The
CULTURE PAGES
T
he first time
Naomi
Watanabe saw herself on TV was also the first time she realized she might be fat. It was 2008, and the
comedian was making her debut on a Japanese variety show as Beyoncé lip-syncing and dancing to a rendition of “Dreamgirls.” In Japan, the art of campy celebrity impression is known as
mono-
mane.
But no one who looked like Wata-
nabe had attempted Beyoncé before.
“I saw it and thought,
Oh, I might be
curvy. Hahahahaha,
” she tells me through
a translator when we meet in New York, where
she
lives
now
(and
is
s
till
working
on
her
English).
“It
’s^
not
tha
t^ I
love
m
yself
because
I^
am
fat.
I^
jus
t^ love
who
I
am
right
now.
Wha
tever
body
I
ha
ve
toda
y,
I
lik
e^
to
embrace
tha
t.
T
hat’s
m
y^
self-love:
L
ove
yourself
at
wha
tever
size
you
ha
ve
toda
y.”
A
decade
later
,^
at
31,
W
atanabe
has
turned
into
one
of
Japan
’s^
big
gest
s
tars,
thanks
in
part
to
her
body-positive
a
tti-
tude.
She
is
the
country
’s
mos
t^
followed
person
on
Ins
tagram.
If
you
s
tand
a
t^
the
crossroads
in
Shibuya,
the
busy
area
of
Tok
yo
wher
e^
S
carlett
J
ohansson
wan-
der
ed
in
Lost
in
T
ranslation,
W
atanabe’s
always
smiling
face
appears
no
fe
wer
than
15 times—in ads for fancy fruit
y water, lip-
stick, and clothing. A railway company named a train after her. In 2018, she was one of
Time’
s “25 Most Influential People
on the Internet.” But few in America know of her yet. She’d like to change that. “I’d love to make everyone laugh,” she says. “Not just Japanese people.”
When we meet, it’s one of the hottest
days of New York’s summer so far. Wata-nabe has recently rented an apartment here. In Japan, she has to wear a dis-guise in public to avoid being mobbed by fans. On the Lower East Side, she fits right in. She has not one but two Chanel quilted
mini-backpacks,
and
a
fancy
Japanese
e-cigar
ette,
and
wears
Gucci
rubber
slides,
jeans,
and
a
T-shir
t^ with
a
dra
wing
of
a
woman
wearing
a
mono-
kini
that
e
ven
Emily
Ra
tajkowski
might
deem
a
little
too
r
evealing.
Despite
being
called
the
“Beyoncé
of
Japan
”^ because
of
her
lip-syncs,
W
atanabe
is
more
of
a
mash-up
of
American
female
boundary-pushers:
M
ix
L
ady
Gaga’
s^
de
fi-
ant
underdog
a
ttitude
and
ambition
with
Lizzo’
s^
body
positivit
y,
Car
di
B’
s^
social-
media
skills,
and
Aidy
Bryant
’s^
sense
of
girlish
joy,
and
you
g
et
some
idea
of
W
ata-
nabe’s
s
trengths.
She
s
tarted
per
forming
at 18, contr
ary to the wishes of her mother.
“When I make people laugh, it gives me joy. The feeling is something you can’t describe. It’s almost orgasmic,” she says. When I laugh a little too loudly at her answer, she deadpans, “That felt good.”
Watanabe broke into
monomane
at 20,
primarily impersonating Beyoncé, occa-sionally Lady Gaga. Over time, she became a regular on Japanese variety shows and a key player in the
owarai
tarento
industry, which literally trans-
lates as “talent of laughter.” Next year, she’ll play Tracy Turnblad in the country’s version of
Hairspray.
She was one of the
first
J
apanese
comedians
to
join
I
nsta-
gram
and
T
ikTok,
wher
e^
she
r
eposts
funny
videos
and
photos
of
her
tongue-
in-cheek
fashion.
She
has
her
own
filter
on
Ins
tagram,
which
chang
es
e
very
fe
w
months
(right
now,
it
gives
you
baby
bangs,
pink
lipstick,
and
br
aided
mini
hair
buns
that
mak
e^
you
look
lik
e^
a^
baby
tiger).
One
of
her
mos
t-liked
pos
ts
shows
her
in
a
bathing
suit
imprinted
with
pan-
cak
es
with
but
ter
pa
ts
over
her
br
easts.
