."<br />

"I wish I could turn on the<br />

water from the bath itself.<br />

The control button is in the<br />

kitchen for some reason..."<br />

Those who have been to a sento.<br />

Although only 30% said they regularly<br />

use both home and public baths.<br />

The percentage<br />

from North<br />

America who tend<br />

to bathe at night,<br />

while people from<br />

Asia tend to bathe<br />

in the morning.<br />

"I would like an app on my<br />

smartphone to start running<br />

or heat up my bath!"<br />

"Have beer vendors walking<br />

around the onsen? That<br />

would be pretty silly<br />

though."<br />

SO WHAT DID WE ULTIMATELY LEARN FROM THE SURVEY?<br />

After 66 years in the bathing possible to automatically clean the bath tub,<br />

biz, Noritz told us they were fill the water and maintain the temperature<br />

interested "to discover that with just one switch. Also look out for their<br />

international residents enjoy newly launched high-efficiency gas water<br />

taking baths as much as people heater, the Eco Jozu GT-C2462 series, which<br />

who grew up in Japan."<br />

carries a UV sterilization unit on the water<br />

Following on from some of the feedback heater itself to prevent bacteria growing in<br />

received, they'll be focusing their attention<br />

on adding to their range of high-tech<br />

residual water.<br />

features – for example, the Osouji Yokuso For more information about The Noritz<br />

(bath tub cleaning) feature, which makes it Group, go to www.noritzglobal.com/en<br />

"I only wish they allowed<br />

tattoos. Some of us have<br />

small tattoos and got<br />

rejected at some onsen."<br />

"All I know is pressing a<br />

button to run a bath has<br />

changed everything! And<br />

living closer to a Lush. Bath<br />

bombs are my life now."<br />

"More signs in proper<br />

English, widely available in<br />

onsen and sento."<br />

24 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


SHIFTING PERCEPTIONS<br />

This month: a shocking documentary challenges traditional opinions on sexuality in<br />

Japan (above and page 36), a new book shatters antiquated views on the kimono (page 26),<br />

and why the crows of <strong>Tokyo</strong> don't really deserve their "bad boy" image (page 32).<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | APRIL JULY 2017 | 25


BREAKING<br />

THE RULES<br />

OF KIMONO<br />

A NEW BOOK BY DR SHEILA CLIFFE SHOWS<br />

OFF THE DIFFERENT PERSONALITIES<br />

OF THIS VERY TRADITIONAL YET OFTEN<br />

MISCONCEIVED GARMENT<br />

Words by Lisa Wallin<br />

26 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


EVERY GARMENT I WEAR IS A STORY,<br />

AND I’M JUST ANOTHER CHAPTER IN<br />

THAT GARMENT’S STORY<br />

also much more connected with nature,<br />

climate, the seasons and place. Also, a dress<br />

or a shirt and pants are kind of a done deal.<br />

You can add some earrings or something,<br />

but what you buy is basically what you<br />

wear. If I buy 50 obi, then that’s 50 different<br />

outfits with this one kimono. That’s fascinating<br />

to me. Anyone who loves the idea<br />

of putting an outfit together will become<br />

hooked on kimono.”<br />

On her own kimono-wearing style, Cliffe<br />

says, “Contrast works with kimono. I limit<br />

the number of colors I use, and those colors<br />

are almost always opposites on the color<br />

circle. I don’t look at any of the magazines<br />

telling you what’s right or wrong. If I look at<br />

those, I know I’m going to end up dressing<br />

the same as everyone else. When you do<br />

that, you lose all the power of expression.<br />

I go my own way. I think it’s normal and<br />

ordinary, but people seem to think it’s interesting.<br />

I suppose dressing is my art.”<br />

Cliffe also mentions that kimono are<br />

usually inherited, connecting people across<br />

generations. Silk is said to last a hundred<br />

years, which is roughly equal to three generations.<br />

Given its long life and the fact that<br />

silk kimono are kept for formal occasions<br />

and thus remain in good condition, being<br />

able to wear a hundred-year-old kimono is<br />

not unusual. Cliffe explains, “I pick up the<br />

old ones and wear them until they fall apart.<br />

Kimono has long been<br />

pigeon-holed as the<br />

“national costume”<br />

of Japan, and largely<br />

ignored by Western<br />

fashion academics who view it<br />

as an unchanging garment that<br />

simply serves the purpose of<br />

covering the body. It is clothing,<br />

but it isn’t considered fashion.<br />

Dr. Sheila Cliffe, who moved<br />

from Bristol to Japan in 1985 and<br />

is a professor at Jumonji Gakuen<br />

Women’s University in Saitama,<br />

aims to shatter this antiquated<br />

and Eurocentric view of the<br />

kimono in her book The Social<br />

Life of Kimono. Spoiler alert: she<br />

succeeds. Her in-depth social<br />

analysis of past and present kimono<br />

wearers, as well as makers<br />

and craftsmen in the industry,<br />

indicates kimono is part of a<br />

complete fashion system separate<br />

from the West.<br />

Cliffe’s passion for kimono<br />

is infectious, and her deep<br />

knowledge on the subject – both<br />

academically and aesthetically<br />

– is nothing less than inspiring.<br />

When asked what kimono means<br />

to her, Cliffe tells <strong>Weekender</strong>:<br />

“It’s fashion, very simply. But<br />

it’s far more interesting than<br />

Western fashion, for a lot of reasons:<br />

it’s slow and it’s three-dimensional.<br />

It caters to multiple<br />

audiences because of that. It’s<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 27


