A kabuki performance is unique, awe-inspiring, and always entertaining. These plays incorporate acting, dancing, singing, and music into one theatrical show, leaving the audience quenched of their need of entertainment. There are two popular styles used in kabuki, called aragoto and waggoto. Aragoto plays involve a rough style of acting, with exaggerated movements and gestures. The actors typically wear elaborate costumes and make-up, and they will shriek on stage, giving depth and excitement to the play. Wagato works are more elegant and romantic, fulfilling the need to see something beautiful and heartwarming. Actors performing in these types of plays tend to take on a more realistic voice and image, more equal to what one would have seen out on the streets of Edo period Japan.