Famous Japanese. The most beautiful Japanese in the world Popular Japanese actors and actresses

There has long been a debate among fans of Asian films about which dramas are better: Japanese or Korean. There is no consensus and is unlikely to be, it is painfully different focus is done by screenwriters and directors. However, everyone agrees on one thing: that Korean and Japanese actors play first-class (for the most part). And they look like a dream come true: beautiful, well-groomed and charismatic. And some, in addition to filming, also sing, dance and act in commercials. Paradise for fans. In this article, we will talk about Japanese actors. It's pretty hard to choose the very best, and there will always be someone ready to challenge the list, and yet ...

Kimura Takuya

Bright, beautiful, talented, over the years, like a good wine, Captain (as his fans call him) has only gotten better. Each role is a work of art. Whether it's a historical series or a romantic melodrama - in any case, there is no doubt that the actor will give everything 100%, and the audience will see a well-drawn character.

One of the most memorable roles Kimura Takuya played in the drama "Pride". This is the story of a hockey player who dreams of playing in the big leagues, for whom sport always comes first. Love? Just a game. But only until Haru meets Aki, a modest office worker who can't even skate.

Kamenashi Kazuya

A singer, a dancer, an actor, a baseball player and just actors (the photo will not let you lie) can be damn attractive. But besides appearance, Kazuya definitely has the gift of reincarnation. Therefore, it is interesting to observe the creative activity of Kamenashi and watch how his talent is revealed. He can do both comedy roles and images of criminals.

You can start acquaintance with this talented actor from the drama "One and Only Love".

What is the probability of a relationship between a girl from a wealthy family and a simple poor guy? Small. What kind of relationship can we talk about when you need to work to ensure a normal existence for your younger brother and mother? Yes, even with a rich girl. About none. But the feelings that flare up are very difficult to suppress, especially when they are mutual. But will Hiro and Nao be able to deal with personal problems and the opinions of others in order to be together?

Yamashita Tomohisa

Japanese actors are often attracted by their appearance, and then you start to pay attention to everything else. Yamashita Tomohisa disarms and conquers, if not at first sight, then from the second for sure. But there is no consensus about his musical and artistic activities. Someone considers him an absolute "log" with an invariable "poker face", someone praises and exalts. But there are two dramas in which Yamashita shines and once again proves that Japanese actors can do almost anything. These are Code Blue and Last Second Score.

The first is a medical series showing the workdays of the emergency department. Four applicants come to the internship, wishing to be on board the legendary "Doctor Halley" - a helicopter of the rapid response team. But only the most capable are taken there, so the guys will have to try and show their best skills and ability to work in any emergency.

Last Second Score is a more positive drama that tells a romantic story about a young, insecure basketball player and a capable but unlucky violinist. By helping each other, they will be able to overcome their own weaknesses and, of course, find love.

Cary-Hiroyuki Takagawa

Japanese actors (men) of the second plan also know how to attract attention and surprise with unexpected actions. We are talking about Cary-Hiroyuki Takagawa, best known to moviegoers for his roles in Mortal Kombat and Memoirs of a Geisha.

Although he has a decent number of villains to his credit, Takagawa attracted the attention of the public with a very unusual act: during the filming of the Russian film Priest-san. Confessions of a Samurai ”The 65-year-old Japanese actor decided to accept Russian citizenship. He does not worry about how such an act will be perceived in America, where Cary-Hiroyuki lives, believing that this is his own business. Takagawa plans to spend most of his time in Russia, flying to America only for the winter. In addition to citizenship, the Japanese actor converted to Orthodoxy.

Sakurai Sho

Continues the list of "Memorable Japanese Actors" Sakurai Sho. Like his many colleagues, he not only acts in films, but also sings in a popular group and hosts television shows.

The most striking works of this talented guy can be considered "Quiz 2" and "Family Game". Both series produce an ambiguous impression, but are addictive.

