Masaichi Nagata
Masaichi Nagata | |
|---|---|
Nagata at the 27th Academy Awards | |
| Born | 21 January 1906 Kyoto, Japan |
| Died | 24 October 1985 (aged 79) Tokyo, Japan |
| Occupations | Daiei president, film producer, baseball executive |
| Years active | 1925–1980 |
| Children | 2[1] |
|
Baseball career | |
| Member of the Japanese | |
| Baseball Hall of Fame | |
| Induction | 1988 |
Masaichi Nagata (永田 雅一, Nagata Masaichi; 21 January 1906 – 24 October 1985) was a Japanese businessman and film producer who served as president of Daiei Film and was the self-proclaimed creator of the kaiju Gamera, and was also the first president of the Pacific League.[2]
Overview
His achievements to contribute in the golden era of Japanese film industries granted a title "Father of the cinema" (Japanese: 映画界の父, Hepburn: Eigakai no Chichi) in Japan,[note 1] while his well-known nicknames "Nagata Trumpet" (Japanese: 永田ラッパ, Hepburn: Nagata Rappa) and "Fixer of the political world" (Japanese: 政界の黒幕, Hepburn: Seikai no Kuromaku) along with others[note 2] were given due to his boasting behaviors and connections with political circles.[6][7][8]
Either Masaichi or Hideo Matsuyama, the inventor of the "Silver Week", was also the inventor of the advertising slogan "Golden Week".[9]
His biological and non-biological relatives include Hidemasa Nagata (son), a film and television producer Mamoru Nagata (grandson),[10] Masashi Nagata (grandson) who is the current chairman of Nagata Kikaku founded by Masaichi,[6] a businessman Masao Nagata (great-grandson) known as the YouTuber "Nagata Trumpet",[11] Ichikawa Raizō VIII's wife Masako Ōta (adopted daughter),[12] and his nephew-in-law Masayuki Tayayama is the first professional taiko player in Japan.[13]
Careers
Early life
Masaichi was born into a ton'ya for yūzen and dye in Kyoto, however his family underwent misfortunes since when Masaichi was three-years-old, and eventually fell apart; loss of the factory by a fire, an elopement by a kozō (employee) and a jochū (housemaid) who stole money when they escaped, and the bankruptcy due to his father being a joint guarantor of his friend. Masaichi attempted to became a kozō for one of his relatives (an executive director of Tokyo Stock Exchange) to reconstruct the family for his parents. To gain a sufficient educational attainment, he attended the Ōkura College of Commerce (now Tokyo Keizai University), however lost his father due to an intracranial hemorrhage and dropped out the school in despair. As a member of a local seinendan, he diligently contributed in the cleaning of damaged cites following the Great Kantō Earthquake, and subsequently returned to Kyoto.[14][15]
Nagata was gradually influenced by socialism due to his admire for heroism, and joined a local yakuza Senbongumi afterwards. He, along with Jun Okamoto, became one of apprentices of Suezaburō Sasai,[note 3] while Nagata defended Suezaburō and his father and the crime boss Sanzaemon; Sanzaemon was a renowned kyōkaku known as ""Fierce Tiger" (Japanese: 荒虎, Hepburn: Aratora)", and Nagata claimed Sanzaemon definitely not being an actual yakuza, and Suezaburō was the 10th highest taxpayer in Kyoto back then. However, Masaichi's mother strongly deplored the fact that her son became a subject of surveillance by the police, and she expelled Masaichi from the family.[14][16]
- It was not uncommon for yakuza syndicates to have connections with show business and entertainment industries, so as the Sasai family. The three (Nagata and Okamoto and Suezaburō) later joined those industries, where Nagata and Okamoto subsequently co-worked in Daiei Film, and various notable filmmakers and actors later emerged under Suezaburō.[8][17]
Film industry
He joined the Nikkatsu studio in 1925 due to his relationships with the aforementioned Shōzō Makino and the Makino Family,[4] and after working as a location manager, rose to become head of production at the Daiei Kyoto studio.[18][16] As a fledgling handyman, Nagata was noticed for his eloquence and social skills, and was favored by notable figures (such as Yoshirō Fujimura, Nobuo Asaoka, Mochizuki Keisuke, and so on), and developed a relationship with the political world.[19] Experiencing conflicts with the Nikkatsu president, he left the company in 1934, taking many Nikkatsu stars with him, to form Daiichi Eiga.[18] While short-lived, that studio created such masterpieces as Kenji Mizoguchi's Sisters of the Gion (1936) and Osaka Elegy (1936).
