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What is a “meteorite”?

「隕石」
とはなにか?

Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite Tokyo

The Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite Tokyo, will be held mainly at the Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre in Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku. The Artistic Director is Toshiki Okada, who is active both in Japan and overseas as a playwright, theater director, novelist, and leader of the theater company chelfitsch. With our core missions―“Creation of new art,” ”Promoting artists and works internationally,” “personnel development in the performing arts”―, we will present a variety of performing arts works from both Japan and overseas, and implement initiatives to develop performing arts artists and production staff to be active in the world. Toshiki Okada is highly acclaimed both domestically and internationally for his unique methodology exploring the relationship between language and the body as well as for his sharp insight into contemporary society. Under his direction, this Tokyo-based festival aspires to become a more globally connected event that is forward-thinking, original, creative, and international.

A Message for the 2025 Edition

For the first year under the artistic director Toshiki Okada, we will feature “Performance Program”, presenting 14 diverse performances from Japan and abroad, “Non-Performance Program”, offering lectures and workshops, and “Hello and Welcome (Attendee Support)” to support accessibility and inclusivity across all programs. In 2025, the festival will serve as a platform to discover new domestic talent, commission a new work, and promote international exchange among young professionals in the performing arts. We will invite presenters from overseas festivals, and through exchanges with them, build connections with various festivals, theatres, artists, and professionals around the world for future collaborations. Our various programs will allow audiences to understand and relate more directly with performing arts from Japan and around the world that are happening here and now. And it also creates opportunities to become aware of different realities and reconsider our world through fresh perspectives. Under a new team, led by Okada, we aim to become a truly international performing arts festival that is inclusive and open to wider public.

Program Structure of The Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite Tokyo

The Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite Tokyo, is made up of three categories. The first is “Performance Program,” which includes dance, theatre, and performance art works. The second is “Non-Performance Program,” which includes workshops and talk sessions. And the third is “Hello and Welcome (Attendee Support)”, which ensure anyone can enjoy our festival. Not only developing a wide range of accessibility features, but also we will offer relaxed performances* in some works, making space for diverse ways of experiencing theater. Through the festival, we hope to provide an opportunity to rethink our unconscious standard itself in people involved in performing arts. *What is a Relaxed Performance? A relaxed performance is a show that’s been adopted to suit people who might require a more relaxed environment when going to the theatre. We provide safe and comfortable environment for performing arts for small children, people with developmental disabilities, people who are sensitive to sound and light stimuli, and people who are not comfortable in an atmosphere where they are forced to sit quietly and docilely. Specific efforts to create a relaxing environment include not completely darkening the auditorium during performances and softening the effects of sound and lighting. There is no atmosphere of censure for those who are speaking or moving their bodies, or for those who are going in and out the theatre during the performance.

Meteorite-ness

Message from the Artistic Director

The image of a meteorite evokes something foreign, unfamiliar—a presence infused with a rare power to set things in motion. However subtly, its influence radiates out into the world, into the cosmos, quietly but surely leaving its mark. Yes, even as a mere image, the meteorite casts its influence upon our lives, in this world, in this very moment, on Tokyo as a city, the Earth as a planet—upon the greater universe, upon this reality we inhabit. That is why I named the performance arts festival Autumn Meteorite.

