Difference between revisions of "Rumi Kasuga"
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==Selected Works== | ==Selected Works== | ||
+ | [[image:KasugaRum3.jpg|200px|thumb|From a 1955 [[Kitan Club]] photo pack. Masako Ibuki is underneath.]] | ||
* ''Don't Hurt Me So Much'' ([[Kitan Club]], 1954) [http://nawa-art.com/backnumber/1950/195407/01/019.html Pin-up page] | * ''Don't Hurt Me So Much'' ([[Kitan Club]], 1954) [http://nawa-art.com/backnumber/1950/195407/01/019.html Pin-up page] | ||
* ''[[People of Kitan Club]]'' (2003) Features: [[Rumi Kasuga]]. | * ''[[People of Kitan Club]]'' (2003) Features: [[Rumi Kasuga]]. |
Revision as of 20:49, 7 April 2021
春日 (姓) family name, ルミ (名) first name, (1930-20xx)
Rumi Kasuga first appeared in Kitan Club in 1954. In photos, she often played the role of a sadist who overpowered masochists. She worked often with Masako Ibuki and Shozo Konuma (Onuma). In private life, she was a mistress. She was also talented in kinbaku and writing. It appears she pursued kinbaku independently.
Activities
Model, Mistress, Kinbakushi.
Alternate Name(s)
春日ルミ (Japanese)
Biography
1930: Born in Osaka. Parents were an office worker and a shopkeeper.
1940s: Spends a lot of time around the red light district growing up.
1940s: After the war, Kasuga discovers her desire for dominating men during a relationship with a man who was four years older than her.
1950s: While looking at photos of women pressing high heels in men’s necks, Kasuga writes, “some kind of animal instinct flared up within my body.”[※ 1]
1954: Debuts in Kitan Club July.
1970s: Became a prolific writer.
Interesting point(s)
Rumi Kasuga’s bondage was credited as “Design by Rumi Kasuga”.[1]
Owner of “Bridge” in Shinsekai, Osaka, which broke new ground in gay SM. There is evidence[2] that Kitagawa[3] witnessed SM play between Kasuga and a male partner, and this is the basis for saying she was a mistress in private.
Selected Works
- Don't Hurt Me So Much (Kitan Club, 1954) Pin-up page
- People of Kitan Club (2003) Features: Rumi Kasuga.
References
Notes (※)
- ↑ Kasuga, Rumi. My First Letter to Readers. Kitan Club, 1954