Namiki Sōsuke, also known as Namiki Senryū, was a prominent Japanese playwright who wrote for both kabuki and bunraku. He produced around 47 bunraku plays, nearly 40 of them composed for jōruri, a particular form of musical narrative, and 10 kabuki plays. He is considered the second greatest Japanese playwright after Chikamatsu Monzaemon. Sōsuke was born in Osaka in 1695 and for the early part of his life he was a buddhist monk in the Jōjūji temple in Mihara, Bingo province. He then left priesthood and settled in Osaka to become a playwright, starting as a disciple of Nishizawa Icchū in the Toyotake-za theatre. Collaborating with a number of other playwrights, including Takeda Izumo I and Miyoshi Shōraku, Namiki Sōsuke created some of the most famous traditional Japanese plays. Among them are NatsuMatsuri Naniwa Kagami, Sugawara denju tenarai kagami, Yoshitsune no senbonzakura, and Kanadehon chūshingura. Namiki died while writingIchinotani futaba gunki, but it was completed by some of his collaborators. One of his plays has been translated into English, Summer Festival: Mirror of Osaka in Kabuki Plays on Stage I: Brilliance and Bravado, 1697–1770, edited by James R. Brandon and Samuel L. Leiter.
Plays
Izutsuya Genroku Koi no Kanzarashi with others, bunraku
Hōjō Jiraiki with Nishizawa Icchū, bunraku
Karukaya Dōshin Tsukushi no Iezuto with Namiki Jōsuke, bunraku
Wada Gassen Onna Maizuru bunraku
Kama-ga-Fuchi Futatsu Domoe bunraku
Hibariyama Himesute Matsu bunraku
Futatsu Biki Nishiki no Manmaku with Namiki Eisuke I, kabuki
Natsu Matsuri Naniwa Kagami with Miyoshi Shōraku and Takeda Koizumo I, bunraku. Adapted to kabuki the same year
Sugawara Denju Tenarai Kagami with Takeda Izumo I, Miyoshi Shōraku and Takeda Koizumo I, bunraku. Adapted to kabuki the same year
Yoshitsune Senbon Zakura with Takeda Izumo II and Miyoshi Shōraku, bunraku. Adapted to kabuki the next year
Kanadehon Chūshingura with Takeda Izumo II and Miyoshi Shōraku, bunraku. Adapted to kabuki the same year
Futatsu Chōchō Kuruwa Nikki with Takeda Izumo II and Miyoshi Shōraku, bunraku
Genpei Nunobiki no Taki with Miyoshi Shōraku, bunraku
Ichi-no-Tani Futaba Gunki with Asada Icchō, Namioka Geiji, Namiki Shōzō I, Naniwa Sanzō and Toyotake Jinroku, bunraku