Unfortunately, I haven’t inherited any from<br />

my own mother, but every garment I wear is<br />

a story, and I’m just another chapter in that<br />

garment’s story. I’m the last chapter – or<br />

almost, at least. When I can’t wear a kimono<br />

anymore, I cut it up to make kimono collars<br />

or recycle it into other things. Each time it<br />

changes context, another story is added to<br />

the life of the kimono.”<br />

Cliffe’s view of kimono as a fashion item<br />

to enjoy and play with may seem obvious<br />

now, but it wasn’t always an easily accessible<br />

culture. The Internet has played a large<br />

role in the spread of interest in kimono, and<br />

in turn, bending its rules. Cliffe explains:<br />

“Before the Internet, kimono knowledge was<br />

trapped within the industry, especially with<br />

kimono dressing schools. The schools were<br />

keeping it a closely guarded secret, but they<br />

didn’t realize that raising the bar to kimono<br />

wearing so high was actually strangling<br />

the whole industry. It was only because<br />

the information started to leak out that the<br />

kimono revival could happen.”<br />

The kimono revival found its way<br />

through a worldwide boom in Asian culture<br />

in the early Nineties. Interest for all things<br />

Japanese increased at home, whether it was<br />

keeping goldfish instead of tropical fish, or<br />

an indoor bonsai garden. Along with that,<br />

interest in yukata grew, and from yukata to<br />

kimono. As with most fashion movements,<br />

young women led the way, but with one<br />

difference: the knowledge of how to wear kimono<br />

was held by older women. Previously,<br />

mothers would have taught their daughters<br />

REVISING HOW<br />

PEOPLE FRAME<br />

THE KIMONO IS<br />

CRITICAL FOR<br />

IT TO REMAIN A<br />

FASHION ITEM IN<br />

THE FUTURE<br />

how to wear kimono – now it’s older women<br />

teaching younger women who are their<br />

friends. “It’s a return to a more natural<br />

way of sharing the knowledge,” says Cliffe.<br />

Thanks to the Internet, the interest<br />

in kimono has also grown overseas, with<br />

people meeting up to wear the garment<br />

and discuss its care, how to accessorize<br />

it, and more. Cliffe met with one of the<br />

groups, Kimono de Jack, in Birmingham.<br />

“When I went to interview them, I was<br />

petrified at first. I didn’t know what I<br />

would be dealing with. But everyone<br />

wore their kimono beautifully and had<br />

even come up with new ways of tying obi<br />

knots, which is fascinating. That’s how<br />

far the information has leapt out. And<br />

this is without ever having stepped foot in<br />

Japan!”<br />

28 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


The Web<br />

has also helped<br />

create a medium<br />

for homegrown<br />

kimono influencers<br />

who reside<br />

outside of Japan’s<br />

bigger cities. One<br />

in particular,<br />

Akira Times [who<br />

created the image<br />

on this issue's<br />

cover], breaks the<br />

mold of the image<br />

of the traditional<br />

kimono wearer.<br />

He says people are<br />

looking for culture<br />

in the wrong places<br />

because they<br />

are looking to the<br />

past and trying to<br />

preserve it, rather<br />

than making<br />

something new. He believes in breaking stereotypes<br />

and taboos to create something that<br />

never existed before. He and Cliffe agree<br />

that revising how people frame the kimono<br />

is critical for it to remain a fashion item in<br />

the future, and the Internet is one way to<br />

help spread knowledge and style ideas.<br />

However, even with all the knowledge<br />

online, some things still get lost in translation.<br />

For Cliffe’s book, she interviewed 50 international<br />

kimono wearers and 50 Japanese kimono<br />

wearers. The difference in their collections<br />

was remarkable. While Japanese enthusiasts<br />

had wardrobes with raw silk and komon (a<br />

casual kimono with all-over patterns) for<br />

everyday wear, international wearers had<br />

completely different collections. “They had<br />

so many gorgeous kimono, but they were<br />

very formal and with very few uses for them.<br />

I understand why, though. They’re coming<br />

from the outside, from a visual aspect, and<br />

those are the ones that make the strongest<br />

impression. I wanted to show that Japan has<br />

always had its<br />

own fashion,<br />

unrelated to the<br />

West. I wanted to<br />

tell the users’ and<br />

wearers’ story.<br />

The international<br />

wearers only<br />

have part of that<br />

story, through<br />

photos and websites<br />

with geisha<br />

on them. If you’re<br />

going to have a<br />

photo taken, then<br />

you wear a fancy<br />

kimono and that<br />

creates a distortion<br />

in the data.<br />

I wanted to tell<br />

the real stories of<br />

real women.”<br />

This was<br />

how Cliffe’s bilingual<br />

project, Kimono Closet, was born.<br />

This ongoing project catalogues women’s<br />

kimono wardrobes as well as their stories<br />

behind certain kimono, their influences,<br />

and their challenges. For Cliffe, her social<br />

study of kimono has only just begun.<br />

The Social Life of Kimono is available on<br />

Amazon.co.jp for ¥3,226. For more info<br />

about Dr. Sheila Cliffe and her projects, visit<br />

www.kimonocloset.com. Also, find her on<br />

Instagram: @kimonosheila and YouTube:<br />

Kimono World.<br />

WHERE TO BUY<br />

& HOW TO WEAR<br />

While the media would have us believe<br />

the kimono industry is dying, Cliffe<br />

insists this isn’t the case. “There are<br />

some kimono that are only made in<br />

certain places because of the weather<br />

or because the techniques are so<br />

exacting that only a few older people<br />

remember how to do it. Those types are<br />

endangered, but kimono isn’t dying.<br />

It’s changing. There are a lot of new<br />

and successful businesses out there. It’s<br />

fashion, and fashion changes. There’s<br />

nothing wrong with that.” So, where to<br />

get your kimono kicks in <strong>Tokyo</strong>? Here<br />

are three recommended spots…<br />

GALLERY KAWANO<br />

Extensive selection of vintage kimono,<br />

obi and haori (jacket), with sizes<br />

available to suit the taller shopper.<br />

Flats Omotesando 102, 4-4-9 Jingumae,<br />

Shibuya-ku, www.gallery-kawano.com<br />

KIMONO, REMADE: TOKYO<br />

KALEIDOSCOPE<br />

For those who love kimono patterns<br />

and fabrics but aren’t keen on the<br />

traditional way of wearing them, Lia<br />

makes stunning modern-day bespoke<br />

creations from vintage kimono.<br />

www.tokyokaleidoscope.com<br />

HISUI TOKYO<br />

This school offers lessons not only in<br />

kimono dressing, but also tea ceremony,<br />

calligraphy and sword training in the<br />

heart of Ginza. 5F Koizumi Bldg., 4-3-13<br />

Ginza, Chuo-ku, en.hisui-tokyo.com


THE LIFE AND LOVE OF<br />

JAPAN’S NEW EMPEROR<br />

Words by Matthew Hernon<br />

As Emperor Akihito prepares to step down, all eyes are turning towards his son and successor, Crown Prince<br />

Naruhito. Here, we reflect on his relatively down-to-earth upbringing, the freedom he felt while living in England,<br />

and whether his wife, who has battled for years to adjust to palace life, is ready to take on the role of empress<br />

After almost three decades as the ceremonial figurehead<br />

of Japan, Emperor Akihito has been given permission<br />

to step down. The 83-year-old, who has undergone<br />

heart surgery and had treatment for prostate cancer,<br />

no longer feels he can carry out his duties properly. A one-off bill<br />

has been passed by the government allowing him to renounce<br />

the throne. It will be Japan's first abdication in more than two<br />

centuries, with the baton being passed on to his son, Crown Prince<br />

Naruhito. The exact date of the succession has yet to be confirmed,<br />

though reports have suggested it will take place on January 1,<br />

2019. Naruhito will become the 126th emperor in the world's oldest<br />

hereditary monarchy, a line dating back to the 5th century. So,<br />

what do we know about the heir apparent to the Chrysanthemum<br />

Throne? Here’s a look at the life and times of the future emperor.<br />

THE NARU-CHAN CONSTITUTION<br />

The eldest son of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, Naruhito<br />

was born in a makeshift hospital at the palace on February 23,<br />

1960. His mother – the first commoner to marry into the imperial<br />

family – decided to raise Naruhito and his siblings, Prince Akishino<br />

and Sayako Kuroda, herself, even breastfeeding them. While that<br />

may not sound noteworthy, at the time it was considered significant<br />

as the everyday care of royal children had previously been<br />

the duty of wet nurses and maids.


When his parents were away Naruhito<br />

would be left with nannies who were<br />

given written instructions by Michiko on<br />

how to take care of him. He was allowed<br />

no more than one toy at a time and had to<br />

be hugged at least once a day. This list of<br />

rules was turned into a best-selling book<br />

titled Naru-chan Kenpo (The Naruhito<br />

Constitution) that’s still popular today.<br />

From all accounts, Naruhito was<br />

said to have had a happy and relatively<br />

normal upbringing, especially when<br />

compared to his ancestors. His father<br />

allegedly gave him a hand-me-down uniform<br />

to wear to school and told teachers<br />

not to give him any special treatment.<br />

The young prince enjoyed watching<br />

baseball, hiking and skiing.<br />

CLUBBING, PUB CRAWLS AND<br />

TEA WITH THE QUEEN<br />

In 1983, a year after graduating from Gakushuin<br />

University, Naruhito decided to<br />

move to the UK where he did a master’s<br />

degree on the history of transportation<br />

on the River Thames at Oxford University’s<br />

Merton College. More important<br />

than his classroom studies, however,<br />

were the life lessons he learnt during his<br />

two years in Britain.<br />

For the first time, the prince had to<br />

fend for himself and seemed to revel<br />

in it. In his book, The Thames and I: A<br />

Memoir of Two Years at Oxford, he wrote,<br />

“This had been a happy time for me –<br />

perhaps I should say the happiest time of<br />

my life.” The autobiographical account,<br />

whilst not exactly hard-hitting, gives<br />

a fascinating insight into the personal<br />

escapades of a man whose privacy is<br />

usually closely guarded.<br />

Much of his first week in England<br />

was spent in the company of the royal<br />

family, including the Queen, who impressed<br />

him with her laid-back manner<br />

and the fact that she poured him a cup of<br />

tea herself. Shortly after, he moved into<br />

a shared dormitory in Oxford where he<br />

learnt how to iron and use the coin laundry<br />

machine, though his first attempt at<br />

the latter ended with him almost flooding<br />

the room.<br />

One of his favorite pastimes was discussing<br />

music over a few pints. He even<br />

went on a few pub crawls. The prince<br />

apologizes to the British public for not<br />

getting to grips with the rules of cricket,<br />

but did participate in many British<br />

sports such as tennis and rowing. It was<br />

an exciting time for a man who, under<br />

normal circumstances, can barely move<br />

without asking for permission.<br />

“I met the crown prince twice,” says<br />

social anthropologist Joy Hendry. “On<br />

the second occasion, I sat opposite his<br />

personal body guard who told me how<br />

much the prince loved being in Oxford<br />

because he could walk about in the<br />

streets and the local market where nobody<br />

recognized him, which made him<br />

feel free like any other student.”<br />

Around the city Naruhito would<br />

usually wear jeans, much to the surprise<br />

of Japanese tourists. His casual attire got<br />

him turned away from a nightclub, yet that<br />

didn't put him off. He went to a different<br />

club at a later date, dancing with girls until<br />

2am. “Perhaps this was the first and last<br />

disco I would go to in my life,” he remarked.<br />

In October 1985 Naruhito departed<br />

from the UK. “As the London scene gradually<br />

disappeared from view I realized that<br />

an important chapter in my life was over.<br />

A new page was opening, but I felt a large<br />

void in my heart, and as I stared out of the<br />

window of the plane I had a lump in my<br />

throat.”<br />

IN PURSUIT OF A PRINCESS<br />

Back in Japan, Naruhito’s activities were<br />

far more constricted, and being in his<br />

mid-twenties he was under pressure to find<br />

a bride. He could reportedly choose one<br />

himself, but she had to meet the approval<br />

of a committee of palace officials. The plan<br />

was to have him married off before reaching<br />

30, yet despite numerous candidates<br />

being put forward the prince remained<br />

single at 32.<br />

I FELT A LARGE VOID<br />

IN MY HEART, AND AS<br />

I STARED OUT OF THE<br />

WINDOW OF THE PLANE<br />

I HAD A LUMP IN MY<br />

THROAT<br />

His first choice was Harvard graduate<br />

Masako Owada, whom he pursued for six<br />

years after they met at a banquet for the<br />

Duchess of Lugo in 1986. Coming from<br />

a wealthy family, she ticked most of the<br />

committee’s boxes: highly educated, multilingual<br />

and, crucially, slightly shorter than<br />

the prince.<br />

One problem was the controversy surrounding<br />

her maternal grandfather, Yutaka<br />

Egashira. He was the former chairman<br />

of Chisso Corporation, a chemical company<br />

that dumped mercury-laden<br />

industrial waste into<br />

the bay off Minamata<br />

in Kyushu, leading to<br />

the onset of Minamata<br />

Disease. Thousands<br />

were affected by the<br />

neurological syndrome,<br />

which in extreme cases,<br />

led to insanity, paralysis<br />

and death. Though not<br />

directly involved in the<br />

scandal, Egashira’s association<br />

with Chisso was seen<br />

as potentially damaging<br />

for the imperial family.<br />

Despite this, Naruhito was still determined<br />

to wed Masako. Unfortunately, she<br />

wasn’t so keen. Twice she turned down<br />

his proposals as it would mean giving up a<br />

budding career as a diplomat for the constrained<br />

life of a princess. Not one to give<br />

in, Naruhito tried a third time and finally<br />

got his wish.<br />

Speaking at a press conference after<br />

their wedding in 1993, Crown Princess<br />

Masako said, “His Highness told me that<br />

‘you may have many worries and anxieties<br />

about entering the imperial house, but I<br />

will do everything in my power to protect<br />

you as long as I live.’”<br />

Despite the support of her husband,<br />

Masako has struggled with life as a royal.<br />

Under pressure to produce a male heir,<br />

she miscarried in 1999. Two years later<br />

Princess Aiko was born; however, as Japan<br />

operates under a system of agnatic<br />

primogeniture, this did little to solve the<br />

succession problem. It was all getting too<br />

much for the future empress.<br />

Speaking to journalists in 2004, Naruhito<br />

said, “Princess Masako still faces ups and<br />

downs in terms of her health. She’s worked<br />

hard to adapt to the environment of the<br />

Imperial Household for the past decade,<br />

but from what I can see, she's completely<br />

exhausted herself in trying to do so.”<br />

It was announced that Masako was suffering<br />

from adjustment disorder, a mental<br />

condition brought on by stress, making it<br />

difficult for her to carry out official duties.<br />

The birth of Prince Hisahito – son of the<br />

crown prince’s brother and third in line for<br />

the throne – reduced some of the pressure.<br />

Her condition is said to have improved<br />

slightly in recent years, but public appearances<br />

remain sporadic. Whether that<br />

will change when she becomes empress<br />

remains to be seen.<br />

As for Naruhito, this is a role he has<br />

been preparing for since childhood. His<br />

amiable father, ably supported by wife<br />

Michiko, is held in high regard for prioritizing<br />

disaster victims, championing the<br />

cause of marginalized people and attempting<br />

to reconcile with countries affected by<br />

Japan’s colonialism and wartime aggression.<br />

The hope is that his son will devote<br />

himself to the role of emperor in a similar<br />

fashion.