Meteorite-ness

Message from the Artistic Director

The image of a meteorite evokes something foreign, unfamiliar—a presence infused with a rare power to set things in motion. However subtly, its influence radiates out into the world, into the cosmos, quietly but surely leaving its mark. Yes, even as a mere image, the meteorite casts its influence upon our lives, in this world, in this very moment, on Tokyo as a city, the Earth as a planet—upon the greater universe, upon this reality we inhabit. That is why I named the performance arts festival Autumn Meteorite. Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo consists of three main components: the Performance Program, the Non-Performance Program, and Hello and Welcome (Attendee Support). The Non-Performance Program includes workshops and talk events, amongst other offerings. The Hello and Welcome refers to our efforts to provide an enjoyable and accessible experience for all, as well as a space where people can gather and rest during the festival. Of course, the Performance and Non-Performance Programs are meteorites in their own right. But equally important is recognizing the Hello and Welcome framework as a significant meteorite. As a performing arts festival, Autumn Meteorite is not only about projecting the image of a meteorite onto the programs it presents. It also sees the attendees and audience as vital meteorites. Through Hello and Welcome, we aim to expand the scope of who the performing arts can reach, and who they can resonate with. After all, “welcome-ness” is a form of meteorite-ness in itself. Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo begins with an outdoor performance titled “Another Shape of Reality/Shape of Another Reality.” This phrase was originally conceived as the subtitle for the festival as a whole, and, as such, the title of this performance directly expresses what Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo aims to project onto reality through art. The essence of the phrase will undoubtedly manifest in the performance itself. “Dance Jurors’ Dance” explores the theme of property, depicting a group of dance award jurors taking part in a dance competition. The idea of property pervades our world, and it is often invoked as a means of protection, yet it undeniably contributes to forces that constrict us. In this dance-theater performance, the concept propels the choreography and playful dance.  We, the living, often ponder the dead, but what if the dead were to think about us? What might that look like? “The Bathhouse of Honest Desires,” co-written and co-directed by Taiwan’s Chia-Ming Wang and Japan’s Kuro Tanino, brings this question to life in a strange and haunting narrative that blends sorrow and humour. Every night in a dilapidated, traditional bathhouse, men who died in war return, “playing” out their desires for women. To witness this work of theater (play) is to undergo an experience that exposes the folly of war in ways both strange and deeply memorable. As digital technologies such as AI continue to shift the boundaries between fact and fiction—and our ability to reliably perceive reality unravels—UK-based theater company Forced Entertainment presents “Signal to Noise,” a chaotic and chilling piece where deep-fakes are brought to life by flesh-and-blood performers. In this performance, what should be a sanctuary of analog reality (the performing arts) is haunted with a sense of the digital macabre. For those of us living in a reality where the natural and political conditions for survival are shifting on a planetary scale, Faye Driscoll’s “Weathering” reflects our fate in symbolic, metaphorical, and intensely concrete ways. The ten performers resemble castaways on an ocean raft, intertwined in a frozen stance on a rectangular set positioned within the “acting area” and surrounded on all sides by audience seating. As we observe the subtle, continually shifting movements of the ten performers amongst all the other elements, “Weathering” becomes a storm in itself, gradually overwhelming those who witness it. Autumn Meteorite seeks to shift and broaden the context in which the performing arts operate. The program “Future Ideations Camp Vol.7 | Super Sober Shamanism: Exploring Synchronization, Co-presence, and Mimesis through Theatre and Technology” is a bold step in that direction, serving as a networking initiative bridging performing and digital arts. While the performing arts may harbor a deep-rooted apprehension toward digital technology, marked by stark differences in values and aesthetics, it is precisely within this tension that new possibilities emerge. Perhaps the performing arts have been waiting thousands of years for a moment like this. Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo will also highlight the field of Object Theater, through programs curated by Yoko Yamaguchi. Included in the Performance Program are “THE THIRD HAND” by Handa Gote Research & Development and “Things Easily Forgotten” by Xavier Bobés, while a workshop by Ariel Doron is included in the Non-Performance Program. Too often, contemporary performing arts remain bound to human-centered theater. Yet theater need not be confined by the limitations and constraints of human performers. Object Theater—where objects, rather than people, take the stage—offers a vital perspective. Its importance is undeniable, though perhaps underrecognized today. Or perhaps what was once more fully understood about its power has since been forgotten. Autumn Meteorite seeks to build a context wherein Object Theater can be recognized as a meteorite that forges new connections. Across the world, within the mind, and throughout other layers of reality, countless visible and invisible walls are being built—among them, the divisions between artistic genres. In response, Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo presents “YOU BALANCE” as one of its featured programs. Over the course of two days, musical and non-musical performances will unfold simultaneously across multiple spaces within the Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre. A brackish zone will emerge, where sounds and performances blur and bleed into one another. Our society continues to throw countless absurdities at women, especially those raising children. Utau-Hahagokoro, a group of mother and non-mother actresses, confronts these challenges with a uniquely powerful form of theater called mothers’ choral theater. Their work does not only speak to mothers raising children: it transcends the context of motherhood to reach all of us who inhabit this society. For this reason, Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo presents their new piece, “The Theater☆Sing! Dance! Grow! A garden of Hahagokoro ~Children's Clothing is Reincarnation~,” as a significant performing arts offering. Shin Hanagata attempts to transform into something other than human. Severing the perception of his own body as a body, he enters a world revealed through VR goggles—where the image of the body merges with that of objects. Within this realm, he adjusts his posture in pursuit of becoming an object himself. At Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo, an open experiment will be conducted as a prelude to the upcoming presentation of “Ergonomic Embryo,” scheduled for the following year. This work appears to stem from a disquieting yet sincere desire to detach from the state of being human. SEKITA IKUKO’s theater works invite us to understand the lives we inhabit through the examination of ambience, detail, and the indescribable textures of the air that surrounds us. The company does not put a hierarchy on the components that make up theater: each component is treated equally. Within an exposed space, distinctive acting performances are presented with an exceptionally unique touch, reminiscent of a refined manga drawn in crisp lines. Their performance overflows with ephemeral impressions and emotions that archival stills will almost certainly fail to preserve. And there is laughter, too. The Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo commissioned SEKITA IKUKO’s new work, “under take,” which began with the idea of revealing a stage mechanism typically concealed from the audience. Meteorites do not always come from beyond our planet. There is another metaphoric image I want to offer for this performing arts festival: the culvert, a type of subterranean tunnel. A culvert is also a kind of meteorite. Both meteorites and culverts are defined by context. A meteorite, after all, is just a rock, or large piece of stone, until it arrives. What, then, do we call a meteorite that doesn’t fly toward us? Can Autumn Meteorite extend its context to include these non-flying meteorites? This performance arts festival is a meteorite in its own right, made up of various other meteorites and culverts. As long as we carry the name “meteorite,” we aim to hold these questions close so we can be ready to receive you, another meteorite.

