Isuzu Yamada


Isuzu Yamada was a Japanese actress whose career on stage and screen spanned eight decades.

Early life

Yamada was born in Osaka as Mitsu Yamada. Her father, Kusuo Yamada, was a shinpa stage actor specializing in onnagata roles and her mother, Ritsu, was a geisha. Her family was poor, but under her mother's influence, she began learning nagauta and Japanese traditional dance from the age of six.

Career

Yamada debuted as a film actress in 1930 at age twelve, appearing in a Nikkatsu film, Ken o Koete, opposite Denjirō Ōkōchi. She soon became one of Nikkatsu's top actresses, but it was her strong portrayals of two rebellious modern girls in Kenji Mizoguchi's Osaka Elegy and Sisters of the Gion in 1936 at the new Daiichi Eiga studio that earned her popularity and critical acclaim. Moving to Shinkō Kinema and then to Toho, she starred in a series of films with Kazuo Hasegawa, such as Mikio Naruse's Tsuruhachi Tsurujirō and Masahiro Makino's Kinō Kieta Otoko, that made her a major star.
Yamada appeared in the films of many of the Japanese directors, including Yasujirō Ozu for Tokyo Twilight and Akira Kurosawa for The Lower Depths, Throne of Blood and Yojimbo.
From the mid-1950s, she appeared more and more on stage and on television, including the ''Hissatsu series.

Personal life

Yamada was married four times, first to the actor Ichirō Tsukita, second to the producer Kazuo Takimura, third to the actor Yoshi Katō, and fourth to the actor Tsutomu Shimomoto. Her daughter with Tsukita, Michiko, became famous as the actress Michiko Saga.

Death

Yamada died from multiple organ failure in Tokyo on 9 July 2012 at the age of 95.

Awards

Yamada earned numerous accolades during her long career. She earned double honors, a Blue Ribbon Award and a Mainichi Film Award for best actress, two times: in 1952 for Gendai-jin and Hakone Fūunroku, and in 1956 for Boshizō, Neko to Shōzō to Futari no Onna, and Nagareru. She also won a Blue Ribbon Award for best supporting actress in 1955 for Takekurabe and Ishigassen. She received a Special Award from the Chairman of the Japan Academy in 1995 in honor of her lifetime achievements in cinema. For her work on stage, she has been awarded the Grand Prize three times from the Agency for Cultural Affairs's Arts Festival for the plays Tanuki, Aizome Takao, and Daiyu-san.
She was named a Person of Cultural Merit by the Japanese government in 1993 and became the first actress to receive the illustrious Order of Culture from the Emperor of Japan in 2000. The Order of Culture is considered Japan's "top cultural award."

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleDirectorNotes
1930Ken o KoeteOkayoKunio WatanabeDebut role
1934Aizō TōgeKenji MizoguchiLost
1935Orizuru OsenOsenKenji Mizoguchi
1936Osaka ElegyAyako MuraiKenji Mizoguchi
1936Sisters of the GionYounger sister OmochaKenji Mizoguchi
1938Tsuruhachi TsurujirōTsuruhachiMikio Naruse
1941Kinō Kieta OtokoKotomiMasahiro Makino
1946Aru yo no TonosamaOmitsuTeinosuke Kinugasa
1951Home Sweet HomeNamiko UemuraNoboru Nakamura
1952Gendai-jinMinoru Shibuya
1952Hakone FūunrokuRitsuSatsuo Yamamoto/Kiyoshi Kusuda/Tetsujin Kosaka
1953EpitomeTamikoKaneto Shindo
1954Tōjin OkichiTōjin OkichiMitsuo Wakasugi
1955TakekurabeOkichiHeinosuke Gosho
1955Christ in BronzeKimikaMinoru Shibuya
1956BoshizōYukiko IzumiKiyoshi Saeki
1956Neko to Shōzō to Futari no OnnaFirst wifeShirō Toyoda
1956NagareruTsutayaMikio Naruse
1957Throne of BloodLady Asaji WashizuAkira Kurosawa
1957Black RiverMikikoMasaki Kobayashi
1957Tokyo TwilightKikukoYasujirō Ozu
1957The Lower DepthsOsugiAkira Kurosawa
1961The Littlest WarriorYashioTaiji Yabushita/Yūgo SerikawaVoice
1961YojimboOrinAkira Kurosawa
1961The Story of Osaka CastleYodogimiHiroshi Inagaki
1975'HerselfKaneto Shindo
1978Shogun's SamuraiOeyoKinji Fukasaku
1982SuspicionTokie HoriuchiYoshitarō Nomura
1984'OrikuMasahisa SadanagaHissatsu series

Television