Kanji Shimizu (Kanze School) | Shite |
---|---|
Takao Nishimura (Kanze School) | Jiutai (chorus) |
Haruhiko Hasegawa (Kanze School) | Jiutai (chorus) |
Satoshi Tsukitaku (Morita School) | Nohkan (Noh flute) |
Naoya Toriyama (Kanze School) | Kotsuzumi (small hand drum) (Kanze School) |
Mitsuhiro Kakihara (Takayasu School) | Ōtsuzumi (large hand drum) |
Laura Sampson | Ai kyogen Interlude Storytelling |
In the mountains of ancient China, a monk lives quietly in a small hut. Lately, he has felt the strange presence of someone nearby. One day, a woman appears. She says she has come to form a spiritual connection and follows the teaching of the Lotus Sutra, which says that even plants and trees can reach enlightenment. The monk tells her that the beauty of flowers is a form of the Buddha’s truth. The woman is happy to hear this and hints that she is not human before disappearing.
Later that night, she returns. This time, she reveals that she is the spirit of a plantain leaf. She says she is thankful to be touched by the Buddha’s compassion, and that all things—soil, plants, and people—are true just as they are. Unlike flowers that bloom brightly in spring and autumn, she has lived a quiet life in the shadows. Under the moonlight, lost in thought, she begins to dance slowly. As the wind blows through the garden, the flowers fade away, and only a torn plantain leaf remains.
This performance includes a reimagined English interlude by a British storyteller Laura Sampson, based on the original ai-kyōgen interlude. She weaves together two enigmatic classical tales: ‘The Plantain Tree in Snow’, where the impossible flourishes in winter’s stillness, and ‘The Dream of the Plantain and the Deer’, where memory, illusion, and nature gently blur.
The performance will last approximately 80 minutes without interval.
Please note that this performance has been adapted from the original, featuring the shite (main actor), jiutai (chorus), and ohayashi (musicians), in order to fit within a 80-minute performance.
Kings Place Concessions Tickets
We want to ensure that people who may be struggling financially to purchase a ticket can still enjoy visiting Kings Place. A limited number of tickets are allocated for certain events (if the ticket type does not show in the booking pathway, it means they are not available for this event or have all been sold). Concessions tickets are accessible for people on the following criteria (for more information visit our FAQs)
£10 ‘Under 30s’ tickets
A limited number of £10 tickets for attendees aged under 30 are available for certain shows. To purchase an ‘Under 30s’ ticket, please choose the ‘Under 30s’ price type when selecting your ticket(s). If the option does not appear, this means all ‘Under 30s’ tickets have sold out or are not available for this performance. Please note that proof of age may be requested at the venue. The £10 offer does not apply to premium price categories.
Getting here
Kings Place is situated just a few minutes’ walk from King’s Cross and St Pancras stations, one of the most connected locations in London and now the biggest transport hub in Europe.
Our address is:
90 York Way, London, N1 9AG.
The Venue
Our performance spaces are situated on the lower ground floor. Hall One, Hall Two and St Pancras are located in level -2, reached by stairs, escalator and lift from the ground floor entrance level.
Event Times
Door times indicate auditorium entrance times only. Visitors are welcome to enjoy the Kings Place seating areas, gallery-level art, canal-side terrace, café, restaurant and bar throughout the day and evening.
We aim to make your visit to Kings Place as comfortable as possible. For more information about the accessibility of Kings Place, including details about our Access Scheme, please visit this page.
If you would like to discuss your access requirements with a member of our team, please get in touch with the Box Office team at info@kingsplace.co.uk.
Rotunda Bar & Restaurant
Rotunda, situated on the ground floor of Kings Place, offers a unique dining and drinking experience alongside Regent’s Canal. The concert bar in the venue foyer will also be open for select events.
Green & Fortune Café
Recently re-furbished and now open with a new look, the Green & Fortune Café is open for selected concerts. Serving hot and cold food and drinks, including sandwiches, salads, soup, stew and a pie of the day, alongside a choice of cakes made by the on-site bakery team. See here for selected concert dates and standard opening hours.
Kanji Shimizu (shite actor, Kanze School) is one of the most sought-after noh actors today. Born in 1953, he started noh training after graduating Waseda University .In 2019, performances of Holly Mother in Nagasaki written by a renowned scientist Tomio Tada and Jacob’s Well written by a renowned Austrian art historian Diethard Leopold, were held in three cities across Europe. Shimizu actively engages in interdisciplinary collaborations, including productions with contemporary theatre and dance, as well as joint performances with other traditional performing arts such as Okinawa’s Kumi Odori and China’s Kunqu. In 2024, he was awarded the prestigious Kanze Hisao Award for his outstanding contributions to the development of noh theatre tradition. Shimizu is designated as an Important Intangible Cultural Property by the Japanese government.
Laura Sampson is a British-Trinidadian storyteller, writer and noh practitioner, based in London, UK. Recent projects include creating work for London’s Victoria & Albert Museums, National Trust, Lyric Hammersmith, Polka Theatre, and performing with leading UK storytelling organisations Crick Crack Club and Story Jam. She is the author of two-story collections, Enchanted Tales (2023) and Mythical Tales (2025), both published by Templar Books. Her unique storytelling style incorporates elements of noh, as in her latest solo show She’ll be Coming Round the Mountain (based on the noh Yamanba) and ongoing collaborations with Irish composer Anna Murray and the Quiet Music Ensemble, which combine Irish myth and noh chant.