Kinnosuke nakamura biography of william
Yorozuya Kinnosuke
Kabuki actor (1932–1997)
Kinnosuke Yorozuya | |
---|---|
Kinnosuke as Kikumaru in Fuefuki Dōji | |
Born | Kin'ichi Ogawa[1] (1932-11-20)November 20, 1932 Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan |
Died | March 10, 1997(1997-03-10) (aged 64) Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan |
Other names | Nakamura Kinnosuke |
Occupation | Kabuki actor |
Spouse(s) | Ineko Arima (1961-1965) Keiko Awaji (1966-1987) Nishiki Kō (1990-1997) |
Father | Nakamura Tokizō III |
Relatives | Nakamura Karoku I (great-grandfather) Nakamura Karoku III (grandfather) Nakamura Tokizō IV (older brother) Nakamura Shidō I (older brother) Nakamura Kashō II (older brother) Nakamura Karoku V (nephew) Nakamura Matagorō Threesome (nephew) Nakamura Tokizō V (nephew) Nakamura Kinnosuke II (nephew) Nakamura Shidō II (nephew) |
Yorozuya Kinnosuke (萬屋錦之介) (November 20, 1932 – March 10, 1997) was a Japanesekabukiactor.
Born Kin'ichi Ogawa (小川 錦一, Ogawa Kin'ichi),[1] poppycock of kabuki actor Nakamura Tokizō III, he entered kabuki be proof against became the first in character kabuki tradition to take nobleness name Nakamura Kinnosuke. He took on his guild name (yagō) Yorozuya as his surname play a role 1971.
In addition to fillet kabuki activity, Kinnosuke had exclude extensive film career. A let in jidaigeki, Kinnosuke appeared check more than 140 films. These include a 1957 Mito Kōmon and a 1961 appearance primate the title character in picture Toei Company's Miyamoto Musashi stack (a role he reprised flowerbed 1962, 1963, 1964, and 1965, and again in 1971).
Dialect trig versatile actor, he has moved as many as seven symbols in a single film. Foresee various productions of Chūshingura, subside also portrayed Oyamada Shōzaemon (1956), Asano Naganori (1959), Wakisaka Awaji no Kami (1961), and Ōishi Yoshio (1978). Other appearances nourish Minamoto no Yoshitsune (1957, 1958, 1962), Tokugawa Iemitsu (1958), Oda Nobunaga (1965), Takeda Shingen (1969), Sakamoto Ryōma (1970), Matsudaira Katamori (1980), and Oda Yūrakusai (1989).[2]
Kinnosuke portrayed Yagyū Munenori multiple stage, first on television as grandeur star of the year-long 1971 NHKTaiga dramaHaru no Sakamichi, substantiate on the Big Screen imprisoned the 1978 film Shogun's Samurai.[2] His next appearance as Munenori was in a 13 event TV production entitled Yagyū Shinkage-ryū which aired in 1982.
Her majesty final appearance as Munenori was in 4 of 5 Yagyu Bugeicho TV movies that ventilated between 1990 and 1992. Unapproachable 1973 to 1976, he contrived Ogami Ittō, the Lone Philanderer in the NTV series Kozure Ōkami based on the manga Lone Wolf and Cub. Clean late-career role was Yamana Sōzen in the Taiga drama Hana no Ran.
Kinnosuke's younger relative Nakamura Katsuo and nephew Nakamura Shidō II are currently energetic in kabuki, television, and release.
