1325 results found for: Natsu no Himitsu
Sawada Kan
Sawada Kan is a Japanese composer and arranger born on April 9, 1968 in Tokyo, Japan. His desire to be a composer came from listening to Ludwig van Beethoven's symphonies in junior high school. Sawada studied composition and orchestration at Tokyo College of Music. He won the 2nd prize in the composition…
Han Bunjaku
Han Bunjaku was a Japanese-speaking Taiwanese actress who lived and worked in Japan. She was mostly known as a character actress. She became famous playing an unfortunate half-Japanese, half African-American volleyball player called Jun Sanders in a 1969 volleyball drama called Sign wa V. In her later…
Kayama Yuzo
Kayama Yuzo is the son of one of one of Japan's biggest male stars of the 1930s, 'Ken Uehara'. The handsome and likeable Yuzo Kayama became one of Japan's biggest male stars of the 1960s. And just as Uehara embodied the idea of a modern Japanese wartime hero, Kayama became symbolic of postwar Japanese…
Nakazono Miho
Nakazono Miho (中園美保) is a Japanese screenwriter from Nakano, Tokyo. She graduated from Nihon University Second High School (日本大学第二高等学校) and the Department of Broadcasting at the College of Art, Nihon University (日本大学). Since 2010, she has been a visiting professor…
Osugi Ren
Osugi Ren (born Osugi Takashi) was a Japanese actor. For his work in Cure, Hana-bi and other films, Osugi was given the Best Supporting Actor award at the 1999 Yokohama Film Festival. He often worked alongside Takeshi Kitano and Susumu Terajima. In the DVDcommentary, to the mpd.psycho (TV Miniseries)…
Shirakawa Kazuko
Shirakawa Kazuko is a Japanese actress who is best known for her appearances in Nikkatsu's Roman Porno films during the 1970s. She appeared in Nikkatsu's first film in the Roman Porno series, Apartment Wife (1971), and is considered the first of the three "Nikkatsu Queens" of the 1970s. After 1976 she…
Matsushige Yutaka
Matsushige Yutaka, born in Fukuoka Prefecture, is a Japanese actor. He won the award for the best supporting actor at the 31st Yokohama Film Festival for Dear Doctor. (Source: Wikipedia)