"Quiz" is a new entertainment show on the TV channel that promises a big cash prize for 7 correct answers and the fulfillment of any desire of the participant who reached the final and answered the last question. Only questions are sometimes more like a detective investigation. And the presenter is not at all such a sweetheart as it seems at first glance. He also has his secrets.

"Family Game" will tell the story of an unusual tutor, whose arrival will turn the whole house on its ears and turn the whole idea of ​​a good family upside down. Who is he and why climbs into someone else's personal life? Why does he force children and parents to do strange things? Does he really want to help or is he trying to destroy the family hearth?

The list of Japanese actors and the dramas they have starred in is very long. After all, everyone has their favorites, whose game will always be the best.

Japan is one of the most economically and technologically advanced countries in the world. There are many well-known Japanese people who have made invaluable contributions in areas such as business, politics, cinema, sports, and science. Keep reading to know about some of them.

SakichiToyoda.

Sakichi Toyoda was a famous Japanese inventor and industrialist. He was born on February 14, 1867 in a family of carpenters. He patented the first wooden loom that increased productivity by 40-50%. He perfected the first loom powered by steam. Sakichi's most famous invention is the automatic loom, in which he implemented the principle of complete automation. He founded Toyota Industries Co. Ltd. He died of pneumonia on October 30, 1930.

Emperor Akihito.

Akihito is the current Emperor of Japan. In 1989 he became Emperor. He is the eldest son of Emperor Shouya and Empress Gojun. He was born on December 23, 1933. He studied with tutors. He subsequently attended the School of Peers. In April 1959, Akihito married Michiko Shoda, a simple girl. They had three children - Crown Prince Naruito, Prince Akishino and Princess Nori. As Crown Prince, he traveled extensively, visiting the United States, Canada, Great Britain and several countries in Asia and South America. Akihito is an experienced marine biologist. He also wrote articles about the earlier period of Japanese Scientific History.

DenFujita.

Fujita was a famous Japanese entrepreneur. He was born March 3, 1926 in Osaka, Japan. He worked as an English translator during high school. He is the man who made the hamburger a Japanese symbol. He founded McDonald's in Japan in 1971. McDonald's in Japan today makes about four billion dollars. Lair died of cardiac arrest on April 21, 2004.

AnnoHideaki.


Anno is a famous Japanese animator and director. He was born on May 22, 1960 in Ube, Yamaguchi, Japan. In 1984 he created Gainax, a Japanese anime studio. He was the chief animator for two of the most popular anime films of the decade: Macross: Do You Remember Love? and Nausicaa: Valleys of the Wind.

AbeCobo.

Abe was a famous Japanese writer. He was born on March 7, 1924 in Kita, Tokyo. His works include Kangaroo Notebook, Women in the Dunes, The Man Who Turned into a Stick, Inter Ice Age 4, Secret Rendezvous, Shattered Map and Box Man. January 22, 1993 he died.

Sujiyama Ai.

Sujiyama is a famous Japanese tennis player. She was born on July 5, 1975 in Yakohoma, Japan. In 1993, she made her Grand Slam debut at Wimbledon and lost in the first round to Gigi Fernandez. In 1994, she won the open tournament in Japan and entered the list of 100 best tennis players. In 1995, she entered the top 50. In 1999, she qualified for the singles final in Japan. In 2000, she became the first Japanese woman to win first place.

21st place. Ariana Miyamoto / Ariana Miyamoto- Miss Japan 2015, the representative of Japan at the Miss Universe 2015 pageant, where she entered the top 10. Ariana was born in Nagasaki, Japan on May 12, 1994. Her father was an African American who served at that time at the US Navy base in Japan, and her mother was Japanese. After winning the Miss Japan contest, the girl was criticized for her non-Japanese appearance. This is due to the fact that Miyamoto became the first mestizo to win the national beauty contest, although this has long become the norm in Europe, the USA and Canada.

20th place. Yui Shinada- Japanese fashion model (born September 6, 1982). Height 160 cm, figure parameters 84-59-86.