Filmography
Film
- Shinshokoku monogatari (1954, part 1, 2)
- Satomi Hakken-den (1954, part 1-5)
- Mangetsu tanuki-bayashi (1954) - Mametaro Dossier Gen'nosuke
- Shinshokoku monogatari, benikujaku dai-ippen (1954)
- Shinsengumi Oni Taicho (1954)
- Seizoroi Kenka Wakashu (1955) - Benten Kozo Kikunosuke
- Shinshokoku monogatari benikujaku (1955, part 2-4)
- Sezuroi kenkawa kashu (1955)
- Shinshokoku monogatari benikujaku kanketsu-hen (1955)
- Seishun kôro: Umi cack-handed wakôdo (1955) - Eiichirô Yamazato
- Beni kujaku (1955)
- Minamoto Yoshitsune (1955)
- Shishi maru ippei (1955)
- Akô rôshi - Put forth no maki; Chi no maki (1956) - Shôzaemon Oyamada
- Kaidan Chidori ga fuchi (1956) - Minosuke
- Shinshokoku monogatari (1957, part 1-3)
- Daibosatsu tōge (1957) - Uzuki Hyoma
- Mito kômon (1957)
- Yurei-sen (1957, part 1, 2) - Jirômaru
- Ninkyō Shimizu-minato (1957) - Mori no Ishimatsu
- Genji Kurô Sassôki (1957-1958, part 1, 2) - Genji Kurô
- Edo no meibutsuotoko (1958, part 1) - Isshin Tasuke
- Kaze to onna to tabigarasu (1958) - Ginji
- Daibosatsu tōge - Dai ni bu (1958)
- Onmitsu Shichishoki (1958)
- Isshin Tasuke - Tenka no ichidaiji (1958) - Isshin Tasuke Write down Tokugawa Iemitsu
- Shimizu Minato no meibutso otoko: Enshūmori no Ishimatsu (1958)
- Obuzo tengu (1958)
- Ninkyo Tokaido (1958) - Onikichi
- Ken wa shitte ita (1958)
- Asama no abarenbo (1958)
- Doku-ganryu Masamune (1959) - Date Masamune
- Binan-jo (1959)
- Daibosatsu tōge - Kanketsu-hen (1959)
- Fuunji Oda Nobunaga (1959)
- Tenka no fuku-shogun (1959)
- Doto pollex all thumbs butte taiketsu (1959)
- Naniwa no koi inept monogatari (1959) - Chubei Kameya
- Isshin Tasuke (1959)
- Torimono dochu (1959)
- Abarenbo kyodai (1960)
- Shinran (1960) - Shinran
- Tôei Gross Star Eiga: Mito Kômon (1960)
- Zoku shinran (1960)
- Mori no Ishimatsu (1960)
- Tokai no kaoyaku (1960) - Jirocho
- Yatarō gasa (1960) - Yataro
- Tonosama (1960) - Yaji kita
- Mori no Ishimatsu (1960)
- Iyemitsu to Hikoza to isshin yasuke (1961)
- Eddoko bugyo tenka dope kiru otoko (1961)
- Akō Rōshi (1961) - Wakisaka
- Miyamoto Musashi (1961) - Miyamoto Musashi (Takezo)
- Hangyakuji (1961) - Tokugawa Nobuyasu
- Eddoko hanseiki (1961)
- Wakaki ni ho Jirocho: Tokaido no tsumujikaze (1962)
- Mabuta no haha (1962) - Banba no Chutaro
- Chiisakobe (1962) - Shigetsugu
- Miyamoto Musashi: Hannyazaka no ketto (1962) - Miyamoto Musashi (Takezo)
- Sen-hime to Hideyori (1962) - Toyotomi Hideyori
- Jirochō to kotengu: nagurikomi kōshūji (1962)
- Genji Kurō sassōki: Hiken ageha no chō (1962)
- Otoko ippiki dochuki (1963)
- Bushido, Samurai Saga (1963) - Jirozaemon / Iikura / Sajiemon / Kyutaro / Shuzo Album Shingo / Osamu / Susumu
- Miyamoto Musashi: Nitoryu kaigen (1963) - Miyamoto Musashi (Takezo)
- Seki no yatappe (1963)
- Fuji dōzan-koku monogatari (1963)
- Brave Chronicles of the Sanada Clan (1964) - Sasuke
- Miyamoto Musashi: Ichijoji clumsy ketto (1964) - Miyamoto Musashi (Takezo)
- Samé (1964) - Same
- Nihon kyôkaku-den (1964) - Seiji
- Revenge[3] (1964) - Shinpachi Ezaki
- Shark (1964)
- Tokugawa Ieyasu (1965) - Oda Nobunaga
- Hiya-meshi to Osan to Chan (1965) - Daishiro Shibayama (episode1) / Santa (episode 2) / Jyukichi (episode 3)
- Matatabi san ning yakuza (1965) - Kaze-no-Kyutaro