THE MISUNDERSTOOD<br />

CROWS OF TOKYO<br />

Love or hate them, the city’s gigantic crows cannot be ignored. To make sense<br />

of their place in the concrete jungle, we look at their longheld connection with<br />

Japan, and some surprising lessons we can learn from these sometimes smart,<br />

sometimes foolish “urban guerrillas of birds”<br />

Words by Alec Jordan<br />

In Japan, the public perception of crows got off to a pretty<br />

good start: According to the Kojiki and the Nihonshoki, two<br />

of Japan’s oldest written records, a gigantic crow known as<br />

the Yatagarasu guided the mythical first emperor of Japan<br />

to the part of the country now known as Nara. This crow,<br />

which is often depicted with three legs, can be found at the Kumano<br />

shrines of Japan, and even more commonly, on the uniforms<br />

of the Samurai Blue – Japan’s national soccer team.<br />

But even though they have been common figures in art from<br />

well before the Edo period, crows are generally seen with a mixed<br />

perspective in Japan. On one hand, you have the traditional song<br />

“Yuyake Koyake,” which plays on loudspeakers every afternoon<br />

and whose lyrics tell us return home like the crows return to<br />

their roosts in the trees, but there are also still the associations<br />

of the birds with death – even today, there is a superstition that<br />

if a crow perches on a house at night and calls out, someone in<br />

that house will die before long. We may be happy to return home<br />

like crows – as straight as they fly – but we don’t necessarily want<br />

them roosting with us.<br />

Today, perhaps, the biggest problem that people face with<br />

crows around <strong>Tokyo</strong> is trying to keep them out of their garbage.<br />

And the birds can cause other kinds of trouble as well: the <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Metropolitan Government receives some 600 calls a year from<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong>ites who’ve been attacked by crows – most often in spring,<br />

around the time when the birds are hatching their eggs and raising<br />

their newborn young.<br />

Nonetheless, crows have their fans in <strong>Tokyo</strong>, just as they do<br />

everywhere around the world. Why? It could be their intelligence<br />

– crows know how to use tools, they recognize human faces, and<br />

they’ve even been observed to hold what look to be funerals. It<br />

might be their distinctive voices: crows and their larger cousin<br />

the ravens are believed to possess some of the most complicated<br />

vocabulary of calls of any bird. Or maybe it’s a shared sense<br />

of play. The birds have been seen using wind currents like children<br />

might use waterslides, throwing paper to themselves, going


ody surfing on snowy banks, and playing<br />

with balls.<br />

It was probably a combination of these<br />

traits, as well as their sheer number, that<br />

drew a filmmaking couple, Kris Samuelson<br />

and John Haptas, to devote a few years to the<br />

crows of <strong>Tokyo</strong>. They got their first exposure<br />

to the birds when they were returning from<br />

teaching in Southeast Asia and stopped for a<br />

while in <strong>Tokyo</strong>. As they explained, “there was<br />

a garden where we were staying and we were<br />

amazed by the huge number of crows we<br />

heard and saw. We were intrigued and began<br />

noticing them everywhere we went.”<br />

Samuelson and Haptas returned home<br />

to Northern California, intent on learning<br />

more about city crows – “the urban guerrillas<br />

of birds,” the couple calls them – in general,<br />

and about <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s crows in particular. A<br />

short visit to Japan to shoot a funding clip<br />

followed, and a year and a half later, the<br />

couple received a Japan-US Creative Arts<br />

Fellowship that allowed them to spend five<br />

months in Japan shooting what would<br />

become <strong>Tokyo</strong> Waka.<br />

In the words of the filmmakers, the<br />

documentary is “an essay about man and<br />

nature coexisting in a megalopolis.” Its subjects<br />

include scientists, nature lovers, artists,<br />

a homeless woman, Shinto and Buddhist<br />

priests, and, of course, Corvus macrorhynchos:<br />

the jungle crow, also known as the<br />

large-billed crow. We see them building nests<br />

with hangers stolen from people’s balconies,<br />

chased away by the bees that make the honey<br />

that is sold through the Ginza Bee Project,<br />

and at play in the city’s many parks. The film<br />

has its darker moments – we see a crow that<br />

has been trapped by the <strong>Tokyo</strong> Metropolitan<br />

Government and bagged for euthanization,<br />

for example – but these scenes all help to<br />

draw a fuller picture of the interaction<br />

between humans and the animals they share<br />

the city with.<br />

As one of the film's subjects states,<br />

"Japan has a love of nature, but it’s a kind of<br />

nature that is moderated by mankind – not<br />

necessarily a 'wild' nature." And that’s why<br />

the crow is a complicated beast for <strong>Tokyo</strong>: it<br />

is inadvertently “raised” on what we throw<br />

away, but we really can’t control it, despite<br />

our best efforts.<br />

Another figure who is equally fascinated<br />

by the city’s crows is Hajime Matsubara,<br />

an Affiliate Associate at <strong>Tokyo</strong> University's<br />

Intermediatheque. His first early exposure to<br />

the birds set him on the course of research<br />

that has become part of his life’s work: “One<br />

day in my childhood, I heard a flock of crows<br />

cawing to each other, on the way to their<br />

roost. It looked as if they were talking, so I<br />

tried to call them, imitating their call. A few<br />

seconds later, two or three crows ‘replied.’<br />

Of course, I’m not sure that they really called<br />

back or were calling to each other for their<br />

own purposes. Anyway, that was an impressive<br />

experience for me.”<br />

THE CROW HAS<br />

AN OUTSIDE<br />

PERSPECTIVE,<br />

AND SEES RIGHT<br />

THROUGH OUR<br />

BEAUTY AND OUR<br />

UGLINESS<br />

To this day, he remains impressed<br />

by their attitudes, which he often likens<br />

to those of humans, and their “limitless<br />

ability to adapt to any environment.” And<br />

despite the city’s best efforts to control the<br />

crow population, he believes that crows<br />

have done quite well in the city. Matsubara<br />

estimates that the crow population in <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

is somewhere between 18,000 (the official<br />

estimate of the <strong>Tokyo</strong> Metropolitan Government)<br />

and 100,000.<br />

As <strong>Tokyo</strong> Waka explains, trapping and<br />

gassing crows has been the official city<br />

policy for keeping the crow population<br />

down, but Matsubara doesn’t believe this is<br />

the best long-term approach (and not just<br />

because the crows are getting wiser to the<br />

city’s traps). “I think garbage control is the<br />

most successful way. Because, if their food<br />

resource is decreased, their reproductive<br />

success and survival rate must decrease.<br />

If we continue piling up garbage bags on<br />

the street and keep carrying capacity high,<br />

nothing can stop the crows from breeding<br />

and coming into <strong>Tokyo</strong> from other places in<br />

Japan.”<br />

When asked about their intelligence, he<br />

responds cautiously: “That’s a very difficult<br />

question, because they are very smart<br />

in some aspects and very foolish when it<br />

comes to other matters. For example, crows<br />

are insightful and capable of long-term<br />

planning. Their cousins, the common raven<br />

have shown researchers that they can<br />

figure out how to untie bow knots simply<br />

by watching other individuals’ behavior.<br />

But, for example, they don’t recognize their<br />

own mirror images, which is something<br />

that even pigeons can do.” However, when<br />

it comes to feeding, and figuring out how to<br />

stay fed alongside human beings, he thinks<br />

that crows are geniuses: “In <strong>Tokyo</strong>, [when it<br />

comes to feeding strategies] crows can adapt<br />

to human behavior very quickly – sometimes<br />

within some minutes.”<br />

Perhaps one of the things that attracts<br />

us to crows is that they give us a seemingly<br />

limitless opportunity to interpret their behavior.<br />

For example, even though Matsubara<br />

watches his research subjects with a scientist’s<br />

eye, he says that he’s noticed two things<br />

that humans can learn from the resourceful<br />

crow: “‘Make the most of every opportunity<br />

and be careful in seeking them out’” and<br />

‘Love is forever.’ Why? Because crows eat<br />

everything – even if it is garbage. And crow<br />

pairs seldom separate.”<br />

And, after all, who’s to say that the crows<br />

aren’t considering us, as we go about our<br />

days? Akiyoshi Taniguchi, a Buddhist priest<br />

at Chohouin Temple in Kuramae, who was<br />

interviewed for <strong>Tokyo</strong> Waka – and who had<br />

a prize goldfish taken from the temple pond<br />

by a crow – strikes a philosophical note as he<br />

muses about how the crows of <strong>Tokyo</strong> might<br />

look at the two-legged creatures they share<br />

the city with: “They are observing us in their<br />

own way. The crow has an outside perspective,<br />

and sees right through our beauty and<br />

our ugliness.”<br />

For more information about <strong>Tokyo</strong> Waka,<br />

visit www.stylofilms.com/tokyowaka.html. To<br />

learn more about the Intermediatheque, visit<br />

www.intermediatheque.jp/en<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 33


