Ken Takakura

Ken Takakura
高倉 健
Born
Takeichi Oda

(1931-02-16)February 16, 1931
DiedNovember 10, 2014(2014-11-10) (aged 83)
Tokyo, Japan
Alma materMeiji University
OccupationActor
Years active1956–2014
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Spouses
(m. 1959; div. 1971)
  • Taka Oda (Common-law marriage 1997-2014 until death, daughter in law from 2013)
[1]

Ken Takakura (Japanese: 高倉 健, Hepburn: Takakura Ken), born Takeichi Oda (小田 剛一, Oda Takeichi; February 16, 1931 – November 10, 2014), was a Japanese actor and singer who appeared in over 200 films. Affectionately referred to as "Ken-san" by audiences, he was best known for his brooding style and the stoic presence he brought to his roles.[2] He won the Japan Academy Prize for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role four times, tied with Koji Yakusho for the most ever.[3] Takakura additionally received the Japanese Medal of Honor with purple ribbon in 1998, the Person of Cultural Merit award in 2006, and the Order of Culture in 2013.

Life

Takakura was born in Nakama, Fukuoka in 1931.[4] He was the second of four siblings, two of whom were sons and two of whom were daughters. His father, Toshiro Oda, was a former Imperial Japanese Navy officer, serving on the battleship Hiei during World War II, and mother, Takano was a teacher.[5] As child he suffered from disease , encouraged by his father, Tadahi joined sports when He attended Tochiku High School in nearby Yahata City, where he was a member of the boxing team and English society. It was around this time that he gained his streetwise swagger and tough-guy persona watching yakuza movies.[6] This subject was covered in one of his most famous movies, Showa Zankyo-den (Remnants of Chivalry in the Showa Era), in which he played an honorable old-school yakuza among the violent post-war gangs.[4] After graduating from Meiji University in Tokyo, Takakura attended an audition on impulse in 1955 at the Toei Film Company while applying for a managerial position.[4]

Career

Toei found a natural in Takakura as he debuted with Denko Karate Uchi (Lightning Karate Blow) in 1956.[7] In 1959 he married singer Chiemi Eri, but divorced in 1971. His breakout role would be in the 1965 film Abashiri Prison, and its sequel Abashiri Bangaichi: Bokyohen (Abashiri Prison: Longing for Home, also 1965), in which he played an ex-con antihero.[4] By the time Takakura left Toei in 1976, he had appeared in over 180 films.[6]

He gained international recognition after starring in the 1970 war film Too Late the Hero as the cunning Imperial Japanese Major Yamaguchi, the 1974 Sydney Pollack sleeper hit The Yakuza with Robert Mitchum, and is probably best known in the West for his role in Ridley Scott's Black Rain (1989). He again appeared to Western audiences with the 1992 Fred Schepisi comedy Mr. Baseball starring Tom Selleck.[7]

Takakura was one of the few Japanese actors who experienced popularity in China, due to his appearance in Junya Satō's 1976 crime drama Kimi yo Fundo no Kawa o Watare (known in some territories as Manhunt), the first foreign film shown after the Cultural Revolution.[8][9] He also starred as the titular assassin in Junya Satō's Golgo 13 (1973), a Japanese–Iranian production and the first live-action adaptation of the Japanese manga series Golgo 13.

He appeared in three films since 2000: Hotaru (ホタル, The Firefly) in May 2001, Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles, by Chinese director Zhang Yimou, in late December 2005, and Yasuo Furuhata's Anata e (Dearest) in late August 2012, after a six-year hiatus.[10] He died of lymphoma on November 10, 2014.[11][3] Shintaro Ishihara described him as "the last big star (in Japan)."[12] A huge number of Chinese internet users expressed their sympathies and condolences, including many celebrities in the Chinese movie industry.[13] The spokesman of China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs Hong Lei said that Takakura made significant contributions to the cultural exchange between China and Japan.[14]

