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  • Site Guide
  • About
    • About the Archive
    • People
    • Collaborations and Affiliated Projects
    • Call for Participation and Materials
  • Videos
    • All Productions
    • by Shakespeare Play
    • by Language
    • by Region
  • Education
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Scripts
    • Glossary
    • Bibliography
    • Study Modules
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Khon (Thai dance)

Khon is a masked, stylized form of traditional Thai dance. The performers do not speak, but rather a chorus set to the side tells the story. The performances feature Ramakien, the national epic story of Thailand, and traditional costumes, including colored masks. The four main types of characters are males, females, monkeys, and demons with elaborate khon masks.

Sources Cited:
Tour Bangkok

Glossary

  • Alexander Technique
  • Biwa (Japanese instrument)
  • Biwa hōshi
  • Bunraku (Ningyo Joruri)
  • Butoh (Japanese Dance)
  • Crosstalk (Xiangsheng, Chinese drama form)
  • Distancing effect (Brechtian Verfremdungseffekt)
  • Gamelan (Indonesian instrumental ensemble)
  • Hanamichi (Kabuki stage design)
  • Hua Ju (Chinese drama form)
  • Jingju (Peking opera, Beijing Opera)
  • Kabuki
  • Karakuri Ningyo (Japanese mechanical dolls)
  • Khon (Thai dance)
  • Kunqu (kunju or kun opera, form of Chinese opera)
  • Kyogen (Japanese theater form)
  • Nihon buyo (Japanese theater dance)
  • Noh
  • Randai (Indonesian folk theater form, uses silat)
  • Shingeki (Japanese ‘new theater’)
  • Sho-gekijo (Japanese ‘Little theater’)
  • Silat (also Pencak Silat, Malaysian martial arts)
  • Super Kabuki
  • Suzuki method
  • Takarazuka Revue (Japanese all-female musical theater)
  • Topeng (Indonesian theater dance)
  • Wayang Kulit (Indonesian shadow puppet play)
  • Yueju



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Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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George Washington University

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