Sachiko Murase
Sachiko Murase | |
---|---|
Born | Sada Matsui 21 March 1905 Honjo Ward, Tokyo, Japan |
Died | 9 October 1993 | (aged 88)
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1927–1991 |
Spouse | Kihachi Kitamura |
Sachiko Murase (村瀬幸子, Murase Sachiko, 21 March 1905 – 9 October 1993) was a Japanese stage and film actress.[1][2] She appeared in about 90 films between 1927 and 1991, often under the direction of Hiroshi Shimizu and Keisuke Kinoshita,[3] and received numerous awards for her stage and film performances.[1]
Biography
Sachiko Murase was born Sada Matsui in
Eitarō Ozawa and others.[1][4] Since the mid-1950s, she also regularly appeared on television.[5] She was the oldest active actress of Shingeki (Japanese modern realist) theatre in her lifetime.[1]
Selected filmography
- Sentanteki dawane (1930)
- Gendai okusama katagi (1930)
- Seishun zue (1931)
- Nanatsu no umi: Zenpen – Shōjo-hen (1931) – Ayako Kirihara
- Jōnetsu – Ra pashion (1932) – Mitsuko, reporter
- Satsueijo romansu, renai annai (1932)
- Nanatsu no umi: Kōhen – Teisō-hen (1932) – Ayako Kirihara
- Nemure haha no mune ni (1933)
- Zen'ei sōkō ressha (1933)
- A Woman Crying in Spring (1933) – Oaki
- Juku no haru (1933)
- Rappa to musume (1933)
- Sono yo no onna (1934)
- The Boss’s Son at College (1934) – Fumiko
- Shunkinsho: Okoto to Sasuke (1935) – Yoshiko
- Yakushin Tokyo minato matsuri (1935)
- Sakura no sono (1936) – Namie – stepdaughter
- Niji tatsu oka (1938) – Mrs. Hayakawa
- Sincerity (1939) – Mrs. Asada
- Onna keizu (1942) – Sakai's wife
- Zoku onna keizu (1942) – Sakai's Wife
- Yaotome no uta (1942)
- Port of Flowers (1943) – O-yuki
- Marriage – Fujie Sugawara
- Spring Awakens (1947) – Masa Hirobe
- Apostasy (1948) – Inoko's wife
- Here's to the Young Lady (1949) – Proprietress of the bar
- Mahiru no embukyoku (1949) – Yasuko
- A Broken Drum (1949) – Kuniko
- The Angry Street (1950) – Sudō's mother
- Re mizeraburu: Kami to akuma (1950)
- Re mizeraburu: Kami to jiyu no hata (1950)
- Wakai musumetachi (1951) – Mihiko
- Junpaku no yoru (1951)
- Kaze ni soyogu asi (Kouhen) (1951) – Sakiko Kodama
- Kekkon annai (1952)
- Carmen's Pure Love (1952)
- Himitsu (1952) – Doctor
- Natsuko no boken (1953) – Itsuko, Natsuko's aunt
- Himawari musume (1953) – Setsuko's mother
- Yoru no owari (1953) – Madame
- Aijō ni tsuite (1953) – Masako
- Zoku shishunki (1953)
- Itsuko to sono haha (1954) – Shizuko Matsuo
- Onna no issho (1955) – Aoshima's mother
- A Girl Isn't Allowed to Love (1955) – Junko Matsushima
- Princess Yang Kwei-Fei(1955) – Chengfei (uncredited)
- Sugata naki mokugekisha (1955) – Motoko
- Asunaro monogatari (1955) – Landlady
- Kaki no ki no aru ie (1955) – Sei Komatsu
- Shichinin no ani imōto (1955) – Satoko Kitahara
- Hahabue kobue (1955)
- Ryūri no Kishi (1956) – Uta, Chiho's grand mother
- Gendai no yokubō (1956) – Mineko Iizuka
- Aru onna no baai (1956) – Teruko Hisamoto
- Yūhi to kenjū (1956) – Atsuko
- Aishu no machi ni kiri ga furu (1956)
- Banjun Morishige no funnyotan (1957)
- Bōkyaku no hanabira: Kanketsuhen (1957)
- Kisses (1957) – Kikyoko Shirakawa
- Kajin (1958) – Takako Sakō
- Towa ni kotaezu – Kanketsu-hen (1958) – Toshiko
- Denwa wa yugata ni naru (1959)
- Mi wa jukushitari (1959) – Naoko, Shinobu's mother
- Kizoku no kaidan (1959)
- Meiji Tennō to Nogi Shōgun (1959) – Shizuko, Nogi's wife
- A False Student (1960) – Hikoichi's mother
- Arega minato no hi da (1961)
- Nippon no obaachan (1962) – Tsuya
- Wakamono ni yume ari (1962)
- Asu no hanayome (1962) – Hatsu Shiozaki
- Wakai hito (1962) – Atsuko Yamagata
- Zatoichi the Fugitive (1963) – Maki
- Oka wa hanazakari (1963) – Setsu Noro
- Kizudarake no sanga (1964) – Fujiko Arima
- Hadaka no jūyaku (1964) – Matsuyo Hidaka
- Zatoichi and the Doomed Man (1965) – Shimazo's wife
- The School of Spies (1966) – Kikuno Miyoshi
- The Kii River (1966) – Yasu
- Ichiman sanzennin (1966)
- Lost Spring (1967) – Taza Murakoshi
- Love for an Idiot (1967) – Sumie
- The Snow Woman (1968) – Soyo
- Aa, kaigun (1970)
- Tsubasa wa kokoro ni tsukete (1978)
- Jishin rettō (1980) – Fusae Kawazu (Yūko's mother)
- Station (1981) – Ryosuke's mother
- Jidai-ya no nyobo (1983)
- A Promise (1986) – Tatsu, Ryōsaku's wife
- Rhapsody in August (1991) – Kane
Awards and honours (selected)
- 1986: Mainichi Film Award for Best Supporting Actress for A Promise
- 1989: Kinokuniya Theatre Award for Arifuku shijin
- 1990: Order of the Sacred Treasure, 4th Class
- 1991: Nikkan Sports Film Award for Best Actress for Rhapsody in August
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h "村瀬幸子". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "村瀬幸子". Kinenote (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ a b "村瀬幸子". Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese). Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "俳優座史". Haiyuza (in Japanese). Retrieved 17 August 2023.
- ^ "村瀬幸子". TV Drama Database (in Japanese). Retrieved 17 August 2023.
External links
- Sachiko Murase at IMDb