What was the opportunity to first watch Japanese dramas and Japanese movies? Probably for the love of food, so driven by enthusiasm, I went to search for a lot of dramas and movies about food to see, "Thank you for hospitality" This is in the make-up is encountered, after watching there is a feeling of seeing each other and hating the night, because I like too much, before and after so far I have watched a total of four times, but also can be regarded as the East out of Changda and apricot set drama it.

<h1>Brief introduction</h1>
"Thank You for your Hospitality" is a morning drama broadcast by NHK Television from September 2013 to April 2014 (later replayed again because higashi and apricot were married, and the series was replayed again by everyone's infinite love), starring Apricot (Watanabe Apricot, because ansai didn't like everyone because her father was Watanabe Apricot, so she removed her surname when she debuted), Higashi deportant Masato, Naomi Kimimae, Yasuzo Harada, Midoriko Kimura, Masato Kondo, Mitsuki Takahata, Shoki Sugata, and Masato Wada. Overall, this drama tells the story of the protagonist Ya Yizi from the Taisho years when she knew the end of World War II, supported the people around her with loving food, and always adhered to the love for her husband.
This drama (because it is a morning drama) has a total of 150 episodes, each episode is 20 minutes long, it is a drama that everyone watches during breakfast, and it received extremely high ratings during the broadcast, and finally won the 80th Japanese Drama Academy Awards Best Work Award, Script Award, and the 7th Tokyo Drama Awards (TV Series Unit) Excellence Award.
The whole drama begins during the Taisho period in Japan, when there is a Western restaurant called "Kaimingxuan" in the Tokyo neighborhood, and the owner and head chef Daigo (Taizo Harada) makes a lot of praise, and his daughter Ayaiko (子役: Toyo hana, adult: apricot) seems to have inherited the genes of a gourmet, and "eating" has become the biggest and only interest in her life. When I was a child, me sauce really caused a lot of disasters because of gluttony, but it also prompted my father to invent apricot eggs, tomato omelette rice, Scottish eggs and many other delicacies.
At the age of 17, at the age of 17, Yoneiko, who lives a carefree life at a girls' school, meets Yutaro Nishiyo (Higashi Izumi Masadae), an architecture student at Imperial University from Kansai. This tall boy, who was called "Tsutenkaku" by Aya, was very handsome and intelligent, and had a good relationship with everyone during his stay at the Ueno family. Although there were occasional misunderstandings at first, During the process of getting along with Yutaro, Yoshiko gradually changed her mentality, from a girl who "loves to eat food" to a girl who "loves to make food and share". In the years of war and tribulation, she also actively experienced an unprecedented life experience with Yutaro and all the people around her. And eventually wait until the husband comes home.
The main theme of the whole play is actually very positive, teaching people to live optimistically, and not only love food, but also be willing to share. In the face of hardship, even for good food, you must persevere.
Every actor in the play is great, showing the optimism and struggle of the people of that era.
<h1>Music</h1>
Not only is the plot great, but even the theme song and the soundtrack in the play are also gratifying.
The theme song is "Rain のち晴レルヤ" sung by Yuzu Group, and "焼氷有りマスの呗" and "Suzhou Nocturne" sung by Mitsuki Takahata in the play are also very popular, and I also went to find a sound source to download it.
<h1>Broken thoughts</h1>
Like this drama, like all the actors in the play, when you see Dong Chu and Xing really married, it is really happy to cry, everyone in the play also came together to celebrate for the two, this kind of family feeling and family affection extending from the play to the outside of the play is rare.
Like food, and because of food like life, like to face everything positively, what a good attitude to life.
So, in the face of all the benefits in life, I like to say "Thank you for your hospitality!" ”