Masahiko Tsugawa
Masahiko Tsugawa (津川 雅彦, Tsugawa Masahiko), born Masahiko Katō (加藤 雅彦 Katō Masahiko, January 2, 1940—August 4, 2018) was a Japanese actor and director.
Masahiko Tsugawa (津川 雅彦) | |
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Tsugawa in 2016 | |
Born | Masahiko Katō 2 January 1940 |
Died | August 4, 2018 78) | (aged
Other names | Masahiko Makino |
Occupation |
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Years active | 1945–2018 |
Agent | granpapa pro |
Height | 171 cm (5 ft 7 1⁄2 in) |
Career
Tsugawa was born January 2, 1940 in Kyoto, Japan. After acting as a child, he made his major debut at the age of 16 in the Kō Nakahira film Crazed Fruit in 1956. Tsugawa's family was heavily involved in the film industry since before his birth. Tsugawa attended school until dropping out of Waseda University Graduate School to pursue acting alone.
He gradually grew in popularity by playing villain roles such television jidaigeki drama series as Hissatsu series[1] and appeared in films like Otoko wa tsurai yo: Watashi no tora-san and Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack. He was eventually adopted as one of director Juzo Itami's favourite actors, and went on to appear in nearly every one of his movies since Tampopo.
In television Tsugawa portrayed Tokugawa Ieyasu five times. He played Ieyasu in the 2000 Aoi Tokugawa Sandai and became the oldest actor who played a lead role in the Taiga drama.
Tsugawa recently debuted as a director under the pseudonym Makino Masahiko with his film Nezu no Ban. He chose this name because he is the nephew of the Japanese director Masahiro Makino, his mother's brother. Legend has it that Tsugawa was so awed by the director while watching him at work as a young child that he asked if he could use Makino as his last name should he ever be a director, because of the similarities of the first names.
Tsugawa comes from an illustrious film family. His older brother Hiroyuki Nagato was an actor. His wife Yukiji Asaoka was an actress. His grandfather is the director Shōzō Makino, his father, Kunitarō Sawamura, and his mother, Tomoko Makino, were both actors. His aunt and uncle through his father are the actors Sadako Sawamura and Daisuke Katō.
Tsugawa died August 4, 2018 due to heart failure. He was 78.
Filmography
Director
Film
- Sansho the Bailiff (1954) – Zushiō as a Boy
- Crazed Fruit (1956)
- Farewell to Spring (1959)
- Night and Fog in Japan (1960)
- The Sun's Burial (1960)
- Rokudenashi (Good-for-nothing) (1960)
- Bitter End of a Sweet Night (1961)
- Drunkard's Paradise (1961)
- Cuban Lover (1969)
- Otoko wa tsurai yo: Watashi no tora-san (1973)
- Time and Tide (1984)
- The Funeral (1984)
- Tampopo (1985)
- Hitohira no yuki (1985)
- A Taxing Woman (1987) – Hanamura
- A Taxing Woman 2 (1988) – Hanamura
- A-ge-man (1990)
- Heaven and Earth (1990) – Takeda Shingen
- Minbo (1992)
- The Strange Story of Oyuki (1992)
- Daibyonin (1993)
- Crest of Betrayal (1994) – Ōishi Kuranosuke
- A Last Note (1995)
- Supermarket Woman (1996) – Goro
- Hissatsu! Mondo Shisu (1996)
- Marutai no Onna (1997)
- Pride: The Fateful Moment (1998) – Prime Minister Hideki Tojo
- Gamera 3: Revenge of Iris (1999)
- Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack (2001)
- The Man in White (2003)
- What the Snow Brings (2005)
- The Uchōten Hotel (2006)
- Death Note (2006) – Police Chief Saeki
- Death Note 2: The Last Name (2006) — Police Chief Saeki
- A Long Walk (2006)
- Hideo Nakata's Kaidan (2007)
- Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea (2007)
- Aibō the Movie (2008)
- Postcard (2011)
- Strawberry Night (2013)
- 0.5mm (2014)
- Lady Maiko (2014)
- The Boy and the Beast (2015) – Sōshi (voice)
- Solomon's Perjury 2: Judgment (2015)
- Black Widow Business (2016) – Kōzō Nakase
- Ikitoshi Ikerumono (2017) – narrator
Television
- Ryōma ga Yuku (1968) – Kusaka Genzui
- Shinsho Taikōki (1973)
- Katsu Kaishū (1974) – Tokugawa Yoshinobu
- Ōgon no Hibi (1978) – Tsuda Sōgyū
- Ōoku (1983) - Tokugawa Tsunayoshi
- Hissastu Hashikakenin (1985) – Ryūji
- Hagoku (1985) – Keizaburō Suzue
- Dokuganryū Masamune (1987) – Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Tokugawa bugeichō: Yagyū sandai no ken (1992) – Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Hachidai Shōgun Yoshimune (1995) – Tokugawa Tsunayoshi
- Kenpō wa Madaka (1996) – Jōji Matsumoto
- Ieyasu ga mottomo osoreta otoko, Sanada Yukimura (1998) – Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Furuhata Ninzaburō (1999)
- Aoi (2000) – Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Chūshingura 1/47 (2001) – Kira Kōzukenosuke
- Shounen wa Tori ni Natta (2001)
- Sengoku Jieitai: Sekigahara no Tatakai (2006) – Tokugawa Ieyasu
- Ultraman Ginga (2013) – Hotsuma Raido
- Akagi (2015) – Iwao Washizu
- Nobunaga Moyu (2016) – Kaisen Joki
- Nemuri Kyoshirō The Final (2018)
Awards and honors
Honor
- 2006 Awarded Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon from H.M. The Emperor of Japan
- 2014 Awarded Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette from H.M. The Emperor of Japan
Awards
- 1982 Blue Ribbon Awards for Best Supporting Actor
- 1986 Japanese Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor nomination for Hitohira no yuki
- 1987 Mainichi Film Award Best Actor
- 1987 Hochi Film Award Best Supporting Actor nomination for A Taxing Woman
- 1988 Japanese Academy Awards Best Actor nomination for Wakarenu riyu
- 1988 Japanese Academy Awards Best Supporting actor for A Taxing Woman[2]
- 1993 Japanese Academy Awards Best Actor nomination Bokuto kidan
- 1994 Nikkan Sports Film Award Best Supporting Actor
- 1995 Japanese Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor nomination for Shudan-sasen
- 1999 Japanese Academy Awards Best Actor nomination for Puraido: Unmei no toki
- 2014 Hochi Film Award Best Supporting Actor nomination for 0.5mm
References
- "私の職務履歴書「第19回 映画監督・演出家 マキノ雅彦の場合」". 宅ふぁいる便. オージス総研. Retrieved 2018-10-21.
- 第 11 回日本アカデミー賞優秀作品 (in Japanese). Japan Academy Prize. Retrieved 2010-12-16.
External links
- Granpapa Pro Profile
- Masahiko Tsugawa at IMDb
- Masahiko Tsugawa at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)