In the eleventh year of the Tempō era, the Kawarazaki-za theater in Edo buzzed with excitement for a new production of "Kanjinchō" by Naritaya, featuring music by the master Kineya Rokusaburō. However, Naritaya's requests to change some of Rokusaburō's most painstakingly crafted parts of the composition angered his disciple, Shinjirō, leading to a conflict and Shinjirō's abandonment of the shamisen. One day, Shinjirō was captivated by the mysteriously beautiful dance of Oaki, a traveling performer's daughter, who seemed to be channeling her art into a form of revenge.
Kōkichi Takada
池田均
Kyōko Kagawa
Keiko Yukishiro
Yatarō Kitagami
Danshirō Ichikawa
Kodayu Ichikawa
Yoshito Yamaji
Haruyo Ichikawa
Atsushi Watanabe
Jūshirō Konoe
Jotaro Togami
Rintarō Fujima
Miki Mori
Toshio Nogi
Minpei Tomimoto
Eiichi Nozawa
Mitsugu Terashima
Danshirō Ichikawa
Kómori Ičikawa II
溝口亮
市川勝
市川段一