19th place. (born October 20, 1987) - Miss Japan 2013, representative of Japan at the Miss Universe 2013 contest. Height 173 cm, parameters 82-60-87.

18th place. Reon Kadena / Reon Kadena(born February 19, 1986) is a Japanese fashion model and actress. Height 167 cm, figure parameters 90-59-87.

16th place. Saki Seto(born June 21, 1985) is a Japanese actress and gravure idol.

15th place. Mikie Hara(born July 3, 1987) is a Japanese fashion model and actress. Height 163 cm. Figure measurements 94-61-88.

14th place. Rina Aizawa / Rina Aizawa(born July 28, 1991) is a Japanese actress and gravure idol.

13th place. Yuri Ebihara / Yuri Ebihara(born October 3, 1979) is a Japanese fashion model and actress. Height 168 cm, figure parameters 82-56-84.

12th place. Erika Sawajiri(born April 8, 1986) is a Japanese actress, fashion model and singer. Her father is Japanese, and her mother is an Algerian Berber. Height 160 cm, figure parameters 80-58-86.

11th place. Yu Hasebe / Yu Hasebe(born January 17, 1986) is a Japanese fashion model and actress. Height 156 cm, figure parameters 78-60-80.

10th place. Miwa Oshiro / Miwa Oshiro(born August 26, 1983) is a Japanese fashion model and actress. Height 154 cm, figure parameters 88-58-84.

9th place. Keiko Kitagawa / Keiko Kitagawa(born August 22, 1986) is a Japanese actress and fashion model. Height 160 cm, figure parameters 75-53-81.

8th place. Kana Tsugihara(born August 25, 1984) is a Japanese actress and fashion model. Height 158 ​​cm, figure parameters 87-60-88.

7th place. Mayuko Iwasa(born February 24, 1987) is a Japanese actress and fashion model. Height 155 cm, figure parameters 83-58-86.

6th place. Aya Ueto / Aya Ueto(born September 14, 1985) is a Japanese actress, singer and model. Height 162 cm, figure parameters 82-58-84.

5th place. Ayumi Hamasaki (born October 2, 1978) is a Japanese singer, model and actress. Height 156 cm, figure parameters 80-53-82.

4th place. Meisa Kuroki(born May 28, 1988) - Japanese actress, fashion model, singer. Height 165 cm, figure parameters 82-59-85. Meisa Kuroki is Japanese by father and Brazilian by mother.

Every nation has outstanding women who are remembered for many generations for their deeds and deeds that influenced the fate of the country. In today's article, we will talk about 10 Japanese women who radically influenced the development of their country in their time. Most of these women have achieved fame overseas, which is another hallmark of success in Japan.

All the women on this list are well known among the Japanese. Ready to test your knowledge of Japan's prominent women? Then let's go through history, from 973 to the present day.

Murasaki Shikibu / Murasaki Shikibu (973 - 1025)

Writer

In those days, women were deprived of the opportunity to study classical Chinese, but Sikubu's father gave her the opportunity to study with her brother. A precocious child, she immersed herself in the study of the Chinese language, but hid her abilities so as not to arouse contempt from adults.


While living at the court of the imperial family, where she served as maid of honor to Empress Akiko, Shikibu kept a diary in which she wrote about the activities of the fictional Prince Genji, supplementing it with various little things from real court life. Such "poetic tales" are a genre of poetic biography in which reality is mixed with fiction, resulting in works of "Japanese prose". Such writing found favor among women, especially court ladies, wives and daughters of courtiers, while men still preferred to write in classical Chinese.

An English translation of The Tale of Genji, consisting of six volumes, appeared in 1933.

Misako Shirasu (1910 - 1998)

Publicist and expert in aesthetics and design

Sirasu began to study at the age of four, and at the age of 14 she became the first woman to perform on stage Noh.