WHAT IT’S REALLY<br />

LIKE INSIDE<br />

TERRACE<br />

HOUSE<br />

The Japanese reality TV show has been described as<br />

both boring and fascinating, and has gathered a cult<br />

following abroad. Matthew Hernon chats with the stars<br />

to find out what it’s like on the inside<br />

A<br />

fly-on-the-wall reality show<br />

focusing on six, mostly polite<br />

Japanese people living together<br />

without a competitive angle:<br />

Terrace House doesn't sound particularly<br />

captivating. Fairly calm and undramatic,<br />

the participants have little interest in<br />

backstabbing or causing rifts like they do in<br />

Western reality programs, yet somehow the<br />

concept works. It's mundane and addictive<br />

at the same time.<br />

"There are conflicts in the house, but<br />

they're dealt with in a quiet, considered way<br />

which can be even scarier than something<br />

explosive," comedian Ryota Yamasato tells<br />

<strong>Weekender</strong>. "I think it gives a fascinating<br />

and realistic insight into modern Japanese<br />

society and the way people interact here. I'm<br />

not typical in that sense so it's an interesting<br />

learning experience for me."<br />

Yamasato, or Yama-chan as he's better<br />

known, is one of six commentators on the<br />

show who watch and analyze the week's<br />

main events. He's the cynical one of the<br />

group, taking pleasure in the misfortune of<br />

the housemates, particularly when relationships<br />

turn sour. "I don't dislike people falling<br />

in love, it's just more fun when things<br />

go wrong," he says, smiling. "Not everyone<br />

wants to see these models and athletes<br />

succeeding. I prefer to focus on their flaws,<br />

which some people like, while others tweet<br />

me to say I'm being too harsh. The passion<br />

people have for the show is great. I especially<br />

love getting messages from abroad."<br />

Since premiering on Netflix with English<br />

subtitles two years ago, Terrace House<br />

has garnered a cult following globally, and<br />

as Netflix Japan content manager Kaata<br />

Sakamoto told Buzzfeed News, it has "exceeded<br />

expectation in terms of international<br />

viewership."<br />

BOYS X GIRLS: NEXT DOOR<br />

The program first aired on Fuji TV in 2012<br />

and immediately did well in the ratings. One<br />

of the most talked about and outspoken of the<br />

original housemates was Seina Shimabukuro<br />

whose drunken escapades in the first 29 episodes<br />

caused quite a stir. Despite leaving midway<br />

to pursue a career in modeling (housemates<br />

can choose when they depart), things<br />

didn't turn out as planned so she returned to<br />

the show, and ended up staying until the end.<br />

"I was there a long time, probably too<br />

long for some," she says, laughing. "It was<br />

amazing. I loved all the trips, dates and small<br />

things like eating dinner with everyone in the<br />

evening. Living with strangers is nerve-wracking,<br />

but you soon get used to it. Dealing with<br />

the criticism wasn't so easy, though."<br />

Unlike Big Brother, Terrace House members<br />

are well aware of what's being said about<br />

them. In the first series, they would watch the<br />

program on TV at the same time as viewers<br />

and then check social media to gauge the<br />

public's reaction.<br />

34 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER<br />

Yuto Handa


©Fuji Television Network Inc./East Entertainment<br />

©Fuji Television Network Inc./East Entertainment ©Fuji Television Network Inc./East Entertainment<br />

"It was scary," says Shimabukuro. "I love<br />

Yama-chan, but he could be quite harsh. You<br />

then had to deal with negative comments<br />

online. People wrote about me drinking so I<br />

thought about trying to hide my wine behind<br />

the cameras. I decided not to, though, as there's<br />

no point pretending to be someone you're not."<br />

Japanese-American artist Frankie Cihi<br />

also received her share of online abuse. "I<br />

was trolled on Twitter," she says. "Early on<br />

I was seen as pushy which didn't go down<br />

well. The worst comments came from Taylor<br />

Swift fans. Her song was in the opening<br />

credits so the producers arranged for us to<br />

interview her. Being the English speaker, I<br />

asked the questions and her followers didn't<br />

like it. They were really offended when I<br />

posted a picture posing with their goddess.<br />

I even had death threats."<br />

Despite this, Frankie has no regrets about<br />

appearing on the show. "I gained so much<br />

confidence from it," she says. "It's a program<br />

that lets you be yourself without much interference.<br />

Early on people had their doubts<br />

about me because I seemed bitchy, but once<br />

they got to know my real character they realized<br />

I was harmless. My mother [actress Aki<br />

Mizusawa] saw that I was being well-received<br />

and reached out to me. Before that we weren't<br />

on good terms so that was probably the biggest<br />

positive from the whole experience."<br />

BOYS & GIRLS IN THE CITY<br />

Frankie was also a fan of the following<br />

series, which was coproduced by Netflix and<br />

Fuji TV. Her favorite housemate was Yuto<br />

Handa (Hansan) whom she says, "listened<br />

intently, always knew what to say and spoke<br />

with good diction."<br />

The aspiring architect was the fatherfigure<br />

in the house, relieving tensions and<br />

lending an ear when other members had<br />

problems. In the eyes of commentators Reina<br />

Triendl and Yukiko Ehara he could no wrong.<br />

The latter even cried when he left.<br />

"I appreciate the praise, but of course I'm<br />

not perfect," Hansan tells <strong>Weekender</strong>. "People<br />

evaluated me on the way I thought and behaved<br />

in the house, yet we all have different<br />

sides and I'm no different."<br />

Yama-chan wasn’t a fan. He’d have preferred<br />

to have seen more of Hansan's ugly side.<br />

"He already had a girlfriend and basically did<br />

nothing wrong," says the comedian. "I felt he<br />

didn't need to be there. Natsumi [Saito] was far<br />

more interesting. She was like a dark heroine."<br />

Not afraid to speak her mind, Natsumi<br />

caused a few arguments and a meeting was<br />

called to discuss her behavior. There were<br />

many of these kinds of meetings throughout the<br />

series, including one where everyone sat down<br />

to talk about some meat that had been taken<br />

without permission. Then there was the case of<br />

teenage idol Riko Nagai carrying on with chef<br />

I DON'T DISLIKE<br />

PEOPLE FALLING<br />

IN LOVE, IT'S JUST<br />

MORE FUN WHEN<br />

THINGS GO WRONG<br />

Hayato Terashima away from the cameras.<br />

"This was the defining moment of the<br />

series," says Yama-chan. "Young Japanese<br />

idols are expected to be pure so it's no<br />

surprise Riko tried to hide the relationship<br />

with Hayato. The other housemates knew<br />

what was happening so [they] decided to<br />

confront them. For the sake of her career<br />

it would have been easy for the production<br />

team to gloss over it, but I'm glad they<br />

didn't. This is an unscripted reality show<br />

so it was important that viewers saw how<br />

it developed."<br />

ALOHA STATE<br />

With interest from abroad growing it was<br />

decided that the third and current series<br />

should have more of an international<br />

feel. Set in the tropical island of Oahu in<br />

Hawaii, there are many Japanese-American<br />

housemates, most of whom can speak<br />

English (though they usually converse<br />

in Japanese). It’s created a different vibe<br />

from earlier seasons.<br />

"It's fascinating to watch the contrast,"<br />

says Yama-chan. "In Japan, there was lots<br />

of pent-up frustration amongst the housemates<br />

that eventually came out, whereas<br />

in Hawaii they tend to immediately say<br />

what's on their mind. It took me longer<br />

to get into this one, but now I love it."<br />

Massachusetts-born illustrator and<br />

model Lauren Tsai caused the biggest buzz<br />

early on. Touted as the future It girl of<br />

Japan, she came across as cool and mysterious,<br />

yet surprisingly awkward and at times<br />

looked uncomfortable.<br />

Speaking to hyperbae.com she said,<br />

"I would watch the show and think 'Oh my<br />

God!' is that me? Am I really like that? I hate<br />

myself.' Everything people see about us on<br />

social media is what we choose to put out<br />

there. Being on a reality TV show you have<br />

no control over what's put in or how it's<br />

cut. For someone like me who's not superoutgoing<br />

it was ... an experience."<br />

Since Lauren's departure, Taishi Tamaki<br />

has taken center stage. Initially it seemed<br />

like the wannabe Hollywood actor would<br />

be a calming influence in the house, but<br />

at times he's come across as an emotional<br />

wreck. The fact that he's dated pretty much<br />

every girl who's entered has annoyed some,<br />

while others have found it entertaining.<br />

"Taishi's the star of Aloha State," says<br />

Yama-chan. "He keeps saying he's looking<br />

for a love worth dying for and is clumsily<br />

running out around asking everyone out.<br />

It's great to watch."<br />

Twenty-year-old Niki Niwa was targeted<br />

by Taishi soon after arriving. "At first, I<br />

thought it was good he was being proactive<br />

in trying to get to know the women," she tells<br />

<strong>Weekender</strong>. "The problem is he didn't say<br />

what he was thinking so the girls got confused.<br />

That's what happened to me." Niki soon<br />

turned her attention to professional surfer<br />

Guy Sato, though as her time in the house was<br />

limited things went no further than a kiss.<br />

So, was that her favorite moment? “I<br />

loved it all,” she says. “Staying up late chatting<br />

and watching films, the whole experience.<br />

I cherish every moment I spent there<br />

and really miss it."<br />

Terrace House Aloha State is now streaming<br />

on Netflix, and showing on Fuji Television.<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 35


BOYS<br />

FOR SALE<br />

A SHOCKING NEW DOCUMENTARY BRINGS<br />

TO LIGHT A PARTICULAR KIND OF SEX<br />

TRADE HAPPENING IN SHINJUKU NI-CHOME,<br />

WHERE YOUNG, MOSTLY STRAIGHT BOYS ARE<br />

BEING PAID TO SLEEP WITH OLDER MEN<br />

Words by Annemarie Luck<br />

36 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


Boys for Sale is not a comfortable<br />

watch. From the documentary’s<br />

very first scene in which a former<br />

straight male sex worker reveals<br />

how he could bring himself to<br />

have sex with men (“Money makes you<br />

hard”) to the heartbreaking sentiment of one<br />

boy who has not yet turned 20 but states, “I<br />

don’t want to live a long life,” the shocking<br />

revelations stack themselves high from start<br />

to finish. The film, which documents the<br />

experiences of a group of young male urisen<br />

(rent boys) who live and work together in<br />

Shinjuku Ni-chome, not only exposes one of<br />

the darker sides of <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s famed gay district,<br />

