Writer Profile

Keiichi Iizumi
Affiliated Schools Yochisha Elementary School Teacher [Music Department, 2021–]Former Shiki Theatre Company Actor [2012–2021]

Keiichi Iizumi
Affiliated Schools Yochisha Elementary School Teacher [Music Department, 2021–]Former Shiki Theatre Company Actor [2012–2021]
Under the playwright Michio Kato (then an English teacher at Keio Senior High School), young people who were moved and inspired by reading the play "Nayotake" gathered. This group, centered on students from Keio Senior High School and Keio University, included Keita Asari, Takeshi Kusaka, Hikaru Hayashi, and Hisanori Fujimoto. They were devoted to Kato, who preached "poetry and fantasy in theater" and "the emotion and catharsis brought by theater." Exposed to the worldview of Jean Giraudoux and feeling the need for a professional theater company that could be economically independent through acting, they were introduced by Kato to the Gekidan Hakobune group, which consisted of University of Tokyo students and others based on graduates of the Shakujii High School drama club. Then, on July 14, 1953, the Shiki Theatre Company was formed by ten volunteers.
The Experience Connecting Yochisha with the Shiki Theatre Company, Which Originated in the Keio Senior High School Drama Club
On my first day coming to Yochisha from the Shiki Theatre Company, Headmaster Shigenari Sugiura spoke to me about the philosophy of Keio University and Yochisha. He used the phrase, "Yochisha students should be people of both wisdom and courage." Among those, the word "courage" left a deep impression on me.
"When you try to accomplish something, there is always hardship. Without courage, you will falter halfway or immediately start imitating others. Even though your upbringing and ways of thinking are different, there is no point in imitating. Others are others, I am myself; it is fine to go your own way. To think and act for yourself, you must always possess courage."
It is exactly as Yukichi Fukuzawa said: "Without labor in life, there is no success." There is nothing other than "courage" that drives one forward without begrudging that hardship.
Keita Asari also gave the following words to the actors:
"You have come to an unequal world. The clock of talent is an interesting thing; some people perform in one or two years what takes others ten. Some are slow and take forever. But strangely enough, if you perform for ten years, everyone generally levels out. A turtle must not get anxious looking at a rabbit's clock, and a rabbit must not take a nap looking at a turtle's clock. Look at your own clock and make an effort for yourself."
Mr. Asari was someone who spoke of the Keio University philosophy in words for theater people to stir their souls. For me, having performed in the Shiki Theatre Company, I vividly remember feeling that my past experiences and my future teaching at Yochisha were connected when I realized the source of those words lay in Keio University.
Practicing Drama Education That Only I Can Do
Seeing the creative and expressive Yochisha students, I began classes in drama creation. The teaching material is the song "Suteki na Tomodachi" (Wonderful Friends) from the family musical "The Cat Who Wished to Be a Man," composed by Kunihiko Suzuki, who is also a Keio University alumni. I give the children a sheet of paper with the lyrics and ask them to write a story suitable for the poem, whether it be a real experience or a fantasy. Other teachers who hear this are surprised, saying, "You're making them do something difficult," but in reality, almost all of them finish writing a script with ease. Then, they form groups to perform and sing the stories they created.
I do not provide acting coaching, but I tell them one thing I want them to value: even without props or costumes, I want them to share a single world and exist within the space of that scene. My job as a music teacher is only to provide the accompaniment that fits the script. The children discuss things, saying "not like this, like that," "I want to do this," or "how about trying this," bringing out each other's unique qualities, and sometimes moving works that rival those of adults are born. For example, one child wrote a script with a war theme. It was a story where an enemy soldier helps a wounded soldier, and they both lower their weapons, hold hands, and sing. The children performing are by no means expert actors, but their very hearts believing in the story emerge as a charm. Mr. Asari used to say, "It's okay to be bad at it, just do it with all your might. Have prayer in your words. That is where emotion is born." I was moved to tears by the serious gazes and every single movement of the Yochisha students.
Keita Asari on the Significance of Drama in Primary Education
"Those who like machines do the sound and lighting. Those who like fashion design the costumes, and those who like drawing design the sets. Those who like presenting or being in the spotlight are actors, logical people direct, and those who like taking care of others produce. If you work together toward a single goal, communication is born. People with completely different personalities share a common purpose and achieve something. If music and art became regular subjects in education after the war, shouldn't there be classes to learn drama?"
In many countries, school education includes drama as a subject with specialized teachers. Currently, Japan is the only developed nation that has failed to incorporate drama into school education.
In the comprehensive art of drama, everyone can find their own unique role. There is no need to worry about your strengths or weaknesses or comparisons with others. You can let your individuality shine to the fullest and create something together with your peers.
If we look back at history and recall the words left behind, we can almost hear the earnest wish of theater people who were Keio University alumni, including Mr. Asari: "Give the joy of theater to the children of Yochisha."
*Affiliations and titles are as of the time this magazine was published.