Misako Shirasu grew up in a good family. She attended a preparatory school in the USA. Upon her return to Japan, she married, and in 1942, together with her husband, they moved to a farm away from likely bombing targets. Apparently, this moment became the key in her life. It was during this time that Shirasu learned to appreciate the simple, austere lifestyle. She became a proponent of simple aesthetics and design surrounded by nature.


Sirasu believed in mixing ideas to arrive at practical ways of living. Regarding design, she emphasized that imperfections are the defining beauty of an object, a valuable natural vice, an unforeseen treasure, or "natural imperfection". Instead of creating art, she invited people to put their heart and soul into creating something with great effort and skill. Shirasu also said that folk art should be a little clumsy.

She devoted herself to studying the relationship between art and nature. Sirasu used flower arrangement as an example: once flowers are placed in a vase, for the first time we can understand the essence of a flower in a controlled and observable format, where we can appreciate it on a different level and give it new life. She saw that the beauty of nature included food and art. These values ​​still live on in Japanese art and design.

The house where she lived with her husband is called Buaiso, now a museum open to the public.

Masako Katsura (1913 - 1995)

Professional billiard player

"Katsy" was Japan's only professional female pool player in the 1950s. In addition, she became the first woman to play in a world billiards tournament.

Masako learned the game at the age of 13, thanks to her older sister's husband, who owned a billiard room. In 1958, she participated in 30 shows, and the following year made two appearances on American television (once on CBS and the other on ABC). Masako married an American army sergeant and moved from Japan to the United States.


Katsy wrote two books in Japanese about billiards: Introduction to Billiards (1952) and Improving Your Pool Game (1956).

She eventually returned to Japan and lived with her sister. 5 years after returning to her homeland, she died, it happened in 1995.

Hanae Mori / Hanae Mori (1926)

Hanae Mori is Japan's most famous female designer. She is also considered an icon of free women. Mori used fashion design as a promotion of the interplay of aesthetic values ​​between East and West.

In her youth, Mori studied at a local sewing school. She later opened her own boutique in Ginza and created a clothing collection. She entered the world of haute couture in Paris, influenced by Coco Chanel. In 1976, she opened a salon in Paris and was appointed a member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, becoming the only designer from Japan to be included in Haute Couture.


Mori's designs have appeared on the cover of Vogue magazine. Her designs include the uniforms for the Japan Airlines flight attendants, the uniforms of the Japanese athletes at the Barcelona Summer Olympics, and the kimono and wedding dress for the Japanese Princess Masako. Mori also has a perfume collection and a Hanae Mori Barbie doll.

Mori supports young designers through his Hanae Mori foundation.

Sadako Ogata (1927)

Diplomat

Few women are as impressive as Sadako Ogata, who until the age of 85 held a position at the Japan International Cooperation Agency. She was Chair of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 1991-2001, UNICEF Executive Board 1978-1979, and President of the Japan International Cooperation Agency, where she served from October 2003 to April 2012.

Sadako Ogata, in addition to numerous international awards, has also received the Indira Gandhi Award and the J. William Fulbright Award for International Understanding. In 2001, she accompanied then-Prime Minister Mori to Africa, marking the first visit by a Japanese prime minister to the African continent.

Sadako Ogata is dearly loved by her people for her compassion for the underprivileged.

Yayoi Kusama / Yayoi Kusama (1929)

Artist

Yayoi Kusama was a leader in the avant-garde movement shortly after she moved to the US (she was then in her 20s) and is said to have influenced artists such as Andy Warhol. She is also a direct participant in the minimalist and feminist art movements.

Kusama is known for her red polka dot artwork. This whimsical theme has become her signature. Yayoi Kusama is also known for her installation art - she turns entire rooms into living tree trunks painted with red polka dots.

In 2008, one of her works was sold at Christie's New York auction for $5.1 million, a record for a living female artist of the time.

Once you see her art, you won't be able to forget it. Kusama is candid about his struggles with mental illness. She is in Seiwa Hospital in Tokyo, from where she travels to her studio.