A photo of Toshiki Okada

photo: Kikuko Usuyama

Toshiki Okada

Toshiki Okada is a playwright, novelist, and the director of the theater company chelfitsch. In 2005, he received the 49th Kishida Kunio Drama Award for “Five Days in March.” In 2007, he participated in the Kunstenfestivaldesarts, held in Brussels, with his work “Five Days in March.” Since this debut of his work overseas, he has continued to present works not only domestically but also internationally, putting on performances in over 90 cities across Asia, Europe, North America, and South America. Okada’s work also involves many international co-productions such as “God Bless Baseball” in 2015 featuring a Japanese and Korean cast, “Pratthana – A Portrait of Possession” in 2018, which is based on a Thai novel by Uthis Haemamool featuring Thai actors and which received the 27th Yomiuri Theater Awards Selection Committee Special Prize, as well as “Metamorphosis of a Living Room” in 2023 commissioned by Wiener Festwochen. Since 2016, he has also consistently created and directed works in a repertory program at a renowned public theater in Germany. In 2020, his work “The Vacuum Cleaner” (Münchner Kammerspiele) and in 2022, “Doughnuts” (Thalia Theater, Hamburg) were selected as part of the Berliner Theatertreffen’s “10 Remarkable Productions.” His work “Unfulfilled Ghost and Monster – ZAHA / TSURUGA” won the 72nd Yomiuri Prize for Literature (Play/Scenario Award) and the 25th Tsuruya Namboku Drama Award. This play together with his opera “Yuzuru” received the Director Award of the 29th Yomiuri Theater Awards in 2022. As a novelist, he published “The End of the Moment We Had” (Shinchōsha) in 2007, which won the 2nd Kenzaburō Ōe Prize. In 2022, he received the 35th Mishima Yukio Prize and the 64th Kumanichi Literary Award for his novel “Broccoli Revolution” (Shinchōsha).

Creative Direction

Visual Identity and Design of Autumn Meteorite Tokyo

NEW Creators Club (NEW), established in 2019, has been appointed to handle the creative direction of Autumn Meteorite Tokyo with their main focus on developing a communication tool for the festival. Embracing the festival’s concept of challenging definitive perceptions of reality and of expanding the context in which performing arts can operate in the face of reality, the visual design will reflect this mission. As the first step, NEW will establish the visual identity (VI) of Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo. Based on this VI, visual expressions and designs associated with the festival will be presented in the form of logos and key visuals. These designs will not be fixed graphics, but will act as a generator—a dynamic system that can change its appearance depending on the users who experience the visuals. By using this generator, the visual design of Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo will constantly evolve, reflecting a particular occasion or medium of expression. This concept of an ever-changing VI, dubbed LIVE VI, will support the festival from a visual perspective.

Logo mark of New Creators Club

Message from NEW Creators Club

The name Autumn Meteorite was unexpected but powerful. In terms of visual communication, a conventional logo would have sufficed, but we believed that the VI system itself should embody Mr. Okada’s idea of a meteorite (something that does not exist here, something totally different to what we are used to). The result is LIVE VI — a concept that suits a live performing arts festival. So what is LIVE VI? It is a system that is not defined by a single shape or motion, but one that morphs continuously. To create this VI system, we developed a generator built with various sensors and parameters. The generator is installed with a preset function that can be used as a feature of standard asset management, however, random numbers are always used for the design output, ensuring that no two visuals are ever the same. The question is: how receptive are we to this meteorite?https://www.new-creators.club

Event Overview


Festival Name
Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite 2025 Tokyo

Dates
Wednesday, October 1 – Monday (national holiday), November 3, 2025

Venues
Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre, GLOBAL RING THEATRE, etc.