A documentary based on Takakura's life entitled Ken San premiered at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival and was released in Japanese theaters on August 20, 2016.[15] It was directed by photographer Yuichi Hibi and features interviews with filmmakers and actors such as Martin Scorsese, Paul Schrader, Michael Douglas, John Woo, and Yoji Yamada.[16]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1956 Inner Journey Pt.2 Yusaku Shinobu Lead role [17]
Inner Journey Yusaku Shinobu Lead role [18]
The Chop Professor [19]
Nippon G-Men Pt.3 [20]
Yûhi to Kenjû Shintarô Yamaoka [21]
Mother Peacock
Get Rid of the Gun Lead role
1957 Daigaku no Ishimatsu Lead role
Tajobushin
Nisshin senso fuun hiwa: Kiri no machi
Aoi unabara Kenji Hamada
Jet Air Base 101 Jiro Nakata
1958 No Advice Taken
Tarao Bannai: Jusan no mao
Romance, Freestyle
Kisetsufu no kanatani Hideo Sekigawa
Detective Duel
With Songs in My Heart
Festival of Forest And Lake Ichitaro Kazamori Lead role
Sister within Sister Hiroshi Ishioka
Guns of Purgatory
1959 Tornado Family Goro Tamura
Men in a Rough Town
Black Finger Shinkichi Mita Lead role
Four Hours of Terror Lead role
The Road That Beasts Take Lead role
See You in the Hell Mikio Ikari
Hyoryû shitaî
1960 Zoku beran me-e geisha
Ôinaru tabiji Kozo's Second Son
Zubekô tenshi
Tenka no Kaidanji Tosshin Tarô Tarô Tosshin Lead role
Zoku zoku beran me-e geisha
Otoko nara yattemiro Lead role
Sabaku o wataru taiyo
Ôzora no muhômono Lead role
The Second Bullet Is Marked
1961 Tenka no Kaidanji Senpû Tarô Tarô Senpû Lead role
Hana to arashi to gyangu
Hibari minyo no tabi beran me e geisha Sado heiku
Mannen Tarô to anego shain Tarô Mannen Lead role
Beranme Chunori-san
Akuma no temari-uta Kindaichi Kōsuke Lead role
Saigo no kaoyaku
Kashi no onna Ishimatsu
Boku wa jigoku no tehinshi da
Beran me-e geisha makari tôru
1962 Minami taiheiyô nami takashi
Beran me-e geisha to Osaka musume
Ni-nirokushiken Daisshutsu
Koi to Taiyo to Gang Lead role
Komon shacho manyuki
Minyo no tabi: Sakurajima Otemoyan
Sanbyakurokujugoya
Ankoku-gai saigo no hi
Tokyo Untouchable Yoshio Harada Lead role
Yumin-gai no Judan
Uragiri mono wa jigoku daze
Sen-hime to Hideyori Naomori
1963 Ankokugai no kaoyaku: juichinin no gyangu Sawagami
Tokyo Untouchable: Prison Breakers Yoshio Harada
Ankokugai saidai no kettô Shimpei Matsuoka
Miyamoto Musashi: Nitôryû kaigen Sasaki Kojirō
Gyangu Chûshingura Takumi Asano
Kyôkatsu Teruo Yabuki Lead role
Theater of Life: Hishakaku Miyagawa
Overthrow the Boss Yoshioka Lead role
Violent Quarter Shunsuke Lead role
1964 Tôkyô gyangu tai Honkon gyangu
Miyamoto Musashi: Ichijôji no kettô Sasaki Kojirō
Jakoman and Tetsu Tetsu Lead role
Narazumono Minami Lead role
Irezumi totsugekitai
Ankokugai Main Street Tetsuya Shinobu Lead role
Nihon kyôkaku-den Chokichi Lead role
Wolves, Pigs and Men Jirō
1965 Kaoyaku Kyôichi Hayami
A Fugitive from the Past Detective Ajimura [22]
Nihon Kyokaku-den: naniwa-hen Lead role
Abashiri Prison Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Nihon Kyokaku-den: kanto-hen
Miyamoto Musashi: Ganryû-jima no kettô Sasaki Kojirō
Shôwa zankyô-den Seiji Terajima Lead role
Abashiri bangaichi: Bôkyô hen Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Abashiri bangaichi: Hokkai hen Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
1966 Shôwa zankyô-den: Karajishi botan Lead role
Nihon Kyokaku-den: Ketto Kanda-matsuri Shinsan Lead role
Kamikaze Man: Duel at Noon Fumio Kuroki
Otoko no shôbu Kotaro Senju
Nihon Kyokaku-den: Kaminari-mon no Ketto Shintaro Hiramatsu Lead role
Jigoku no okite ni asu wa nai Ichiro Takita Lead role
Showa zankyo-den: Ippiki okami Lead role
Abashiri Bangaichi: Nangoku no Taiketsu Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Abashiri Bangaichi: Koya no taiketsu Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Abashiri bangaichi: Dai setsugen no taiktsu Shinichi Tachibana
1967 Abashiri bangaichi: Kettô reika 30 do Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Shôwa zankyô-den: Chizome no karajishi Hidejirô Hanada Lead role