Hibari Misora ​​/ Hibari Misora ​​(1937 - 1989)

Singer, actress and cult personality

As an actress, Misora ​​appeared in Takekurabe (1955), Izu no odoriko (1954) and Hibari no mori no ishimatsu (1960). However, she is best remembered as the Enki singer. Her first performance was at the age of eight and she appeared on NHK the following year. She toured Japan for two years.

Hibari Misora ​​has recorded over 1,000 songs, including "Kawa no nagare no you ni". This song was voted by over 10 million people in an NHK poll as the greatest Japanese song of all time.

Misora ​​is one of the most commercially successful musicians. She also became the first Japanese woman to receive the Order of Honor from the Prime Minister. Misora ​​was awarded the Japanese Government's Medal of Honor for her contribution to music and public welfare, inspiring people and giving them hope after World War II.


Hibari Misora ​​died at the age of 52 from an illness. She was reported to have sold over 80 million records. Live, TV and radio concerts are still held in Japan in memory of her.

Sadako Sasaki (1943 - 1955)

Symbol of the innocent victims of war

Sadako lived 1 mile from where the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. Then she was two years old. The girl and her family survived. However, when Sadako was nine years old, she developed leukemia, a disease that affected many children in the area.

Sadako's friend told her the legend of a thousand cranes: if you fold a thousand origami cranes, that person's wish will come true. Sadako painstakingly folded paper cranes from whatever material she could find. But on October 25 of the same year, she died without reaching her goal.


Sadako Sasaki serves as a symbol for children and other innocent victims of war. With the funds raised, in May 1958, a memorial was erected in honor of Sadako in the Hiroshima Peace Park. To this day, children continue to fold paper cranes to decorate her memorial.

Sadako is a bitter reminder of why Japan included Article 9 (prohibiting war as a means of settling international disputes) in its constitution.

Kimi Iwata / Kimie Iwata (1947)

Former Executive Vice President of Shiseido Co., Ltd.

Iwata is a rare example of a female leader in Japan. The fact is that in the country of the samurai, according to the Bureau of Gender Equality, women make up less than 1% of the leaders of leading Japanese companies and only 10% of leaders in general.

After graduating from the University of Tokyo in 1971, Kimi Iwata immediately joined the Ministry of Labor, where she helped create the Equal Employment Opportunity Act in the mid-1980s.


In 2003, she joined Shiseido, the largest Japanese cosmetics company and the fourth largest in the world. Until 2012, she served as Corporate Director and Executive Vice President at the company. Iwata strongly supported female employees at Shiseido and advocated a more female-friendly corporate ethic.

Kimi Iwata also participated as the main spokesperson for the Women's Empowerment Forum. She is also a member of the Gender Equality Council.

Chiaki Mukai (1952)

Physician and astronaut JAXA

Mukai is the first female astronaut from Japan and the first citizen of the Land of the Rising Sun to fly two space shuttle missions, one aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia in 1994 and the other aboard the Discovery in 1998. Mukai flew with US Senator John Glenn, who was 77 years old at the time and became the oldest person to go into space. Their flight was covered live on television in the United States.


You met ten of the most prominent Japanese women in the history of the country. In fact, it was very difficult to choose the best ones. And perhaps you would like to include other personalities in this top? If so, please share your thoughts in the comments.

Japan- the country of the Rising Sun, the world of exotics separated from the continent by the Yellow and Japan Seas: kimono, bansai, geisha, samurai, hara-kiri, judo, sumo, anime, sake, sushi, Fuji, sakura,… eventually, Toyota and Mitsubishi. The list seems to go on forever.

A country of contrasts, where the latest achievements of science and technology coexist with magnificent castles and temples of the samurai era.

