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Kinuyo Tanaka, a Woman We Talk About

as self (archive footage)

2022
Ugetsu

as Miyagi

2014
Equinox Flower

as Kiyoko Hirayama

1994
Let's Go, Grandma!

as Kiku Sasaki

1975
Sandakan No. 8

as Old Osaki

1974
Sanbaba

as

1974
Red Beard

as

1965
The Scent of Incense

as Tsuna

1964
Alone Across the Pacific

as Youth's Mother

1963
A Legend, or Was It?

as Shizuko Sonobe

1963
Bright Sea

as Nobuko Yazaki

1963
A Wanderer's Notebook

as Kishi, Fumiko's mother

1962
The Fencing Master

as Oharu

1962
Wakarete ikiru toki mo

as Michi's Mother

1961
Her Brother

as Mother

1960
The Three Treasures

as Princess Yamato

1959
Hahakogusa

as Shige Ozawa

1959
The Eternal Rainbow

as Fumi

1958
Yellow Crow

as Yukiko Matsumoto

1957
Stepbrothers

as Rie

1957
On This Earth

as Omitsu, Heiichiro's mother

1957
Kinuyo Tanaka Kinuyo Tanaka

Birthday

1909-11-28

Place of Birth

Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Kinuyo Tanaka (田中 絹代 Tanaka Kinuyo, 29 November 1909 – 21 March 1977) was a Japanese actress and director. Tanaka was born in Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. She became a leading actress at an early age, appearing in Yasujirō Ozu's I Graduated, But... in 1929. The following year she played the lead in Aiyoku no ki, and in 1931 she appeared in Japan's first talkie, The Neighbor's Wife and Mine, directed by Heinosuke Gosho. She had a close working relationship with director Kenji Mizoguchi, having parts in 15 of his films, including leading roles in The Life of Oharu (1952), Ugetsu (1953) and Sansho the Bailiff (1954). Their working relationship ended when Mizoguchi countered a recommendation from the Directors Guild of Japan for the Nikkatsu studio to hire her as a director. Despite this, the production of her second film as director went ahead, but Tanaka never forgave Mizoguchi, and the reasons for his behaviour are unclear. She also played Noboru Yasumoto's mother in Akira Kurosawa's Red Beard (1965). For her portrayal in Kei Kumai's Sandakan N° 8 she won the Best Actress Award at the 25th Berlin International Film Festival in 1975.[2] Her last screen appearance was in 1976 in Kei Kumai's Kita No Misaki. Tanaka was the second Japanese woman who worked as a film director, after Sakane Tazuko (1904‐1975). Her first directing job was on the film Love Letter in 1953, and she made five further films in that role. Description above from the Wikipedia article Kinuyo Tanaka, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
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