Background
His father was J. R. Black, singer and publisher of several newspapers in Japan, including The Far E. Black was born in Adelaide, Australia on 22 December 1858 and lived in Japan since he was three years old. Following in his father’s entertainer streak, he became the first foreign-born Kabuki actor.
He had picked up Japanese in part by hanging round his father’s publishing company, and began appearing on stage telling entertaining stories about famous European historical figures.
Career
He was also known by the name Black Ishii (石井 貎刺屈, Ishii Buratsuku). Black worked as an English teacher for about ten years, even publishing a textbook during that time. His audience was astounded to see a foreigner not only fluent in Japanese but also fluent enough to make them laugh.
He published some of these stories in book form.
The rakugo master, Sanyutei Encho gladly took him under his wing. In March 1891, Black adopted the stage name Kairakutei (Pleasure) Black (快楽亭ブラック)and soon after tried his hand at acting on the Kabuki stage.
He was an instant hit, playing female roles, and continued to issue printed versions of his rakugo stories. John actually burst into one of his performances and succeeded in bringing it to an early end by loudly yelling out insults and calling him an embarrassment to the family.
The following year, Black reacted by taking Japanese nationality, and the name Ishii Black.
He had been adopted by Ishii Mine, a sweet shop owner, and appears to have largely severed links with his family from that point. Black married Mine’s daughter, Aka, but the marriage ended in divorce within two years. In 1903, Black made possibly the first gramophone recording in Japan, one of his stories, for the British Gramophone Company.
In 1904, he unveiled his comic masterpiece, “Biiru no Kakenomi” (The Beer Drinking Bet) in which a man’s friend bets him he can’t drink fifteen bottles of beer in one sitting.
The man accepts the challenge but drops into a public on the way over to check that he can manage it (with the obvious result that he was already too inebriated to drink another fifteen before he even got started) A version of this story is still a popular rakugo tale even today. Black was continually on tour but as time passed he became depressed about his declining popularity and earnings.
He attempted suicide in 1908 by drinking arsenic, but survived. Ishii Black died of a stroke on 19 September 1923 at the age of 64 and is buried in Yokohama Foreign Cemetery.