When Daiichi Eiga folded, Nagata became head of the Kyoto studio of Shinkō Kinema until the government reorganized the industry during World War Two. Against a government plan to combine the fiction film companies into two studios, Nagata fought hard for the alternative option of creating a third studio.[20] His efforts resulted in the creation of the Daiei Motion Picture Company, where he first served as an executive.[18] He rose to become president in 1947 and, apart from a brief period when he was purged by Occupation authorities, remained in that position until 1971.[15][4]
Under his reign, Daiei produced Akira Kurosawa's Rashomon (1950) and entered it in the Venice Film Festival, where it won the grand prize and became the first Japanese film to win an international award,[21] thus introducing Japanese cinema to the world. Nagata also spurred the production of Teinosuke Kinugasa's Gate of Hell (1953), the first Japanese color film to be shown abroad, earning both an honorary Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film[22] and the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.[23] Nagata also produced such renowned films as Mizoguchi's Ugetsu (1953) and Sansho the Bailiff (1954), as well as Jokyo (1960) which was entered into the 10th Berlin International Film Festival.[24] On the popular front, Nagata's Daiei was also known for such successful film series as the Zatoichi films starring Shintaro Katsu, the Sleepy Eyes of Death series featuring Raizō Ichikawa, and the Gamera movies. In the early 1950s, Nagata attempted to export Japanese films to obtain foreign currencies for the post-war reconstruction of the Japanese economy;[25] his later efforts to save the declining Japanese cinema resulted in the establishment of a governmental association to export Japanese films and to support productions of kaiju and tokusatsu genres in particular for foreign currencies.[26][27] For the Gamera franchise, Nagata produced the second film Gamera vs. Barugon, with the remainder of the Showa Gamera films produced instead by his son Hidemasa Nagata.
Nagata was also known for his friendship with Walt Disney where Disney called him a "brother", and became an avid fan of Disneyland and had associated in Disney-related businesses such as distributions of Disney films by Daiei Film, publication of Bambi, a Life in the Woods,[note 4] promotion of Tokyo Disneyland, construction of Nara Dreamland, and so on. Nagata also established Daiei's department of western films due to influences from Disney, and had started distributing foreign films.[29] Additionally, he produced a documentary film White Mountains (白い山脈, Shiroi Sanmyaku) as he was inspired by Walt Disney Productions' True-Life Adventures series.[30]
Due to the decline of the film industry, and Nagata's extravagant expenditures, Daiei went bankrupt in 1971,[15] but he continued as an independent producer for some years after that. He produced more than 160 films during his career.[31]
Baseball
During the age when many Japanese film studios owned professional baseball teams, Nagata served as owner first of the Daiei Stars, and then of the Daimai Orions when the Stars merged with the Mainichi Orions in 1958.[15] He promoted the two-league system, helped build Tokyo Stadium, and became the first president of the Pacific League in Japan.[2] He was inducted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 1988.[2]
Miscellaneous
Masaichi had engaged in various other businesses most notably horse racing. He became a horse owner in 1934, and owned several notable horses such as Yamaichi, a foal of Kurifuji, Toast, the mare of Lucky Ruler, Otemon, and Tokino Minoru; Masaichi later produced the 1955 drama film The Phantom Horse based on the life of Tokino Minoru.[7] Masaichi later became the second president of the Tokyo Racehorse Owners' Association, and contributed in the establishment of the Japan Racing Association as a commissioner.[32]
Nagata's competence for managements were also demonstrated in his performances as the first president and a temporal manager of the sports newspaper Tokyo Sports (due to his connection with Yoshio Kodama) to make it into a major national daily,[33] as the business delegate and the owner of Pepsi-Cola Company in Japan,[34] as a sodanyaku of the Japan Pro Wrestling Federation,[35] and as a commissioner (jp) of the Japan Sumo Association.
