Born in the Prefecture of Tokyo, Yuasa was the daughter of the Marine officer who died at a young age (1871–1904) sowie der Sakae Yushisaki (1885–1923). After attending the Oberlyzeum in Tokyo, she studied singing at the
Imperial Academy of Music in Tokyo from 1919 to 1923. Her teacher was the German-Norwegian musician
Hanka Petzold. (1862-1937), former student of
Liszt, acknowledged
Wagner interpreter and wife of the journalist . From 1923 Yuasa continued her training with
Ernst Grenzebach and Adolf Philipsen in Berlin. On 17 July 1926 Yuasa married the Berlin pianist
Walther Carl Meiszner (real name: Meißner) whom she had met at her Berlin debut and who subsequently appeared as her piano accompanist. In 1929 the couple lived at Schloßstraße 53 in
Charlottenburg; the marriage remained childless. Between 1925 and 1943 she sang on European stages, mainly in Germany, Austria and Scandinavia. Yuasa often impersonated
Madama Butterfly in the opera of the same name by
Giacomo Puccini, for example in 1930 at the
Lippischen Landestheater Detmold. In the same year she also sang
Butterfly at the Salzburger Festspielhaus in a performance with the
Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg. In March 1936 she gave a guest performance in this role at the
Hamburg State Opera. Yuasa also sang in concerts. On 8 March 1928, for example, she performed in
Bergen with the symphony orchestra there. She sang four opera arias (including the Butterfly aria
Un bel dì, vedremo) and six songs, four of which were compositions by her compatriot
Kōsaku Yamada. In the same year she gave 24 concerts in England. The various concert critics expressed their amazement at the ability of a singer from Japan to interpret Western opera music, and often referred to the outward appearance of Yuasa. Thus the
Wiener Salonblatt wrote in 1925 In 1926, the journal
Neue Zeitschrift für Musik praised the "
kimono dressed graceful appearance" as well as the "perfect vocal artistry" of the singer. In the
Linzer Tages-Post on the other hand, in 1928 was to be read: Among the fans of the "Japanese nightingale" was the playwright
Gerhart Hauptmann, who wrote her a letter of thanks after a concert. Between 1932 and 1934, Yuasa appeared in four German films, including with the popular singer
Helge Rosvaenge in the feature film
Der Knallenffekt. In it, she helps a singer in the leading role of the opera
Le postillon de Lonjumeau to achieve the desired bang effect with a whip by attaching
bang snaps to it. In 1933 she appeared in the movie
Spiegel, which was produced by
Nicholas Kaufmann and was based on a script by . The director of the short film, which showed Japanese life, was her compatriot, the musician
Kishi Kōichi (composer) (1909–1937). Yuasa sang in Germany and German-occupied territories until at least 1943. She gave numerous concerts in Berlin, so in January 1942, when she sang songs by
Gluck and
Johannes Brahms in the
Beethovensaal; at the piano sat
Michael Raucheisen. At a concert in
Dresden in March 1943 the composer and musician Willy Jaeger (1895-1986) was her accompanist at the piano. In 1945 a recording was published on which she sang Cherubino from Mozart's
Le nozze di Figaro. There is no information about Yuasa's further path in life. == References ==