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Madame Sadayakko :The Geisha Who Seduced the West

3.59 ( 575 Ratings by Goodreads)
Madame Sadayakko

Madame Sadayakko :The Geisha Who Seduced the West

3.59 (575 Ratings by Goodreads)
hardback
Published: 24 February, 2003
Standard worldwide delivery by Wed, June 17 - Mon, June 22
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Condition: USED
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Description

Madame Sadayakko was the ultimate geisha, so exquisite that the prime minister of the day paid a fortune to deflower her. But she was a rebel who wanted to carve her own path in life. In 1899 she married a subversive avant garde actor and, with a troupe of other actors, they set out on the first ever tour of the West by a Japanese theatre company. Sadayakko took to the stage and became an instant star. She danced for the American President and for the Prince of Wales in London, Picasso painted her, Gide swooned over her and Rodin admired her. But back in Japan, she suffered the stigma of being an ex-geisha and an actor and was forced, in the end, to make a terrible choice - between respectability and love.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780755310302
ISBN10 0755310306
Number Of Pages 352
Item Weight 1000 g
Publisher / Reseller Headline Publishing Group
Format hardback
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Media Reviews

The geisha - in fiction and non-fiction - is enjoying something of a vogue, and this is a creditable entry in the field. Madame Sadayakko was the ultimate geisha, so exquisite that the Prime Minister of the day paid a fortune to deflower her. But she was a rebel who wanted to carve her own path in life. In 1899 she married an avant-garde actor and set out on the first-ever tour of the West by a Japanese theatre company. Sadayakko took to the stage and became a star. She danced for the American President and for the Prince of Wales, Picasso painted her, Gide and Rodin admired her. But back in Japan, she suffered the stigma of being an ex-geisha and an actor and was forced to make a terrible choice.

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Author's Bio

Lesley Downer lived in Japan for more than ten years and speaks fluent Japanese. She has written many books about Japan and its culture, presented television programmes on the subject for both Channel 4 and the BBC and she contributes a weekly column to The Scotsman called 'Postcard from Japan'.

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