Nagata was also a patronage of Schools of the Sacred Heart in Japan (jp), and contributed in its expansion notably by contriving resources through managing the palace of the Kuni-no-miya house.[36]
Nagata also became an influential figure on political circles and was regarded as a political fixer.[4] Nagata used his connections with the political world to establish The Japanese Film Export Promotion Association (Japanese: 日本映画輸出振興協会, Hepburn: Nihon Eiga Yusyutsu Shinkō Kyōkai), a governmental incorporated association to support declining Japanese film industries due to a recession of Japanese economy and the prosperity of television industries,[26][27] however his position also made him as one of 14 suspects for the corruption of the Bushu Railway (jp), however five of them including Nagata were eventually acquitted.[8]
Due to influences from his mother, Masaichi himself became an enthusiastic Buddhist of Nichiren-shū. He was also an influential figure and became the representative of worshippers (jp), and Kazuo Hasegawa and Futabayama Sadaji were two of his attendants.[37] Masaichi declared producing films theming the life of Nichiren is his lifework; he produced Nichiren and the Great Mongol Invasion (1958) and Nichiren (1979), and a number of worshippers of Nichiren-shū were appointed for the latter.[38][39]
Legacy
The 2015 novel Holy Beast War Chronicle: White Shadow (聖獣戦記 白い影, Seijū Senki – Shiroi Kage) was a tribute to Masaichi, which themed Gamera and Nichiren and the Mongol invasions of Japan and setted Nichiren as the current summoner of the "Black Tortoise" (Gamera).[40]
Yukijirō Hotaru played Nagano, a character based on Masaichi in the 2020 biopic film Nezura 1964, which focused on the production of Giant Horde Beast Nezura (jp), the scrapped predecessor of Gamera, the Giant Monster.[41]
Selected filmography
- Sisters of the Gion (1936)
- Osaka Elegy (1936)
- Rashomon (1950)
- Miss Oyu (1951)
- Tetsu no tsume (1951) aka Claws of Steel
- The Tale of Genji (1951)
- Ugetsu (1953) aka Tales of Ugetsu
- Gate of Hell (1953)
- Sansho the Bailiff (1954)
- The Crucified Lovers (1954)
- Princess Yang Kwei-Fei (1955)
- The Phantom Horse (1955)
- Shin Heike Monogatari (1955)
- Warning from Space (1956)
- Street of Shame (1956)
- Zangiku monogatari (1956)
- Suzakumon (1957)
- The Loyal 47 Ronin (1958)
- The Snowy Heron (1958)
- Enjō (1958)
- Floating Weeds (1959)
- Fires on the Plain (1959)
- Odd Obsession (1959)
- Jokyo (1960)
- Her Brother (1960)
- An Actor's Revenge (1963)
- Gamera (1965)
- The Hoodlum Soldier (1965)
- Shiroi Kyotō (1966)
- Gamera vs. Barugon (1966)
- Daimajin trilogy (1966)
- Zatoichi the Outlaw (1967)
- Nichiren (1979)
Awards
- Kikuchi Kan Prize (1954)[42]
- Japanese Medal of Honor with purple ribbon (1955)[43]
- Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (1961)[4]
- Japanese Medal of Honor with blue ribbon (1966)[43]
- Japanese Baseball Hall of Famer (1988)[44]
Bibliography
- Nagata, Masaichi (1953). Eigadō masshigura. Tokyo: Surugadai Shobō.