but also unearths a plethora of related<br />

issues in the process.<br />

“We could have made five different<br />

films,” says executive producer Ian Thomas<br />

Ash. “In the three years it took to produce,<br />

we did all kinds of filming, and there were<br />

so many things we could’ve focused on, for<br />

example gay rights in Japan or the fact that<br />

men having sex with men for money is not<br />

illegal in Japan, whereas female sex work is.<br />

But in the end, our original idea still felt like<br />

the strongest.”<br />

The original idea came about when Ash<br />

and the film’s producer and director of photography,<br />

Adrian Storey, were looking for<br />

a collaborative creative project. Both have<br />

spent over a decade living in Japan, and as<br />

film makers, say they are drawn to controversial<br />

topics and people living on the periphery<br />

of society. Storey, who is now based<br />

in the UK and works under the professional<br />

alias of Uchujin (“alien”), has produced<br />

short films for the likes of Vice including one<br />

about anti-nuclear sticker artist 281_Anti<br />

Nuke, while Ash has won awards for several<br />

documentaries, two of which focused on the<br />

effects of Fukushima’s<br />

nuclear meltdown.<br />

In making Boys for<br />

Sale, which enjoyed<br />

a sold-out screening<br />

for its world premiere<br />

in June at the Nippon<br />

Connection festival<br />

in Frankfurt, the pair<br />

spent a full year just<br />

visiting different bars<br />

in Ni-chome, getting to<br />

know the community,<br />

and finding out how<br />

the male sex industry<br />

works. “We had to<br />

build up some trust<br />

there, and convince<br />

them that we would<br />

protect their identities<br />

if they wanted us to,”<br />

explains Storey. By the<br />

time filming began,<br />

some of the boys had,<br />

surprisingly, agreed to<br />

reveal their identity on<br />

camera. “I think this<br />

was partly because people<br />

had come to know<br />

us and they understood<br />

that this wasn’t just parachute journalism,”<br />

says Storey. “But it’s also because they had<br />

had time to reflect on what they were doing,<br />

and they felt that sharing their story was<br />

important perhaps because of what they’d<br />

learnt about themselves, and how their work<br />

had affected their opinions on things like<br />

homosexuality.”<br />

Those who chose not to show their faces<br />

donned colorful masquerade masks while<br />

being interviewed. While to the viewer<br />

the masks might lend an additional layer<br />

of pathos to their stories, Ash and Storey<br />

initially chose the masks for purely practical<br />

THE BOYS ARE<br />

INTERVIEWED INSIDE<br />

THE SEX ROOMS, GIVING<br />

THE VIEWER A PRECISE<br />

PICTURE OF THE TINY,<br />

RUDIMENTARY SPACES<br />

THEY’RE CONFINED TO<br />

EVERY NIGHT<br />

reasons. “At first, the masks were a way of<br />

just trying to disguise their identities in a<br />

visually interesting way,” says Ash. “In the<br />

end we realized that giving them the masks<br />

to wear possibly helped them to talk more<br />

honestly.”<br />

It’s this honesty, in all its brutality, that<br />

makes the film such compelling – and at<br />

times distressing – viewing. The camera<br />

switches between the boys throughout,<br />

with each of them answering the same<br />

questions. Even though they are filmed individually,<br />

the story is carried through their<br />

shared experiences, which see-saw between<br />

exclamations of how much fun it is living<br />

in the dormitory together (eight of them in<br />

a seven-mat room) to horrific accounts of<br />

being gang-raped. Although you never see<br />

them with customers, they are interviewed<br />

inside the sex rooms, giving the viewer a<br />

precise picture of the tiny, rudimentary<br />

spaces they’re confined to every night. Cleverly,<br />

the film uses animated illustrations to<br />

cement in the mind what actually goes on<br />

in these rooms.<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 37


All the boys, save<br />

for one, are under 26 (as<br />

dictated by the urisen bars’<br />

rules), and many of them<br />

service clients up to the age<br />

of 80 and even older. They<br />

are paid around ¥7,000 per<br />

hour, and they work from<br />

4pm to midnight or 2am<br />

every day, with just three<br />

days’ holiday per month.<br />

Depending on how many<br />

clients they have, their<br />

monthly earnings vary<br />

between ¥200,000 and<br />

¥1 million – but 50% of<br />

this goes to the bar.<br />

Aside from wondering<br />

why they would choose to<br />

do this kind of work for<br />

such low pay (the reasons<br />

they give range from things<br />

like family debt to losing<br />

everything in the 2011<br />

tsumani), perhaps the most<br />

perplexing detail is that<br />

the majority of the boys<br />

identify as straight; some of<br />

them even have girlfriends.<br />

Even if they do identify<br />

as homosexual, the bar<br />

owners instruct them to<br />

pretend they are straight.<br />

This leads to many a cringeworthy moment<br />

as they describe their struggle to reconcile<br />

their sexuality with the requirements of<br />

their job.<br />

It also raises questions about societal<br />

norms and pressures in Japan. “I think this<br />

scenario of straight-identifying men having<br />

sex for money with clients who are straight<br />

living is a reflection on a society in which it<br />

has traditionally not been an option to live<br />

openly as a homosexual,” says Ash. “I don’t<br />

think that this kind of sex trade is particularly<br />

unique to Japan, but the way in which it<br />

operates is.”<br />

“The things they talk about in the<br />

film are quite specific to the way Japanese<br />

society works,” adds Storey. “For example,<br />

the tendency to be indifferent to issues<br />

that don’t directly affect you. And the lack<br />

of understanding of sexual health issues.<br />

There were interviews where Ian and I<br />

were in tears afterwards. But probably the<br />

most shocking moment for both of us was<br />

when we asked one of the boys if he knew<br />

how an STD is contracted and he said, ‘Can<br />

men get STDs too?’” Considering the type of<br />

work he is doing, where the sex is usually<br />

unprotected, his answer is dumbfounding.<br />

Sexual health education,<br />

or the lack of it<br />

in Japan, is one of the<br />

critical issues raised in<br />

the documentary. In<br />

one scene, the urisens’<br />

manager states that the<br />

boys are given training<br />

about safe sex, but this<br />

is swiftly followed by<br />

several of the urisen<br />

shaking their heads and<br />

saying the opposite. One<br />

tends to believe the boys<br />

on this point, especially<br />

since in a previous scene<br />

the same manager insists<br />

the nature of the job is<br />

explained at interview<br />

stage, while more than<br />

one urisen claims to have<br />

been misled to believe<br />

they would simply be<br />

dining out with clients<br />

or that they would have<br />

female customers as well<br />

as men.<br />

It’s hard enough as<br />

a viewer to walk away<br />

from Boys for Sale without<br />

feeling desperation<br />

for the boys in the film.<br />

So how, after spending so<br />

much time with them, did Ash and Storey<br />

manage to process the experience? And<br />

how has it shaped their views on Japan?<br />

“Everyone talks about how homogenous<br />

Japan is,” says Storey. “But as soon as<br />

you scratch a tiny bit below the surface, you<br />

start to realize that’s not true. Japanese people<br />

are as diverse as everybody else; there<br />

is a dark side, there is all this undercurrent<br />

going on – the same as everywhere else.<br />

By making a documentary about the fringe<br />

of society, you just have it reinforced to<br />

you that all these things are going on here.<br />

Japan is not unique; it’s not a homogenous,<br />

Hello Kitty wonderland ... You have to find<br />

a way of doing what you can and then letting<br />

go. And in some way, making the film<br />

and getting it out there is part of processing<br />

the emotions.”<br />

Ash adds: “It would be a shame if we<br />

walked away and thought ‘I feel sorry for<br />

them, and something like that would never<br />

happen to me.’ I think we have more in<br />

common with people in these situations<br />

than we don’t. We have a lot to learn about<br />

what it means to be human, and to have<br />

empathy. And to not judge people for whatever<br />

choices they’ve had to make.”<br />

Boys for Sale was directed by Itako, and all<br />

illustrations are by N Tani Studio. The film<br />

is being screened this month at LGBT film<br />

festival Outfest in Los Angeles. To watch the<br />

trailer and find out about upcoming screenings,<br />

visit boysforsale.com<br />

38 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


Vincent van Gogh, Postman Joseph Roulin, 1888, Gift of Robert Treat Paine, 2nd, 35.1982, Photograph © 2017 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston<br />

SIT DOWN FOR A SPELL...<br />

...all right, enough dawdling! There's plenty that you'll want to check out in <strong>Tokyo</strong> this<br />

month, from artistic aquariums to an aesthetic trip through Southeast Asia.<br />

TOKYO TOKYO WEEKENDER | DECEMBER | | | MARCH JUNE JULY 2017 <strong>2016</strong> | | 39


© Julian Lennon<br />

ART & FICTION<br />

JULIAN LENNON – CYCLE<br />

Julian Lennon, son of one of the most iconic figures in rock and roll history, has charted his own considerable professional and<br />

artistic trajectory, working in the genres of music, film, and children’s literature. Over the past several years, Lennon has begun<br />

exploring photography, using it as a means of recording his travels around the globe. His current exhibition, Cycle, which depicts<br />

scenes around Southeast Asia, is on display at the Leica Gallery <strong>Tokyo</strong> in Ginza as well as at the Leica store in the newly opened<br />

Ginza Six shopping center. Leica Gallery <strong>Tokyo</strong> Until September 17 bit.ly/TWLeica<strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

THE ART WORLD<br />

OUR PICK OF THE CITY’S BEST EXHIBITIONS<br />

Compiled by Alec Jordan<br />

© Miraikan - The National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation<br />

NEW PERMANENT<br />

EXHIBITIONS AT MIRAIKAN<br />

The National Museum of Emerging<br />

Science and Innovation, better known<br />

as the Miraikan, has always been<br />

a place that appeals to the science<br />

and tech set, and a great place to<br />

take the little ones. The museum<br />

has just unveiled four new exhibits<br />

that should spark a sense of wonder<br />

in minds both young and old: an<br />

update to "A Hands-On Model of the<br />

Internet"; Alter, a new android; an<br />

interactive lab that shows us how<br />

technology can help us get fitter; and<br />

an exhibit dedicated to the Venus<br />

Climate Orbiter "AKATSUKI" satellite.<br />

Miraikan Permanent Exhibition<br />

www.miraikan.jst.go.jp/en<br />

40 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


Lee Wen, Strange Fruit, 2003, C print, 42×59.4<br />

F<br />

FICTION<br />

SUNSHOWER: CONTEMPORARY ART FROM SOUTHEAST<br />

ASIA 1980S TO NOW<br />

In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the creation of ASEAN (Association<br />

of Southeast Asian Nations), both the Mori Art Museum and the National Art<br />

Center, <strong>Tokyo</strong> will be showing a collection of works by leading creative figures<br />

from the art scenes of several different countries in Southeast Asia. The show<br />

gets its name from the common – in Southeast Asia at least – phenomenon<br />

of rain falling from clear skies, which organizers say is “a metaphor for the<br />

vicissitudes of the region.” Mori Art Museum and The National Art Center,<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong> Until October 23 sunshower2017.jp/en/index.html<br />

GREAT COLLECTORS: MASTERPIECES FROM THE<br />

MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, BOSTON<br />

Vincent van Gogh, Lullaby: Madame Augustine Roulin Rocking a Cradle, 1889, Bequest of John T.<br />

Spaulding, 48.548 Photograph © 2017 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston<br />

The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is renowned as one of the world’s top<br />

museums, in both quality and scale. Even more impressive is that the museum<br />

developed its collection entirely through the efforts of private citizens, collectors<br />

and companies, without any assistance from the state or federal government.<br />

This collection of 80 items from the MFA’s collection highlights the work of<br />

the individual collectors who helped the museum reach its global status,<br />

and features masterworks ranging from ancient Egyptian pieces to dazzling<br />

examples of contemporary art at its finest. <strong>Tokyo</strong> Metropolitan Art Museum<br />