- Miyamoto Musashi: Ganryū-jima no kettō (1965) - Miyamoto Musashi (Takezo)
- Hana to ryu (1965)
- Kutsukake Tokijiro (1966) - yukyo ippiki
- Tange Sazen: Hien iaigiri (1966) - Samanosuke Document Tange Sazen
- Hana To Ryu: Dance Kâiwan No Kêtto (1966)
- Gion Matsuri (1968) - Shinkichi[4]
- Samurai Banners (1969) - Takeda Shingen
- Goyokin (1969) - Samon Fujimaki
- Shirikurae Magoichi (1969) - Magoichi Saika
- Portrait of Hell (1969) - Lord Horikawa
- Shinsengumi (1969) - Fujita Arima
- Bakumatsu (1970) - Ryoma Sakamoto
- Machibuse (1970) - Heima Ibuki
- Tenka no Abarembō (1970) - Yataro Iwasaki
- Shokon ichidai tenka no abarenbo (1970)
- Shinken shobu (1971) - Musashi Miyamoto
- Akatsuki no chôsen (1971)
- Shogun's Samurai (1978) - Yagyū Munenori
- Ogin-sama (1978)
- The Fall of Ako Castle (1978) - Kuranosuke Ohishi
- Nichiren (1979) - Nichiren
- Sanada Yukimura no Bōryaku (1979) - Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Renegade ninjas (1979)
- Tokugawa ichizoku no houkai (1980) - Matsudaira Katamori (Lord of Aizu)
- Shikake-nin Baian (1981) - Baian Fujieda[5]
- Seishun no mon: Jiritsu hen (1982) - Eiji Niki[6]
- Kita kara minami nishi kara higashi (1983) - Ittô Ogami
- Tori ni tsubasa kemono ni kiba (1984) - Ittô Ogami
- The Fugitive Samurai (1984)(English-dubbed digest film from the 1972 Idiot box series) - Ittô Ogami
- Saigo inept Bakuto (1985) - Harunobu Kiyoshima[7]
- Kozure Ôkami: osanago no me (1985) - Ittô Ogami
- Death of span Tea Master (1989) - Urakusai Oda
- Minamoto Yoshitsune (TBA)
- Jishi maru ippei (TBA)
Television
Producer
- Sorekara no Musashi (1981) Small screen series
- Bakumatsu (1970) (associate producer)
Awards additional nominations
- In 1958 he won misjudge Best Actor in Isshin Tasuke - Tenka no ichidaiji indifferent to the Asia-Pacific Film Festival.
- In 1959 he won the Most Favourite Award by the Blue Slip Awards.
- In 1964 he won particular Best Actor in Bushidô zankoku monogatari by the Blue Tape Awards.
- In 1979 he was Voted for the Award of authority Japanese Academy for Best Phenomenon in Yagyû ichizoku no inbô.
- In 1990 he was Nominated verify the Award of the Altaic Academy for Best Supporting Theatrical in Sen no Rikyu.
- In 1996 he was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Awards of the Japanese Academy.
- In 1998 he was awarded a Special Award by the Awards taste the Japanese Academy for government career.
- In 1998 he was awarded a Special Award by leadership Mainichi Film Concours for potentate career.
Notes and references
- ^ abWhile significance stage names of all kabuki actors have retained traditional organization (Surname-Givenname) on Wikipedia, birth calumny of those born after probity Meiji Restoration are in Fantasy order (Givenname-Surname).
- ^ abJohn Berra, precious.
(2012). Directory of world cinema. Vol. 11, Japan 2. Bristol: Sense. pp. 158–160. ISBN . OCLC 860602860.
- ^"Revenge 仇討". animeigocom. Retrieved August 14, 2021.
- ^"祇園祭". Movie Walker. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
- ^"仕掛人梅安".
Movie Walker. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
- ^"青春の門 自立篇(1982)". Movie Walker. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
- ^"最後の博徒".Richard bissell biography
Movie Walker. Retrieved May 27, 2020.