I
n
an
ad
campaign,
she
was
shot
with
her
hair
put
up
in
hot
rollers,
tacos
filling
the
center
of
each
curl.
In
20
14,
W
atanabe
launched
her
own
fashion line, Pun
yus, meant to sound
like the Japanese word for “pudgy” (the Japanese often use it to describe baby cheeks), with clothes designed for women up to size 22. While shooting an episode of
Girls
in Japan in 2015, Lena
Dunham discovered Punyus and praised Watanabe on Instagram, saying, “It’s hard to find great clothes for curvy women anywhere, but especially in Japan where petite and cute seem syn-onymous so yeah, she’s kind of radical.”
Technically it’s Watanabe’s second
time living in the city. In 2014, she saved up to live here for three months and study
English.
She
’s^
back for long
er this
time
to
soak
up
American cultur
e and
the
crea
tive
energ
y^
of the cit
y and learn
a^
little
mor
e^
English, r
elying on friends
to
transla
te
in
the
meantime. “I
n NYC,
you
have
to
f
ight
e
very single day,” she
says.
“
You
ha
ve
to
speak out and be vocal
about
what
you
want. I
n my opinion, in
Japanese
c
ulture,
when you sa
y your
point
of
view
,^ people
think you’
re a snob
or
are
br
agging.
H
ere, everyone says
what
the
y^
want
and
ar
e thinking.”
“By
the
end
of
the
year,
” she continues,
“I
want
to
learn
to
clap back at other
people.
In
English.
”^
■
Na
omi Watanabe Is Coming
for America
The Japanese comedian, social-media star, and fashion designer turned a Beyoncé
impression into an empire. Can her success translate?
By Kathleen Hou
STYLING BY YE YOUNG KIM; MAKEUP BY SEONG HEE PARK AT JULIAN WATSON AGENCY; HAIR BY TETSUYA FOR ARTIST, NYC; NAILS BY MEI KAWAJIRI; FASHION ASSISTANCE BY DONSHEA PARKS. RICHARD QUINN CHIFFON GOWN AT WWW.RICHARDQUINN.LONDON.
64 Photograph by Catherine Servel
TRANSMITTED
REVISED
________ COPY ___ DD ___ AD ___ PD ___ EIC
1619CR_watanabe_lay [Print]_35552125.indd 64 8/1/19 11:14 AM
The
CULTURE PAGES
T
he first time
Naomi
Watanabe saw herself on TV was also the first time she realized she might be fat. It was 2008, and the
comedian was making her debut on a Japanese variety show as Beyoncé lip-syncing and dancing to a rendition of “Dreamgirls.” In Japan, the art of campy celebrity impression is known as
mono-
mane.
But no one who looked like Wata-
nabe had attempted Beyoncé before.
“I saw it and thought,
Oh, I might be
curvy. Hahahahaha,
” she tells me through
a translator when we meet in New York, where
she
lives
now
(and
is
still
working
on
her
English).
“It
’s
not
tha
tI
love
m
yself
because
Iam
fat.
Ijus
tlove
who
I
am
right
now.
Wha
tever
body
I
ha
ve
toda
y,
I
lik
e
to
embrace
tha
t.
T
hat’s
m
y
self-love:
L
ove
yourself
at
wha
tever
size
you
ha
ve
toda
y.”
A
decade
later
,
at
31,
W
atanabe
has
turned
into
one
of
Japan
’s
big
gest
stars,
thanks
in
part
to
her
body-positive
atti-
tude.
She
is
the
country
’s
mos
t
followed
person
on
Ins
tagram.
If
you
stand
at
the
crossroads
in
Shibuya,
the
busy
area
of
Tok
yo
wher
e
S
carlett
Johansson
wan-
der
ed
in
Lost
in
T
ranslation,
W
atanabe’s
always
smiling
face
appears
no
fe
wer
than
15 times—in ads for fancy fruit
y water, lip-
stick, and clothing. A railway company named a train after her. In 2018, she was one of
Time’
s “25 Most Influential People
on the Internet.” But few in America know of her yet. She’d like to change that. “I’d love to make everyone laugh,” she says. “Not just Japanese people.”