<strong>July</strong> 20-October 9 www.tobikan.jp/en/exhibition/2017_boston.html<br />

You might think that writer Barry Lancet<br />

has a crystal ball somewhere around<br />

his writer’s desk, given how topical his<br />

most recent book, The Spy Across the<br />

Table, manages to be. Its plot wends its<br />

way into North Korea, and features a character<br />

who is a high level Chinese spy. But this is<br />

all in a day’s work for Lancet’s creation Jim<br />

Brodie, the art dealer/private detective who<br />

is sleuthing and fighting his way through his<br />

fourth novel.<br />

After two close friends of Brodie are<br />

murdered in Washington DC, he is drawn<br />

into action that takes him to one of the<br />

world’s most tense geopolitical regions –<br />

the demilitarized zone that lies between<br />

North and South Korea. He also delves into<br />

corners of Japan’s underworld, including the<br />

Chongryon, a Japanese Korean group with ties<br />

to North Korea, and the PSIA, Japan’s national<br />

intelligence agency.<br />

The “spy” of the title is Zhou, and as Lancet<br />

explains, “he's based on a real encounter I<br />

had in <strong>Tokyo</strong> years ago. He first appeared<br />

fictionally in the second Jim Brodie book, <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Kill, and a lot of people liked him as a character<br />

so I had planned to bring him back. I had a set<br />

scene in this book where he was just supposed<br />

to appear for just two or three chapters, but he<br />

sort of took over the book. I wasn't even really<br />

expecting it.”<br />

Expect plenty more surprises in this taut<br />

thriller, which hit shelves last month. Some<br />

of the standouts from the book are the fight<br />

scenes, which give the lie to anyone who<br />

thinks that brawlers are just dumb brutes;<br />

Lancet’s ability to introduce cultural details<br />

and deep history while still keeping the pace<br />

going; and the unflappable Jim Brodie, whose<br />

multifaceted background gives him what his<br />

creator sees as his greatest strength: “His<br />

ability to see both sides of the coin without<br />

making judgement – even when there are<br />

three sides to the coin, or four.”<br />

The Spy Across the Table is available on Amazon<br />

Japan and at some Kinokuniya Stores for ¥2,837<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 41


1<br />

3<br />

2<br />

4<br />

7<br />

8<br />

5 6<br />

AGENDA: THE WEEKENDER ROUNDUP OF WHAT’S HAPPENING IN JULY<br />

1<br />

JUL 19-31<br />

2<br />

JUL 22-23<br />

3<br />

JUL 15-31<br />

4<br />

JUL 7-31<br />

DRUM TAO<br />

This group of dynamic percussion<br />

HANDMADE IN JAPAN FES<br />

This annual celebration of creativity<br />

THE MASTERS OF ARTS<br />

The second edition of this Park<br />

ART AQUARIUM<br />

In its 11th year, this popular<br />

artists puts on explosive shows<br />

mixing music, dance and acrobatics<br />

with their traditional drums.<br />

Where: Zepp Blue Theater<br />

Roppongi<br />

How much: ¥8,500<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

features a market with 5,500 artisans<br />

and creators, food stalls galore,<br />

live performances (including pro<br />

wrestlers!), and more.<br />

Where: <strong>Tokyo</strong> Big Sight<br />

How much: ¥1,500-¥2,500<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

Hyatt event features dynamic<br />

calligraphy, traditional pottery and<br />

chef Kenichiro Ooe’s home-style<br />

seasonal summer cuisine.<br />

Where: Park Hyatt <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

How much: From ¥7,500<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

goldfish aquarium meets arts<br />

installation has come of age. This<br />

year’s theme is inspired by the<br />

Palace of the Dragon King.<br />

Where: Nihonbashi Mitsui Hall<br />

How much: ¥1,000<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

JUL 5-9<br />

SHIMOKITAZAWA MUSIC<br />

FESTIVAL<br />

Look forward to live shows on<br />

outdoor stages, inside live houses<br />

and on the streets, with both local<br />

and international bands strutting<br />

their stuff.<br />

Where: Around Shimokitazawa<br />

How much: Free<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

6 JUL 3-31<br />

SHOWA-ERA BEER GARDEN<br />

Unwind after work at Grand Hyatt<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong>’s outdoor Chapel Garden<br />

at this summer event themed<br />

around Japan’s Showa era, with<br />

nostalgic snacks, drinks and<br />

music to match.<br />

Where: Grand Hyatt <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

How much: ¥6,000<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

5 7<br />

JUL 6-10<br />

SHITAMACHI TANABATA<br />

FESTIVAL<br />

Tanabata falls on <strong>July</strong> 7, but you can<br />

catch the colorful strips of paper<br />

for a few days before and after the<br />

7th, and even write your own wish<br />

on them.<br />

Where: Kappabashi Street, Asakusa<br />

How much: Free<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

8 JUL 1-31<br />

TARO OKAMOTO’S TOHOKU<br />

Discover the magic of northern Japan<br />

through this artist’s work, much of<br />

which was inspired by his fascination<br />

with the primeval elements he<br />

associated with the region.<br />

Where: Taro Okamoto Memorial<br />

Museum<br />

How much: ¥620<br />

More info: tokyoweekender.com<br />

42 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


「map」 2014 pigment print 100×150cm<br />

Hokkaien<br />

Gaien West St.<br />

Aoyama Cemetary<br />

Nogisaka Station<br />

The National<br />

Art Center, <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

National Graduate<br />

Institute for Policy Studies<br />

Gaien East St.<br />

Kohei Fukushima / maps<br />

Saturday 15th <strong>July</strong> - Sunday 30th <strong>July</strong>, 2017<br />

Opening Hours: 12:00 - 19:00 | Closed: Mondays<br />

Opening Reception: Friday <strong>July</strong> 14th from 18:00 onwards<br />

To Shibuya Otora<br />

Hiroo Station<br />

Gonpachi Roppongi Dori<br />

Nishi-Azabu Intersection<br />

Roppongi Hills<br />

Mori Art Museum<br />

Roppongi Station<br />

NANATASU GALLERY<br />

〒 106-0031 <strong>Tokyo</strong>, Minato-ku, Nishi-Azabu 2-12-4 Ogura building 3F<br />

Te l : 03-6419-7229 | Web: www.na n a t a s u . j p<br />

Door to Door Pickup Service<br />

24 Hour Staff Supervision<br />

One daycare visit available<br />

Open 365 Days<br />

No Cages<br />

Athletic Dog Club co., Ltd.<br />

1F 1-8-18 Akatsutsumi, Setagaya-ku, <strong>Tokyo</strong> 156-0044<br />

Tel: 03-3327-1003 I Fax: 03-3327-7407 | E: athletic.dog.club@gmail.com<br />

www.pethoteltokyo.com (Japanese) | http://adc.pipi.cc (English)<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 43


TRAVEL<br />

[ PROMOTION ]<br />

Explore Niigata<br />

with a New Market<br />

in <strong>Tokyo</strong>, and Four<br />

Local Festivals<br />

Niigata is an often overlooked prefecture home to Fuji Rock,<br />

great skiing slopes, and the Kodo drum group, but there's<br />

so much more. A new market offers a taste of the region's<br />

specialties right here in <strong>Tokyo</strong> this summer, with other<br />

regions to be showcased later in the year<br />

Summer is synonymous with<br />

festivals in Japan, and this month<br />

we’ve got our sights set on some of<br />

Niigata’s top matsuri. While many<br />

of us would love to throw caution to<br />

the wind and travel up and down the nation to<br />

experience these wonderful events firsthand,<br />

we know it’s not always easy to find the time.<br />

Thankfully you can also get your rural festival<br />

fix right here in the city at Tabisuru Shintora<br />

Market, a new ongoing event outside Toranomon<br />

Hills that opened earlier this year to promote<br />

local regions from across the nation. The<br />

current theme, named Summer Breeze, begins<br />

this month and features five cities from Niigata<br />

touting their wares and local specialties.<br />

But first, a closer look at the festivals and other<br />

attractions they’re famous for….<br />

FOR SAKE ENTHUSIASTS<br />

MURAKAMI CITY<br />

THE FESTIVAL This historical castle town<br />

is home to the Murakami Grand Festival, a<br />

traditional event that dates back over 380<br />

years and features large floats called oshagiri<br />

as the main draw. <strong>July</strong> 6-7, www.sake3.com/<br />

murakamitaisai<br />

WHILE YOU'RE THERE Located on Niigata’s<br />

coast, this city's claim to local fame is sake,<br />

sake and sake. (That’s salmon, sake and<br />

empathy for the rest of us.) Visitors are welcomed<br />

to long lanes of black wooden walls<br />

and fences – a signature Edo-period style –<br />

and rows of whole salmon hanging to air dry<br />

in the sun. The city also a slew of beautiful<br />

beaches and onsen, the most famous being<br />

Senami Onsen, which overlooks the ocean.<br />

HOW TO GET THERE Take the Joetsu Shinkansen<br />

to Niigata City, then switch to the<br />

Uetsu Honsen Line for Murakami Station.<br />

FOR TRADITIONAL CRAFT LOVERS<br />

SANJO AND TSUBAME<br />

THE FESTIVAL Known collectively as Sanjo-Tsubame, this world-class metalworking region<br />

is revered for its high-quality knives, and flatware used at the Nobel Prize banquet. The<br />

Tsubame-Sanjo Factory Festival allows visitors to have a rare chance to see skilled craftsmen<br />

as they work, and also join them for a drink at organized receptions. October 5-8, kouba-fes.jp<br />

WHILE YOU'RE THERE Hard physical work requires filling food, so it's no surprise Sanjo and<br />

Tsubame are famous for their curry ramen and seabura (back fat) ramen respectively. Echigo<br />

Miso Jyouzo lets visitors can try making their own batch of this traditional condiment.<br />

HOW TO GET THERE Take the Joetsu Shinkansen to Tsubame-Sanjo station.<br />

44 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


Yayoi Kusama “Tsumari in Bloom” photo by Osamu Nakamura<br />

Photo by Tsubame-Sanjo Factory Festival Committee<br />

FOR ARTY TYPES<br />

TOKAMACHI CITY<br />

THE FESTIVAL Tokamachi City is home to a unique art event, the Echigo-Tsumari Art Triennale,<br />

that transcends generations, genres and nationalities. Artists stay true to the vision of "humans<br />

are a part of nature" by creating works in diverse locations like rice fields, closed-down schools<br />

and more. Although the next Triennale isn't until 2018, about 200 artworks can be viewed year<br />

round. Activities are held throughout the year, www.echigo-tsumari.jp/eng<br />

WHILE YOU'RE THERE The city is also home to Kiyotsu Gorge, an expansive beech forest, and a<br />

treasure trove of exceptional Jomon Period (14,000-300 BC) flame-style pottery.<br />

