Princess Princess' Final 1996 Concert Screening in Japanese Theaters
The legendary all-female rock band Princess Princess will have their final 1996 concert screened nationwide in Japan on May 31st, marking 30 years since their disbandment.

Princess Princess fans will get a chance to relive history as the band's final concert film "The Last Live" returns to theaters across Japan on May 31st, exactly 30 years after the group disbanded.
The screening will take place in 30 theaters across 24 cities nationwide, bringing the 1996 farewell performance back to the big screen for a new generation of fans.
Princess Princess was one of Japan's most successful all-female rock bands, dominating the charts throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s. The five-member group became household names with hits like "Diamonds" and "Sekai de Ichiban Atsui Natsu" (The Hottest Summer in the World), which became the theme song for the 1988 Koshien high school baseball tournament.
Formed in 1983, the band reached unprecedented heights for female rock acts in Japan, selling over 13 million records before their emotional farewell in 1996. Their final tour drew massive crowds, with "The Last Live" capturing the raw emotion of their Tokyo Dome goodbye.
The May 31st theater screening offers both longtime fans and newcomers a chance to experience one of the most significant moments in Japanese rock history on the big screen, preserving the legacy of a band that paved the way for countless female musicians in Japan's rock scene.