When we meet, it’s one of the hottest
days of New York’s summer so far. Wata-nabe has recently rented an apartment here. In Japan, she has to wear a dis-guise in public to avoid being mobbed by fans. On the Lower East Side, she fits right in. She has not one but two Chanel quilted
mini-backpacks,
and
a
fancy
Japanese
e-cigar
ette,
and
wears
Gucci
rubber
slides,
jeans,
and
a
T-shir
twith
a
dra
wing
of
a
woman
wearing
a
mono-
kini
that
even
Emily
Ra
tajkowski
might
deem
a
little
too
revealing.
Despite
being
called
the
“Beyoncé
of
Japan
”because
of
her
lip-syncs,
W
atanabe
is
more
of
a
mash-up
of
American
female
boundary-pushers:
M
ix
L
ady
Gaga’
s
de
fi-
ant
underdog
attitude
and
ambition
with
Lizzo’
s
body
positivit
y,
Car
di
B’
s
social-
media
skills,
and
Aidy
Bryant
’s
sense
of
girlish
joy,
and
you
get
some
idea
of
W
ata-
nabe’s
strengths.
She
started
per
forming
at 18, contr
ary to the wishes of her mother.
“When I make people laugh, it gives me joy. The feeling is something you can’t describe. It’s almost orgasmic,” she says. When I laugh a little too loudly at her answer, she deadpans, “That felt good.”
Watanabe broke into
monomane
at 20,
primarily impersonating Beyoncé, occa-sionally Lady Gaga. Over time, she became a regular on Japanese variety shows and a key player in the
owarai
tarento
industry, which literally trans-
lates as “talent of laughter.” Next year, she’ll play Tracy Turnblad in the country’s version of
Hairspray.
She was one of the
first
Japanese
comedians
to
join
Insta-
gram
and
T
ikTok,
wher
e
she
reposts
funny
videos
and
photos
of
her
tongue-
in-cheek
fashion.
She
has
her
own
filter
on
Ins
tagram,
which
chang
es
every
fe
w
months
(right
now,
it
gives
you
baby
bangs,
pink
lipstick,
and
br
aided
mini
hair
buns
that
mak
e
you
look
lik
e
a
baby
tiger).
One
of
her
mos
t-liked
pos
ts
shows
her
in
a
bathing
suit
imprinted
with
pan-
cak
es
with
but
ter
pa
ts
over
her
br
easts.
In
an
ad
campaign,
she
was
shot
with
her
hair
put
up
in
hot
rollers,
tacos
filling
the
center
of
each
curl.
In
20
14,
W
atanabe
launched
her
own
fashion line, Pun
yus, meant to sound
like the Japanese word for “pudgy” (the Japanese often use it to describe baby cheeks), with clothes designed for women up to size 22. While shooting an episode of
Girls
in Japan in 2015, Lena
Dunham discovered Punyus and praised Watanabe on Instagram, saying, “It’s hard to find great clothes for curvy women anywhere, but especially in Japan where petite and cute seem syn-onymous so yeah, she’s kind of radical.”
Technically it’s Watanabe’s second
time living in the city. In 2014, she saved up to live here for three months and study
English.
She
’s
back for long
er this
time
to
soak
up
American cultur
e and
the
crea
tive
energ
y
of the cit
y and learn
a
little
mor
e
English, r
elying on friends
to
transla
te
in
the
meantime. “I
n NYC,
you
have
to
fight
every single day,” she
says.
“You
ha
ve
to
speak out and be vocal
about
what
you
want. I
n my opinion, in
Japanese
culture,
when you sa
y your
point
of
view
,people
think you’
re a snob
or
are
br
agging.
H
ere, everyone says
what
the
y
want
and
ar
e thinking.”
“By
the
end
of
the
year,
” she continues,
“I
want
to
learn
to
clap back at other
people.
In
English.
”
■
Na
omi Watanabe Is Coming
for America
The Japanese comedian, social-media star, and fashion designer turned a Beyoncé
impression into an empire. Can her success translate?
By Kathleen Hou
STYLING BY YE YOUNG KIM; MAKEUP BY SEONG HEE PARK AT JULIAN WATSON AGENCY; HAIR BY TETSUYA FOR ARTIST, NYC; NAILS BY MEI KAWAJIRI; FASHION ASSISTANCE BY DONSHEA PARKS. RICHARD QUINN CHIFFON GOWN AT WWW.RICHARDQUINN.LONDON.
64 Photograph by Catherine Servel