Hanging out with an 86-year-old cheerleader in Tokyo

Japan has a rapidly ageing population, but a group of elderly cheerleaders and their fearless leader Fumie, are an example to the rest of the country of how to keep life fun as you grow old.

Dateline reporter Dean Cornish sits with Fumie Takino, of Japan Pom Pom.

Dateline reporter Dean Cornish sits with Fumie Takino, of Japan Pom Pom. Source: SBS Dateline

Grey concrete maze streets

Sky and old are same colour

Nine million of them

It’s a long drive out to Tokyo’s suburbs. And my mind has begun to drift to haiku for some reason.

5 syllables

7 syllables

5 syllables

A confined and constrained communication form – a little like ancient Twitter.

Grow old and die, yes?

This country has changed so much

Best leave for the young

There are nine million senior citizens in Tokyo alone, with precious few young people coming in to take their place. Confined and constrained is, of course, how many old people in Japan feel these days. Constrained by culture, and confined to grey streets and small apartments where they live life to its eventual, inescapable, end.

Not Fumie though.

Fumie Takino, 86, has a fridge full of Coca Cola and beer. She orders pizza with impunity. And she dances – good lord, does she dance.

I spend several days with her while filming my latest Dateline film, which profiles Japan Pom Pom – a 55 plus cheerleading squad based in Tokyo, and Fumie’s decades long passion project.

The average age of the group in 70, and Fumie sees their mission as showing that staying fit, healthy and social in old age is not impossible, or really that difficult at all.

“No matter what it is or how old you are, I tell everyone to start something,” she tells me. “Stop blaming your age for being unable to do this or that.”

In her wardrobe, Fumie has racks full of sparkles and sequins that would make a drag queen drool. Pom poms and feathers and stockings, oh my!

She refuses to grow old gracefully. Or even, to grow old at all.

The drive to her Tokyo suburb is replaced with a swift train trip back to town. Fumie is wearing headphones; listening to electric blues, hip-hop and Taylor Swift. Whenever I ask her to slow down for a picture, she raises her eyebrows ‘you, kid,’ her look seems to say. ‘You slow down too much and you die’.



And then, arriving at Fumie’s favourite place, an inner city gymnasium, we’re shut out. No apologies. No airs, graces, or old-person politeness.

Other demure, elderly ladies shuffle past us, giving brief nods. They enter the sanctum. They leave me and the crew alone in the cold Tokyo night.

When the doors open again, Fumie and friends are reborn, or at least reversioned. Sparkling, sequined and doing the splits.

They’re really good. Not ironically, good-for-old-people good – they’re genuinely good. And they work extremely hard. This stuff, they take seriously, and thrive on it. They’re amazing, 80-year-old plus cheerleaders who are fitter and more flexible than I am.

As outsiders, and documentary-makers, we came here assuming that Japan is a culture that prefers its female citizens quiet, demure and traditional. But looking around and asking about Fumie’s group, we found little cultural pushback from other older Japanese. They’re embraced. Old people admire them, foreigners like me want to report on them.

Shake your pom poms now

You’re not as old as you think

Just do what you want

Fumie isn’t haiku. She’s not restrained.

This sequined octogenarian is a free-flowing sonnet, a glam rock ballad and a punk anthem rolled into one.





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Dateline is an award-winning Australian, international documentary series airing for over 40 years. Each week Dateline scours the globe to bring you a world of daring stories. Read more about Dateline
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Dateline is an award-winning Australian, international documentary series airing for over 40 years. Each week Dateline scours the globe to bring you a world of daring stories.
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4 min read

Published

By Dean Cornish
Source: SBS Dateline


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