Abashiri bangaichi: Fubuki no tôsô Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Nihon Kyokaku-den: Shira-ha no Sakazuki Lead role
Nihon kyokaku-den: kirikomi Lead role
Kyokotsu ichidai
Kyokakû no okitê Special appearance
Abashiri Bangaichi: Aku eno Chôsen Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Âa dôki no sakura First Lieutenant Kenmochi
1968 Nihon Kyokaku-den: Zetsuenjô Lead role
The Drifting Avenger Ken Kato Lead role
Red Peony Gambler Shogo Hanaoka
Gorotsuki Lead role
Jinsei-gekijô: Hishakaku to kiratsune Miyagawa
Gion matsuri
Bakuto retsuden Lead role
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi Katsuji Suematsu Lead role
Kyokaku Retsuden
Gokuchu no kaoyaku
1969 Hibotan bakuto: Hanafuda shôbu Shogo Hanaoka
Shôwa zankyô-den: Karajishi jingi Lead role
Hibotan bakuto: Nidaime shûmei
Nihon kyokaku-den: hana to ryu Tamai Kingoro Lead role
Nihon ansatsu hiroku Saburō Aizawa
Tosei-nin Retsuden
Showa zankyo-den: Hito-kiri karajishi Lead role
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi: Saihate no Nagare-mono Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi: Runin-masaki no ketto Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Sengo Saidai no Toba Lead role
Nihon jokyo-den: kyokaku geisha
Brothers Serving Time Lead role
1970 House of Gamblers
The Japan Derby Race Lead role
Too Late the Hero Major Yamaguchi Anglo-American film
Shôwa zankyô-den: Shinde moraimasu Lead role
Saigo no tokkôtai Lead role
Nihon kyokaku-den: Nobori Ryu Lead role
Yukyo-retsuden Lead role
Sutemi no Narazu-mono Yajima Lead role
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi: Fubuki no Hagure Okami Lead role
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi: Dai Shinrin no Ketto Lead role
Nihon jokyo-den: makka na dokyo-bana
1971 Nihon yakuza-den: Sôchiyô e no michi Ryutaro Fudo Lead role
Gorotsuki mushuku Isamu Tekada Lead role
The Man Lead role [23]
Shin Abashiri Bangaichi: Fubuki no Dai-Dassou Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Showa zankyo-den: hoero karajishi Lead role
Shin abashiri bangaichi: Arashi yobu shiretoko-misaki Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Nihon kyokaku-den: Dosu Lead role
Nihon jokyo-den: ketto midare-bana Yoshioka
1972 The Kanto Scarlet Cherry Gang Kuramoto
New Prison Walls of Abashiri: Temple Code Shinichi Tachibana Lead role
Contemporary Tales of Chivalry: The Traitor Shall Die Lead role
Lullaby for a Tough Guy Lead role
The Pledge
1973 Yakuza of the Present Ryoichi Shimaya Lead role
Golgo 13 Golgo 13 Lead role
Japan's Top Gangster Kazuo Taoka Lead role
1974 Sister Street Fighter Kazuo Taoka Lead role
The Homeless Joukichi
The Yakuza Ken Tanaka American film
1975 Roads for Honor Ichizo Ryuzaki Lead role
Great Jailbreak Ichiro Kozue Lead role
The Bullet Train Tetsuo Okita Lead role
The International Gang of Kobe Masato Dan Lead role
1976 Manhunt Fuyuto Morioka Lead role [24]
1977 Mount Hakkoda Captain Tokushima Lead role [25]
The Yellow Handkerchief Yusaku Shima Lead role [26]
1978 Flower of Winter Hidetsugu Kano Lead role [27]
Never Give Up Takeshi Ajisawa Lead role [28]
1980 Dōran Keisuke Miyagi Lead role [29]
A Distant Cry from Spring Kōsaku Tajima Lead role [30]
1981 Station Eiji Mikami Lead role [31]
1982 Detective Story Detective Mikami Cameo [32]
The Longest Tunnel Go Akutsu Lead role [33]
1983 Antarctica Akira Ushioda Lead role [34]
Izakaya Chōji Chōji Lead role [35]
1985 Yasha Shūji Lead role [36]
1988 Umi e, See You Eiji Honma Lead role [37]
1989 Black Rain Assistant Inspector Masahiro "Mas" Matsumoto American film [38]
Buddies Shūzō Kadokura Lead role [39]
1992 Mr. Baseball Uchiyama American film [40]
1994 47 Ronin Ōishi Kuranosuke Lead role [41]
1999 Railroad Man Otomatsu Satō Lead role [42]
2001 The Firefly Yamaoka Shûji Lead role [43]
2005 Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles Gou-Ichi Takata Lead role; Chinese film [44]
2012 Dearest Eiji Kurashima Lead role [45]

Honours

  • 2013

References

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