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Japanese actor (1919–1980) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yūnosuke Itō (伊藤 雄之助, Itō Yūnosuke, 3 August 1919 – 11 March 1980) was a Japanese film actor. He appeared in more than ninety films from 1947 to 1979.
Itō made his film debut at Toho in 1946,[1] and although mostly a prominent supporting actor—playing memorable figures such as the novelist in Akira Kurosawa's Ikiru—he also was cast in leading roles such as Kon Ichikawa's Mr. Pu.[1] He is acclaimed as "one of the...extremely talented character actors who populated Japanese movies in [the Shōwa] era, playing a broad range of roles."[2]
Itō received the 1962 Blue Ribbon Award for Best Supporting Actor for his dual role in the seminal ninja film Shinobi no Mono.[3] Film scholar Stuart Galbraith IV has noted that the "horse-faced actor...was a real chameleon, despite his instantly recognizable, distinctive features...[and] gives what may be the performance of his career [as] one of the all-time great Japanese movie villains.[4]
The son of kabuki actor Sawamura Sōnosuke I (1886-1924), Itō was the brother of actor Sōnosuke Sawamura (1918-1978), who was born Keinosuke Itō and took the name Sawamura Sōnosuke II when their father died, appearing on stage until the 1950s when he also became a TV and film actor, though never achieving his younger brother's renown.[5]
Itō penned a memoir in 1968 in which he recounted his difficult path to fame, titled Radish Actor (a term of disdain for hammy performers). In 1977, he was urged to record the wistful song "Square Box" by its lyricist, Haruka Homura. Released as a single by Warner Records, a planned follow-up LP was never recorded, as Itō died while practicing the several songs Homura had written for it.[6]
In 2008, Itō was one of the actors commemorated in the Seven Supporting Characters film festival held at the now-defunct[7] Cinema Artone in Tokyo's Shimokitazawa entertainment district.[8]
Tokyo's arthouse theatre Laputa Asagaya curated a 30-film retrospective in 2011 titled Great Character Actor of the Century: Fantastic Yūnosuke Itō.[9]
In July 2019, Tokyo's Cinemavera Shibuya celebrated the 100th anniversary of his birth by screening 11 of his films in a shared festival honoring Itō and actor Kō Nishimura.[10]
A character designed as a caricature of Itō is regularly featured in the cat-oriented manga Mon-chan and Me, published in Fusosha's popular[11] webzine Joshi Spa! (Women's Spa!).[12]
Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1949 | Stray Dog | Manager of Bluebird Theatre | Akira Kurosawa | first collaboration with Kurosawa |
1952 | Ikiru | Novelist | Akira Kurosawa | |
1953 | The Thick-Walled Room | Masaki Kobayashi | released 1956 | |
1955 | Keisatsu Nikki | Seiji Hisamatsu | ||
1957 | Yellow Crow | Ichirō Yoshida | Heinosuke Gosho | |
1958 | Giants and Toys | Junji Harukawa | Yasuzo Masumura | |
1958 | The Ballad of Narayama | Matayan's son | Keisuke Kinoshita | |
1962 | Sanjuro | Mutsuta | Akira Kurosawa | |
1962 | The Graceful Brute | Tokizō Maeda | Yuzo Kawashima | |
1963 | Kanto Wanderer | Okaru-Hachi | Seijun Suzuki | |
1963 | High and Low | Baba | Akira Kurosawa | |
1965 | Samurai Assassin | Kenmotsu Hoshino | Kihachi Okamoto | |
1967 | The Doctor's Wife | Seishu's father | Yasuzo Masumura | |
1967 | Japan's Longest Day | Toshio Nonaka | Kihachi Okamoto | |
1968 | The Human Bullet | Ship captain | Kihachi Okamoto | |
1972 | Lone Wolf and Cub: Sword of Vengeance | Retsudō Yagyū | Kenji Misumi | |
1979 | Taiyō o Nusunda Otoko | Bus hijacker | Kazuhiko Hasegawa |
Year | Title | Role | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1973 | Kunitori Monogatari | NHK | Taiga drama | |
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