- Nagata, Masaichi (1957). Eiga jigakyō. Tokyo: Heibon Shuppan.
Notes
- ^ Not to confuse with Shōzō Makino, who was known as "Father of the Japanese film" (Japanese: 日本映画の父, Hepburn: Nihon Eiga no Chichi).[3] Nagata's relationships with Shōzō and the Makino Family became a stepping stone for Masaichi's entry into the film industry.[4]
- ^ His additional nicknames include "Movie Demon" (Japanese: 映画の鬼, Hepburn: Eiga no Oni) and "The last activist" (Japanese: 最後の活動屋, Hepburn: Saigo no Katsudōya).[5]
- ^ Suezaburō was the third son of Sanzaemon who was widely known for his stance as a yakuza (so called "katagi yakuza") with a regular occupation and not engaging in any gamblings, the head of Senbongumi. Suezaburo was the last head of the yakuza, and eventually dissolved the group. "Aratora Senbongumi", a yakuza syndicate indirectly involved in the Kominto Incident, was derived from the Senbongumi.
- ^ The 2006 film Gamera the Brave was also an homage to Bambi, a Life in the Woods.[28]
References
- ^ "永田雅一の息子は永田秀雅。孫はいたの?晩年や養女の有無について。 | 芸能人の息子まとめ". xn--o9jl2cn5979an1pggi321e5id.com (in Japanese). 23 November 2018. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- ^ a b c "Nagata, Masaichi". Hall of Famers List. The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Archived from the original on 1 January 2020. Retrieved 24 September 2011.
- ^ Yoshirō, Okada [in Japanese] (17 April 2014). "日本映画の黄金時代を築いた、牧野省三・マキノ雅弘". Sendenkaigi (in Japanese). Retrieved 6 January 2026.
- ^ a b c d e "永田 雅一". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Katahira, Motohiro (8 March 2023). "日本映画の黄金期を築いた "ラッパ" 永田雅一の「活動屋魂」". Tokyo Makenomon Newspaper (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 29 May 2024. Retrieved 6 January 2026.
- ^ a b "Company Profile". Nagata Kikaku. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ a b Tatsuhiko Miyoshi (5 August 2023). "「これが数日前にダービーを勝った馬か…」幻の馬の幻になったエピソード。「賞金ぜんぶ使ってもいいから、命だけは」オーナーの悲痛な叫びと当時を知る記者の話【競馬クロニクル 第19回】". G-Journal (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ a b c Eiichi Akasaka [in Japanese] (30 May 2021). "『一業一人伝 永田雅一』田中純一郎". Akasakacycle (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Edwards, Russell (4 May 2017). "Beauty and the Beast bask in Golden Week glow". Asia Times. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Hikaru Ijūin (28 October 2023). "「新庄さんに助言できる地味なじじいがいるといい」伊集院光的ファイターズ論". Bunshun Online. Ichirō Enokido. Retrieved 30 October 2025.
- ^ "永田雅乙(永田ラッパ)". Koushi-Select. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Shin Minatsu [in Japanese] (9 January 2023). "勝新太郎が生前語った「唯一、かなわないと思った俳優」、市川雷蔵が涙を流しながら語った身の上話… 俳優・三夏紳が明かす「大映」秘話". Shūkan Shinchō (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ 福井県出身で1942年生まれの有名人
- ^ a b My Resume: Economic Man 2 (in Japanese). Nikkei, Inc. 1980. pp. 211–215.
- ^ a b c d "Nagata Masaichi". Keizai ketsubutsu retsuden. Jabira. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
- ^ a b Nakagawa, Shigehiro (2016). "「ラッパの王国」一炊の夢~日本映画の栄光と悲惨" (pdf). Journal of Osaka University of Arts (in Japanese) (Art 38). Osaka University of Arts: 9–20.
