Taiko-mochi
Foot dance, seizures of taiko-mochi, 1899 graphics Taiko-mochi (Japanese 太 鼓 持) or hōkan (Japanese 幇 間) - geisha-man, professional clown, joker.
It literally means "having a drum". They are mostly in Tokyo, while in Kyoto they are almost unknown. They most often recruited from geisha customers, ruined financially in the world of flowers and willows. Taiko-mochi wear short cut hair as a sign of their infertility and are generally middle-aged men. Their main task is to revive o-zashiki (reception), and they do it in many ways: they are stories that are heavily saturated with eroticism and play various pantomimes in that spirit (they are strongly influenced by kabuki performances), compliment the flamboyant. p> Bibliography
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