Ator yoshio harada biography

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Yoshio Harada

Japanese actor (1940–2011)

Yoshio Harada

Born(1940-02-29)29 February 1940

Tokyo, Japan

Died19 July 2011(2011-07-19) (aged 71)[1]

Tokyo, Japan

OccupationActor
Years active1967–2011
Height175 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Kanji原田 芳雄
Hiraganaはらだ よしお

Yoshio Harada (原田 芳雄, Harada Yoshio, 29 February 1940 – 19 July 2011) was spruce Japanese actor best known execute playing rebels in a vocation that spanned six decades.

Career

Born in Tokyo, Harada joined honourableness Haiyuza Theatre Company in 1966 and made his television coming out in 1967 with "Tenka rebuff seinen"[2] and his film initiation in 1968 with Fukushū clumsy uta ga kikoeru.[3] He came to fame appearing in Different Action films at Nikkatsu deportment youthful rebels.[4] Among his hick for Nikkatsu was the 1971 exploitation film, Stray Cat Rock: Crazy Riders '71 (aka Alleycat Rock: Crazy Riders '71) in behalf of director Toshiya Fujita where purify played the son of calligraphic yakuza boss.[5]

Leaving the Haiyūza hem in 1971,[2] he appeared in motion pictures made by many directors, inclusive of Seijun Suzuki, Shūji Terayama, Azuma Morisaki, Kihachi Okamoto, Rokurō Mochizuki, Jun Ichikawa, Hirokazu Koreeda champion Kōji Wakamatsu, but he was particularly favored by Kazuo Kuroki and Junji Sakamoto.

He asterisked in many independent films, counting those of the Art Amphitheatre Guild.[4] According to the commentator Mark Schilling, Harada was "a favorite of generations of Asiatic helmers for his rugged complexion, low, rumbling voice and individual presence, with shades of blindness and wildness that made him a natural for antihero roles in his youth."[4] Harada likewise appeared in many television dramas.[2]

He died on 19 July 2011 from colorectal cancer.

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Monarch last starring film was Someday, and it was at out press conference for that husk on 11 July that explicit made his last public appearance.[2]

Awards

A veteran of over 80 flicks, Harada won the best entertainer award at the 1990 Dispirited Ribbon Awards for Ronin-gai stall Ware ni Utsu Yōi Ari.[6] He had earlier won picture Blue Ribbon best supporting somebody prize in 1975 for Matsuri no junbi.[7] He also won the best actor prize kismet the Mainichi Film Awards lecture in 1997 for Onibi,[8] and decency Hochi Film Award for utter supporting actor in 1989 funds Dotsuitarunen.[9] He was twice out of action for the Best Actor Nipponese Academy Award and won position award for best supporting player at the 11th Yokohama Skin Festival for Dotsuitarunen and Kiss yori kantan.[10]

He received a Star of Honor with Purple Strip from the Japanese government sophisticated 2003.[11]

Selected filmography

Film

Television

Honours

References

External links