Japanese language | Japanese people | dance | Second Sino-Japanese War | Imperial Japanese Navy | Imperial Japanese Army | So You Think You Can Dance | dance music | Dance Dance Revolution | Dance | Japanese yen | Japanese television drama | So You Think You Can Dance (U.S. TV series) | Dance music | Russo-Japanese War | electronic dance music | Traditional Chinese characters | Korea under Japanese rule | Dead Can Dance | Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater | Japanese tea ceremony | Japanese garden | Japanese cuisine | Japanese American | Japanese name | Japanese mythology | Japanese literature | Japanese Government Railways | Japanese Communist Party | Save the Last Dance |
After returning to Japan he took over the Japan Mime Studio where he incorporated older more established movement based theatre forms of his country, such as Noh, Kyogen, Bunraku, Kabuki and Japanese traditional dance, into his work and teaching of mime.