Organizer
Tokyo Festival Executive Committee [Tokyo Metropolitan Government, Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre (Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture)]

Support
Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan Japan Arts Council

Sponsor
Asahi Group Japan, Ltd.

Media Partner
Tokyo Art Beat

In cooperation with
Toshima city, SEIBU RAILWAY Co.,Ltd., TOBU RAILWAY CO., Ltd.

Number of Programs
Performance Program: 14, Non-Performance Program: 8,Hello and Welcome (Attendee Support): 3

*Please note that event details are subject to change.

  • Tokyo Metropolitan Government
  • Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre
  • Agency for Cultural Affairs
  • Japan cultural expo 2.0
  • Asahi Group Japan, Ltd.
  • Tokyo Art Beat

Tokyo Festival Executive Committee

  • Advisor: Man Nomura (Chair, Japan Council of Performers Rights & Performing Arts Organizations; Noh actor) Chair of Executive Committee: Seiichi Kondo (Former Commissioner, Agency of Cultural Affairs, Japan)
  • Vice Chair of Executive Committee: Hitoshi Ogita (Director, Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre) Vice Chair of Executive Committee: Yoko Kataoka (Senior Director, Culture Promotion Division, Bureau of Citizens and Culture Affairs, Tokyo Metropolitan Government)
  • Committee Member: Tadashi Uchino(Professor, Gakushuin Women's College) Committee Member: Junya Sakita (Senior Manager, General Affairs, Asahi Group Japan, Ltd.) Committee Member: Masumi Natsusaka (President, Association for Corporate Support of the Arts) Committee Member: Atsuko Hisano (Managing Director, The Saison Foundation) Committee Member: Tomoyuki Fujiu (Director, General Affairs Department, Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture) Committee Member: Hiroyuki Watanabe (Chair, Tokyo Chamber of Commerce and Industry Toshima)
  • Auditor: Mari Yamauchi (Representative, Yamauchi Accounting Office)

Tokyo Festival Executive Committee Office

  • Secretary General: Junko Suzuki*

Performing Arts Festival: Autumn Meteorite Tokyo

  • Artistic Director: Toshiki Okada
  • Chief Dramaturge: Makiko Yamaguchi Dramaturg: Yoshiro Hatori Assistant to the Artistic Director: Ayumi Seki
  • Chief Producer: Yuko Takeda* Senior Producer: Harumi Nemoto Producer: Hirohiko Hanzawa* Producer: Nobutaka Nakahara* Producer: Rin Terada* Producer: Naomi Yoshida* (TMT Autumn Selection) Producer: Takuya Tsuji* (TMT Autumn Selection) Producer: Nanami Hashimoto* (TMT Autumn Selection)
  • Object Theater Curator:Yoko Yamaguchi
  • Technical Director: Takeshi Yasuda* Technical Coordinator: Hiroo Nakai (Stage Work URAK Co.Ltd)
  • Chief Manager: Haruna Matsutani*
  • Chief Communications & Public Relations: Kanon Matsumoto Communications & Public Relations: Yu Fujisaki* Communications & Public Relations: Shoko Yamauchi Communications & Public Relations: Keijirou Okumura Communications & Public Relations: Eiko Kawasaki* (TMT Autumn Selection) Communications & Public Relations: Kazetake Kubo* (TMT Autumn Selection) Communications & Public Relations Assistant: Rena Isono Social Media Specialist: Lina Uchida Inbound Promotion Coordinator: Shoko Sonoda
  • Creative Director: NEW Creators Club [Shunta Sakamoto, Toi Yamada, Daichi Kawashima]
  • Web Design: Tetsuro Shimura Web Development: Kairi Shiomi
  • Accessibility Coordinator: Shoko Miyamoto (Syuz'gen LLC) Accessibility Coordinator: Naoko Oshima Accessibility Coordinator: Jun Mitani* (TMT Autumn Selection) Accessibility Coordinator: Kazuyo Tada* (TMT Autumn Selection)
  • Ticketing: Kosuke Matsuo Ticketing: Yuki Inoue* (TMT Autumn Selection) Ticketing: Yuki Sunohara* (TMT Autumn Selection)
  • Administrator: Naomi Kobayashi* Administrator: Natsumi Hamada Administrator: Naoko Oshima Administrator: Minasu Kai
  • Accountant: Yukiko Ishinabe (Aster Vision Japan, Inc) Accountant: Yachiyo Tanida (Aster Vision Japan, Inc)
  • *refers to Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre
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