HOW TO GET THERE Take the JR Joetsu Shinkansen to Echigo-Yuzawa Station, then the Hokuhoku<br />

Line to Tokamachi Station.<br />

FOR TOKYO STAYCATIONERS<br />

DISCOVER THE CHARMS OF<br />

NIIGATA AT THE TABISURU<br />

SHINTORA MARKET IN TOKYO<br />

Before heading to Niigata, drop by the<br />

Toranomon Hills’ Tabisuru Shintora Market<br />

for a taste of these festive cities. The regions<br />

each have their own stand serving local<br />

delicacies and spirits. Accompanying the<br />

market is the Tabisuru store, with selected<br />

wares from the featured areas, and the<br />

Tabisuru café, which will serve dishes using<br />

Niigata-sourced, seasonal ingredients.<br />

Tabisuru market Jul 5-29, shop and café<br />

Jul 5-Oct 1. 2-16 Nishi-Shinbashi, Minato-ku.<br />

www.tabisuru-market.jp<br />

FOR FANS OF FIREWORKS<br />

NAGAOKA CITY<br />

FESTIVAL Nagaoka Matsuri, now in its 72nd year, is one of Japan’s three great fireworks<br />

festivals and has made the event an explosive show. It features three monstrous<br />

sanshakudama, each over 300kg, as well as perfectly timed fireworks set to music. The<br />

event also features mikoshi shrine parades, as well as folk dance processions. August 1-3<br />

(fireworks Aug 2-3), Shinano Riverside, nagaokamatsuri.com<br />

WHILE YOU'RE THERE Shrines and temples dot the city's environs, including the stunning<br />

Hotokusan Inari Taisha which has history dating back to the Jomon Period.<br />

HOW TO GET THERE Take the JR Joetsu Shinkansen to Nagaoka Station.<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 45


People,<br />

Parties, Places<br />

TOKYO’S LONGEST RUNNING SOCIETY PAGE WITH BILL HERSEY<br />

So much happening here in old Edo – and so many notes on many<br />

of the happenings around town I’m even further behind than<br />

usual. We’re living in what’s got to be one of the most dynamic<br />

cities in the world, and I’m sure most of you love it as much<br />

as I do. The closer we get to the Olympics in 2020, the more changes<br />

we’re going to see. As I’m sure you know, things are already changing<br />

– almost daily. Here are a few things you have probably noticed. La<br />

Foret in Harajuku just opened a variety of really cool menswear shops<br />

– they’re very trendy and chic.<br />

Shibuya’s busier than ever. Don Quixote just opened their megastore<br />

right across the street from the super-popular Segafredo café and<br />

next to H&M’s always<br />

busy fashion building.<br />

Believe me, the beautiful<br />

aquariums with<br />

their marvelous variety<br />

of tropical fish at the<br />

new Don Quixote in<br />

the huge white building<br />

make it well worth<br />

checking out. You and<br />

your kids will love it.<br />

Over Roppongi<br />

way, they’ve cut down<br />

all the beautiful trees<br />

on the corner land<br />

where the late great<br />

Dr. Aksenoff had his<br />

international clinic.<br />

Friends in urban development<br />

tell me the<br />

owner (Mori) really<br />

has dynamic plans for<br />

that area and many<br />

other places in Roppongi<br />

as well. I also<br />

hear that several<br />

property owners behind<br />

the run-down<br />

<strong>Tokyo</strong> flashback: Bill with the late great<br />

actor Roger Moore and his wife<br />

Roi Building have finally sold their property on the street behind the<br />

Roi and development companies will be making really big changes<br />

there as well. As <strong>Weekender</strong> founder Corky Alexander used to say, “I<br />

don’t want to break anyone’s rice ball,” but that property really needs<br />

cleaning up.<br />

While you’re in Roppongi, be sure and check out the new Starbucks<br />

in Midtown Plaza. There’s seating for about 20 people on the<br />

first floor where you can relax and enjoy watching the passing parade<br />

of interesting people. There are also several tables/benches outside,<br />

and a chic room on the second floor that has comfortable seating for<br />

about 60 people.<br />

A great Belgian restaurant, Le Pain Quotidien, moved in where<br />

Starbucks used to be Midtown Plaza. You’ll like the rustic décor, the<br />

service is good, and the food is healthy and tasty. You’ll be amazed at<br />

the variety they offer, and their prices are reasonable. They also have<br />

an in-house bakery – try the organic Baker’s Basket. I really feel you’ll<br />

like this new eatery and it’s going to be very popular. That’s enough this<br />

and that for this month’s column. Time to move on to <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s always<br />

busy social scene.<br />

PAKISTAN’S NATIONAL DAY AND<br />

AMBASSADOR AMIL’S SAYONARA<br />

The National Day event was at the Okura Hotel and his sayonara<br />

was at his sixth floor penthouse in Mita. Farukh was very popular,<br />

and both of the events were wall-to-wall people from all walks of<br />

life. I hadn’t gotten<br />

to know him that<br />

long. He was very<br />

international, very<br />

intelligent, fun,<br />

outgoing and cool.<br />

He’s in Switzerland<br />

now as his country’s<br />

ambassador to the<br />

UN. He’ll really be<br />

missed by his many<br />

friends here.<br />

ARAB JAPAN<br />

DAY GALA<br />

EVENING<br />

Japan went all out<br />

when our Arab<br />

friends held their<br />

annual Arab Japan<br />

Day 2017 at the<br />

Imperial Hotel on<br />

April 4. Security,<br />

which matched<br />

the world’s best,<br />

included dozens of<br />

police cars, lots of<br />

motorcycle officers, several busloads of uniformed officers, and top<br />

SPs (special police).<br />

Many of Japan’s top politicians attended, including Prime Minister<br />

Shinzo Abe, who gave a very meaningful speech. There were also<br />

remarks by Keizo Morikawa, chairman of the Japan Arab Association,<br />

and a gift presentation to the Governor of <strong>Tokyo</strong>, Yuriko Koike. She, as<br />

I’m sure many of you know, studied in Cairo and speaks fluent Arabic.<br />

The ceremony opened with a welcome address by Kuwaiti Ambassador<br />

Al-Otaibi.<br />

Prior to the reception, there was a symposium on sustainable energy<br />

and water security. This was attended by many experts on this<br />

subject. The evening’s program included performances of both Arabic<br />

and Japanese music, a visit to an authentic Bedouin tent transported<br />

from Saudi Arabia, an exhibition of everyday articles inside the tent,<br />

and an exhibition and demonstration of Arabic calligraphy. It was all<br />

46 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


IMPERIAL MEDIA<br />

DINNER/RECEPTION<br />

1. Kelly Wetherille and her husband,<br />

Jorge Pazmino, looking good!! 2. Le<br />

Monde’s Philippe Mesmer, socialite<br />

Vivian Morelli, PR guru Nacio “Skip”<br />

Cronin 3. The host, Imperial Hotel’s<br />

president Hideya Sadayasu, Dewi<br />

Sukarno, Hawaii Halekulani Hotel’s<br />

President Peter Shaindlin 4. Peter<br />

Shaindlin, Imperial Hotel’s exec. Jun<br />

Kazama, Far East Traveler’s founder<br />

George Pokrovsky, his son – the<br />

magazine’s mg. ed., Michael 1 2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

5<br />

7<br />

6<br />

8<br />

9<br />

10<br />

12<br />

13<br />

11<br />

PAKISTANI<br />

AMBASSADOR AMIL’S<br />

PAKISTAN NATIONAL<br />

DAY AND SAYONARA<br />

5. Murlie Tanaka, Kumiko Meric<br />

(Turkey), Kyoko Spector, Lilo<br />

Maruyama 6. Turkish Amb. Bulent<br />

Meric, Amb. Amil, Popular politician<br />

Kazuyuki Hamada and Mrs. Hamada<br />

7. Bahrain Amb. Hassan, Chief of<br />

mission Iraq Rahman Muhsin, Qatar<br />

Amb. Yousef Bilal, Oman Amb. Khalid<br />

Al-Muslahi 8. Amb. Amil, Grand Hyatt<br />

GM Steve Dewire 9. Yuko Miwa and<br />

her son, Masahisa (Valiant Language<br />

School) 10. Amb. Amil, Grand Hyatt<br />

GM Steve Dewire 11. Zimbabwe Amb.<br />

& Mrs. Titus M.J. Abubasutu 12.<br />

Govt. officials Antonio Inoki, Natsuo<br />

Yamaguchi, and Seishiro Eto, Amb.<br />

Amil, Motome Takizawa<br />

13. Senegal Amb. and Mrs. Chiekh<br />

Niang, Muhammad Adam, Nigerian<br />

Charge d'Affaires and Mrs. Bello<br />

Kavaure Husseini<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | | JULY 2017 | 47