The geographical isolation of the Japanese archipelago determined the character traits of its population: calmness and restraint, but at the same time great willpower (you must admit, not every one of us would have decided to commit ritual hara-kiri as revenge on the worst enemy); a penchant for contemplation (it’s not for nothing that one of the favorite actions of the Japanese is considered “hanami” - watching the falling sakura flowers), but at the same time, some lightness and playfulness that can be seen in our favorite Japanese anime.

The official religions of Japan are Shinto and Buddhism. In practice, it is quite difficult to determine any clear line between them, maybe that's why the Japanese say that each of them is born a Shintoist and dies a Buddhist.

Japanese language- the language spoken by about 125 million inhabitants of Japan, as well as the descendants of the Japanese who migrated in the first half of the 20th century. to other countries: to the USA, including the Hawaiian Islands (more than 800 thousand), Brazil (about 400 thousand), Peru (more than 100 thousand), China, Canada, Argentina, Mexico, etc.

This language is mysterious, like Japan itself, its family ties have long been controversial; now most researchers recognize it as related to the Altaic languages ​​​​- Korean, Tungus-Manchu, Mongolian, Turkic. There is a hypothesis about its relationship with the Austronesian ( Malayo-Polynesian) languages. During the historical period, the Japanese language has been significantly influenced by Chinese, and in recent decades by English.

Notable Japanese Cast: Takeshi Kitano, Haruki Murakami, Yasunari Kawabata, Junichiro Koizumi, Utada Hikaru.

Famous people of Japan:

- A famous Japanese director, actor, screenwriter, as well as a writer, poet and artist. He has starred in films such as Johnny Mnemonic, Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence, Zatoichi, Kukijiro, Five, Boiling Point, Tokyo Eyes, Battle Royale. He is also a director, screenwriter and editor of the films "Fireworks", "Dolls", "Guys are back", etc.

Kurosawa Akira (1910–1998)

- Japanese film director, one of the leading representatives of the humanistic direction of art of the XX century. World fame Kurosawa brought the film "Rashomon", based on the works of R. Akutagawa "Rashomon Gate" and "In the thicket." Innovative in terms of storytelling, the film (the story of rape and murder is told from four different points of view) won the Golden Lion Grand Prix at the Venice Film Festival and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film of the Year.

Murakami Haruki(born in 1949)

is a Japanese writer who has gained great popularity in the West in recent years. In April 1974, he wrote his first novel, Hear the Wind Sing, which won the National Emerging Writers Literary Award. This book, together with the novels "Pinball 73" and "Sheep Hunt" made up the "Rat Trilogy". In addition, we all know his novels such as "Norwegian Forest", "Underground", "My Favorite Satellite" and "Chronicles of a Clockwork Bird".

Takada Kenzo(born in 1940)

- a brilliant oriental designer, whom everyone knows only by name and is called "the most European of all Japanese fashion designers." Kenzo's favorite motifs are flowers and leaves, and even his most famous perfumes are in a leaf bottle. The designer loves animal skin prints, tartan variations and bold color combinations. Takada brought into fashion simple, even slightly childish silhouettes - knee-length shorts, mini coats, sweater dresses, huge berets and, of course, kimono sleeves. The national Japanese costume generally became the initial basis for the designer's work, but Kenzo drew inspiration not only from the history of kimonos. In his work, he reinterprets Spanish boleros, traditional Austrian jackets, Indian trousers, and Chinese tunics. Today, Kenzo is considered "the only Master who is able to weave into a single stylistic thread all the nuances of perception that a person possesses."

Kawabata Yasunari (1899–1972)

- one of the most talented Japanese writers of the twentieth century. His stories and novels "Beasts and Birds", "Snow Country", "Thousand-winged Crane" and others have been translated into many languages ​​and enjoy the unchanging love of readers. In 1968, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for "writing that expresses with great feeling the essence of Japanese thinking."

- J-pop singer, now popular in Japan, as well as among anime fans around the world. Writes songs in Japanese and English. Her first album "First Love" sold 9 million copies in Japan. In addition, Utada is also known in the United States under the pseudonym

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