- ^ "実録・映画界の黒幕". Ranran Goya (in Japanese). Retrieved 13 January 2026.
- ^ a b c Hirukawa, Kōtarō. "History of Daiei". Daiei Kyōto Satsueijo to sono chiiki. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2011.
- ^ Tanaka, Junichirō [in Japanese] (1962). 実録・映画界の黒幕 (in Japanese). Jiji Press. pp. 27–28.
- ^ Shoemaker, Greg. "Daiei: A History of the Greater Japan Motion Picture Company". The History Vortex. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 24 September 2011.
- ^ "Master director dies". BBC News. 6 September 1998. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "1954: Best Foreign-Language Film". All about Oscar. Britannica. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "Awards 1954". Festival de Cannes. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
- ^ "IMDB.com: Awards for Jokyo". imdb.com. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
- ^ Fukazawa, Ken [in Japanese] (3 April 2024). "日本映画の輸出で外貨を獲得、大映・永田雅一が欧米行脚で夢見た世界". DIAMOND, Inc.. Retrieved 31 October 2025.
- ^ a b Takeshi Tanigawa, August 2014, 海外輸出向けコンテンツとしての怪獣映画と日本映画輸出振興協会(輸振協)の活用, International Research Center for Japanese Studies
- ^ a b Kazuyuki Suzuki (1 March 2024). "日本映画輸出振興協会 怪獣映画製作に税金が使われた時代". Cercle (in Japanese). Retrieved 20 December 2024.
- ^ ASCII Media Works, 2014, Heisei Gamera Perfection, pp.197-198, Kadokawa Shoten
- ^ Isao Ogawa [in Japanese] (June 2015). "The Study of Fictitiousness in Theme Parks : True-False Discussion of Nara Dream Land from a Tourism-Sociological Viewpoint". The Hikone Ronso (in Japanese). 404. Shiga University: 64–79.
- ^ "白い山脈". MOVIE WALKER PRESS (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 October 2025.
- ^ "Nagata Masaichi". Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- ^ "前史にかえて~日本の競馬のあゆみとともに~". Tokyo Racehorse Owners' Association (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Katsushi Kouda (24 July 2017). "極道記者". ゆずりは通信 (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "1972年"西鉄"最後の年". Saitama Seibu Lions (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "日本プロレスリング協会結成式と力道山道場開き". 昭和プロレス激闘史 (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 October 2025.
- ^ Yohei Mori [in Japanese] (1 February 2024). "「菊栄親睦会」除名も検討 久邇朝融のカネ・女性問題 錬金術と「女道楽」社会学的皇室ウォッチング!/101 成城大教授・森暢平". Weekly Economist (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Kaishuku Mochizuki, 1967, 新校舎落成式挙行, pp.125-130, 学園だより, Minobusan University
- ^ Keibunsha, 1997, 日本特撮・幻想映画全集 p.255
- ^ Yomiuri Shimbunsha, 1978, Yomiuri Weekly, Vol. September 3, 1978, p.15, The Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings
- ^ Shinichiro Inoue, 2015, 聖獣戦記 白い影, p.294-305, 怪獣文藝の逆襲, Kadokawa
- ^ Nezura 1964 Official [@nezura1964] (28 April 2020). "映画『 #ネズラ1964 』初公開の #螢雪次朗 さん演じるナガノのビジュアルイメージ!大映・永田雅一社長をモデルとした豪快な役柄です。ホームページには永田社長への特別な思いを語るインタビューも掲載されています。是非ご覧ください!" (Tweet) (in Japanese) – via Twitter.
- ^ "菊池賞受賞者一覧". Society for the Promotion of Japanese Literature. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ a b "東宝(株)『東宝三十年史』(1963.01)". Shibusawa Shashi Database (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "永田 雅一". The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
External links
- Masaichi Nagata at IMDb
- Nagata Masaichi at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)