MIDTOWN OAKWOOD<br />

CELEBRATES 10TH<br />

ANNIVERSARY<br />

1. Fortress’s Tami Ooka, Asian<br />

Tigers Nick Masse 2. Midtown’s Amy<br />

Harashino, rowing celebrity Capt.<br />

Lia Ditton 3. Midtown’s man in Japan<br />

Martin Fluck, Pacific Development<br />

& Mgmt. Co’s Rep. director Hiroshi<br />

Kasugai, Playfoot Advisory’s Marcus<br />

Fishenden 4. Konishiki and country/<br />

western singer Crystal Godfleish 5.<br />

Maho, Kamasami Kong, Fujisankei’s Jeff<br />

Richards 6. Konishiki, Anetta Hausner,<br />

Mayumi Jones, Andre Zimmerman<br />

1<br />

2<br />

4<br />

3<br />

5<br />

6<br />

7<br />

9<br />

12<br />

10<br />

8<br />

JAPAN ARAB<br />

RECEPTION<br />

– IMPERIAL HOTEL<br />

7. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe<br />

8. <strong>Tokyo</strong> governor Yuriko Koike<br />

9. Noted pianist Reiko Awazu,<br />

Namibia Amb. Sophia-Namupa<br />

Nangome, Bangladesh Amb. Rabab,<br />

Lilo Maruyama 10. Bahrain Amb. Dr.<br />

Khalil Hassan Ras Romani and the<br />

Hotel New Otani’s Seiji Kojima<br />

11. Politician Kazuyuki Hamada,<br />

Rana Ismayilzada (Azerbaijan),<br />

APA Hotels owners Toshio and<br />

Fumiko Motoya 12. Jamilah Al-Otaibi<br />

(Kuwait), Shifa Haddad (Jordan),<br />

her mother Amal Zghoul, Jamila Al-<br />

Gunaid (Yemen)<br />

11<br />

48 | JULY 2017 | TOKYO WEEKENDER


very informative and interesting. I’m sure that the wife of the Kuwaiti<br />

Ambassador Jamilah, who really has an artistic sense, worked hard on<br />

setting it up. Our congratulations to the Council of Arab Ambassadors<br />

and Heads of Mission and their many friends here who made it all very<br />

special.<br />

THE IMPERIAL HOTEL’S GLITTERING DINNER<br />

FOR THE MEDIA<br />

Once again, the President of the Imperial Hotel, Hideya Sadayasu, and<br />

his super staff went all out to make their annual party for the media a<br />

very special evening. This year the party, bigger than usual, was held<br />

in a larger venue: the luxurious Peacock Room.<br />

The spacious venue was filled wall to wall with interesting people.<br />

It was nice seeing special guest Peter Shaindlin, who’s President of the<br />

legendary Halekulani Hotel in Honolulu, and many top Japanese and<br />

foreign journalists I don’t see enough of. The buffet was a fabulous<br />

presentation that the top chefs and food and beverage staff had spent<br />

a lot of time and effort on. They certainly had a gourmet dinner to be<br />

proud of. Congratulations to our host Sadayasu-san. At the same time,<br />

congratulations to the world-renowned hotel on their new and very<br />

personable managing director and GM, Yukio Kanao.<br />

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY MIDTOWN OAKWOOD<br />

Midtown’s luxurious Oakwood Premiere recently hosted a packed 10th<br />

anniversary party at their popular residential lounge in Midtown Mall,<br />

which is also celebrating its 10th birthday. As always at their many<br />

happenings, there was a huge crowd enjoying the music by a Hawaiian<br />

duo, chatting with former sumo champ Konishiki, enjoying the<br />

excellent buffet and mixing with a lot of interesting people. I really<br />

enjoyed spending time with British Captain Lia Ditton, who has gained<br />

international fame by rowing her colorful customized boat solo across<br />

the Atlantic Ocean. I’m sure you’ll be seeing a lot more of her and her<br />

boat, which looks a bit Star Wars-esque, later this year. Lia’s planning<br />

a trans-Pacific solo and is sure, with the right sponsors, she can make<br />

it happen.<br />

My thanks to Oakwood’s Martin Fluck and his always helpful staff<br />

for all their kindness, generosity and friendship over the years. My<br />

congratulations to them all on the success of their many hotels. They<br />

all work very hard and it’s paid off.<br />

NEW FACES, NEW PLACES<br />

First, many thanks to Sri Lankan business tycoon Nishantha Perera for<br />

an invitation to his “New Tomorrow Café.” The theme for this quiet relaxing<br />

getaway is “Happiness, Healing, and Hope” and it’s right behind<br />

the German Embassy which is just up the hill from National Azabu<br />

Supermarket in the Arisunomori Minamiazabu complex. The café is<br />

big. The main dining area has a relaxed atmosphere and is filled with<br />

comfortable tables, chairs and couches. There’s a large outdoor patio<br />

where you can enjoy a first-class barbecue for as many as 50 people.<br />

If you really want to relax, you can stretch out in one of the<br />

hammocks. There’s plenty of greenery, especially my favorite<br />

– bamboo. If someone in your party is talented, there’s a grand piano<br />

in the main dining room that you can use if it doesn’t bother the other<br />

customers, and there’s a small hall with a stage and a good PA system<br />

connected to the main dining room. There are two kitchens and an excellent<br />

chef. The menu is limited, but I was really happy with a cup of<br />

Sri Lankan tea, a fruit smoothie and a piece of New York cheese cake.<br />

The café is open daily from 9am to 6pm. Private parties can be booked<br />

until 8pm. If you check it out I’m sure you’ll be surprised to find such<br />

a spacious relaxed and enjoyable retreat in one of <strong>Tokyo</strong>’s upscale<br />

neighborhoods. For more information call 03-6869-5656.<br />

My timing was perfect for my first visit as there was a colorful<br />

exhibition of paintings by one of Sri Lanka’s top artists, Kekuli. She’s a<br />

very interesting woman whose late husband was mayor of two cities<br />

in Sri Lanka, and her travel companions to Japan for her exhibit were<br />

her two daughters – Tersha who’s a lawyer, and Iranajali who’s a psychologist<br />

– and Prince Unamboowe, whose great grandfather was the<br />

last King of Ceylon. They were all interesting people and I spent most<br />

of the afternoon with them. Happy to have new, high-quality friends<br />

in a country I love and hope to visit soon. I left the café that day with<br />

a much-cherished gift, a painting of an elephant – one of my favorite<br />

animals – by Kekuli.<br />

I had more time later with a very talented sculptor, Dule. He worked<br />

for me at a nightclub I ran for many years in Roppongi. Now he’s a professor<br />

in Shanghai, a city he loves, and was here to see friends. He has<br />

sculptures in many museums and I’m really proud of a beautiful gold<br />

greyhound sculpture he sent me. I also appreciate that Dule got me addicted<br />

to goji berries – it seems the Chinese are really into this health<br />

food. You can get them at National Azabu or Nissen.<br />

In other news, I drive through Yoyogi Park almost every day and<br />

was recently surprised to find a parking spot available on a Sunday.<br />

I stopped, and was pleased to discover they were having an Okinawa<br />

Street Music Festival. I learned to really like Okinawan music when I<br />

was there a few years ago for a film festival, and was able to hear and<br />

meet some of Okinawa’s top musical artists.<br />

As you can see our city’s been busy. Unfortunately, conflicting<br />

schedules, lots of visitors, and so on added up to me having to miss<br />

several worthwhile events. The first was almost a week of Armenian<br />

culture hosted by Ambassador Grant Pogosyan and his wife Natalia.<br />

It was to celebrate a quarter century of Armenian-Japanese relations<br />

and there was a full schedule of art, food, cosmetics demonstrations,<br />

Armenian lace exhibits, and music from both countries. Congratulations<br />

to our Armenian and Japanese friends who got it all together.<br />

Irish Ambassador Annie Barrington’s talented American husband Ed<br />

Miliano is an accomplished artist. I’ve seen some of his work on the<br />

walls of their home, and loved it. Sorry I missed his May exhibit at<br />

the Motoazabu Museum. It was titled “No Ordinary Place” and friends<br />

who made it there really enjoyed it.<br />

Finally, for more proof positive that the multi-talented Steve<br />

Haynes never slows down, he just released his a new CD titled High<br />

Heels Music. It features 15 superstars performing their biggest hits.<br />

In between each song, Steve gives a short intro in his really professional<br />

manner. It’s a CD you should have. Pick it up and<br />

you’ll know what I mean. Congratulations, my friend.<br />

Sri Lankan businessman Nishantha Perera, artist Kekuli<br />

Abeyratne, her daughters Iranjali and Tersha, and Prince<br />

Unamboowe at the New Tomorrow Café in Mita<br />

Cliff Wooley and his daughter Kim at the<br />

Pride Festival<br />

New Miss Supranational, Yuki Koshikawa, with<br />

friends at Shibuya Segafredo<br />

TOKYO WEEKENDER | JULY 2017 | 49


Looking for your next job in Japan?<br />

<strong>Weekender</strong> has teamed up with<br />

Sunny Side Up Career and<br />

Coto Work to bring you<br />

the latest professional<br />

opportunities<br />

WEB MARKETER<br />

A web marketing company with branches in <strong>Tokyo</strong> and Silicon<br />

Valley is looking for a new candidate to join their team. They have<br />

a partnership with Google Analytics. The ideal candidate will have<br />

experience in SEO consulting and web advertising.<br />

Requirements:<br />

- SEO web marketing experience required<br />

- Japanese level: Proficient<br />

Location: Central <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Salary: Competitive (based on experience)<br />

UI/UX DESIGNER<br />

An app developing company is seeking a UI/UX designer to join<br />

the team of an online dating platform. The site has successfully<br />

matched over 40 million pairs of members, and aims to develop a<br />

new dating culture in Japan.<br />

Requirements:<br />

- Minimum five years of web designing experience<br />

- Japanese language level: business<br />

Location: Central <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Salary: Competitive (based on experience)<br />

WEB ENGINEER<br />

An IT company is looking for a new web engineer to join their<br />

growing team. Engineers make up 40% of the company and they<br />

all work in-house. The company is proactive about using new<br />

technologies such as Scala, Node.js, Elixer and others.<br />

The main duties will include development of digital marketing<br />

tools and development of new products. The ideal candidate will<br />

be interested in working in diverse teams to develop and advance<br />

each product. They will also have an interest in learning about new<br />

technologies and using these technologies to support company<br />

operations.<br />

Requirements:<br />

- Java, JavaScript, Ruby, C#, Scala, Elixer<br />

- DB: MySQL, Oracle<br />

- OS: iOS, Windows<br />

- General development and operational experience in web services<br />

- Experience in programming or planning and development of<br />

websites<br />

- Ability to learn necessary skills and develop them<br />

SENIOR GRAPHIC DESIGNER<br />

Havas Worldwide <strong>Tokyo</strong> is looking for a fulltime senior designer for<br />

advertisement content and key visual designing. The company bears<br />

business relationships with major manufacturers worldwide and is<br />

seeking an experienced, responsible and flexible candidate to join<br />

the team to assist with the expansion of businesses.<br />

Requirements:<br />

- Minimum three years of experience in graphic designing using<br />

Photoshop or Illustrator<br />

- A strong sense in project planning<br />

- Experience working with clients<br />

- Active in responding to tasks and projects<br />

- A flexible mindset<br />

- A sense of responsibility and good at schedule management<br />

- Conversational-level English<br />

Probation period: Six months<br />

Location: Central <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Salary: Annual pay ¥3-6 million (based on experience)<br />

Location: Central <strong>Tokyo</strong><br />

Salary: Competitive (based on experience)<br />

To apply for these jobs and view more opportunities, visit<br />

www.tokyoweekender.com/careers


Our new online store featuring a curated selection of designer<br />

made-in-Japan items to enhance your living space, wardrobe,<br />

and beauty kit. Because everyone should have a touch of<br />

Japanese craftsmanship in their lives.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!