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Tadanobu Asano





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Tadanobu Satō (佐藤 忠信, Satō Tadanobu, born November 27, 1973), better known by his stage name Tadanobu Asano (浅野 忠信, Asano Tadanobu), is a Japanese actor, director, and musician, who has had an extensive career working in both Japanese and international cinema. He has been nominated for five Japan Academy Film Prizes, twice for Best Actor and three times for Best Supporting Actor, and winner of its Most Popular Performer award.

Tadanobu Asano

浅野 忠信

Asano at the world premiere of Thor 2011

Born

Tadanobu Satō


(1973-11-27) November 27, 1973 (age 50)
Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan

Occupations

  • director
  • musician
  • Years active

    1988–present

    Spouses

    Chara

    (m. 1995; div. 2009)

    Kurumi Nakata [ja]

    (m. 2022)

    Children

    2

    Relatives

    Minori Nakata [ja] (sister-in-law)

    Japanese name

    Kanji

    浅野 忠信

    Hiragana

    あさの ただのぶ

    Katakana

    アサノ タダノブ

    Transcriptions

    Romanization

    Asano Tadanobu

    Alternative Japanese name

    Kanji

    佐藤 忠信

    Hiragana

    さとう ただのぶ

    Katakana

    サトウ タダノブ

    Transcriptions

    Romanization

    Satō Tadanobu

    Website

    asanotadanobu.com

    Among his best-known roles are in Hirokazu Kore-eda's Maboroshi no Hikari (1995) and Distance (2001), Hyozo Tashiro in Gohatto (1999), Kakihara in Ichi the Killer (2001), Hattori Genosuke in Zatoichi (2003), Kenji in Last Life in the Universe (also 2003), and TemujininMongol (2007). He has also appeared in Hollywood films, notably as Hogun in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Lord Kira Yoshinakain47 Ronin (2013),[1] the Interpreter in Martin Scorsese's Silence (2016), Rear Admiral Tamon YamaguchiinMidway (2019), and RaideninMortal Kombat (2021), based on the fighting video game of the same name. He gained additional recognition in 2024 for his portrayal of Lord Kashigi Yabushige on the American television series Shōgun, based on the James Clavell novel.

    Asano has worked with some of the most prominent and acclaimed directors in Japanese cinema, including Hirokazu Kore-eda, Takeshi Kitano, Nagisa Ōshima, Takashi Miike, Nobuhiko Obayashi and Kiyoshi Kurosawa, along with international directors like Martin Scorsese, Kenneth Branagh, Wong Kar-wai, Roland Emmerich, Pen-ek Ratanaruang and Sergei Bodrov. Among other accolades, he has twice won the Best Actor Award at the Yokohama Film Festival, the Upstream Prize for Best Actor at the Venice Film Festival, and the Best Actor Award at the Moscow International Film Festival.

    Early life

    edit

    Asano was born in the Honmoku area[2]ofYokohama, to artist Yukihisa Satō (佐藤 幸久, Satō Yukihisa)[2] and mother Junko (順子). Through his mother, Asano is of one-quarter American ancestry. His maternal grandfather was Willard Overing, a U.S. citizen of Norwegian descent, whom Asano never met.[2] Asano has an older brother, Kujun Satō, born in 1971,[3] who is a musician and a partner in Anore Inc. (now Adonis A), a talent agency Asano and their father Yukihisa Satō founded.

    Career

    edit

    Asano's father, an actors' agent, suggested he take on his first acting role in the TV show Kinpachi Sensei at the age of 16. His film debut was in the 1990 Swimming Upstream (Bataashi Kingyo), though his first major critical success was in Shunji Iwai's Fried Dragon Fish (1993). His first critical success internationally was Hirokazu Kore-eda's Maboroshi no Hikari (1995), in which he played a man who inexplicably throws himself in front of a train, widowing his wife and orphaning his infant son. He also worked with Kore-eda in the pseudo-documentary Distance in 2001. His best known works internationally are the samurai films Gohatto (aka Taboo, 1999) and Zatoichi (2003), as well as the critically acclaimed Bright Future.

    Asano acted in Katsuhito Ishii's 2003 film The Taste of Tea, which premiered at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. He appeared as the lead actor in Last Life in the Universe (2003) by Thai director Pen-Ek Ratanaruang and starred in Ratanaruang's 2006 follow-up film, Invisible Waves. In 2007, he starred as the young Genghis KhaninSergei Bodrov's Oscar-nominated film Mongol.[4]InVillon's Wife (2009), he played the part of an alcoholic writer, stating that, since he doesn't drink alcohol, he based his performance on people he knows.[5] In 2011, he starred in the Marvel Studios film Thor as the Asgardian warrior Hogun, a member of the Warriors Three and companion to Thor.[6] He reprised the role in 2013's Thor: The Dark World[7] and 2017's Thor: Ragnarok.[8]

    Asano appeared in the 2021 Mortal Kombat reboot as Raiden.[9] In September 2021, Asano was announced as part of the cast of the FX limited series Shōgun, adapted from the James Clavell novel.[10]

    In addition to his acting career, Asano directed commercial TV spots for his then-wife, Chara.[11] He formed the band MACH-1.67 with director Sogo Ishii in 1996 and has also played in the bands Peace Pill and Safari.[12] He is an artist and a model, most notably for Japanese fashion designers Jun Takahashi and Takeo Kikuchi, for whom he filmed a series of commercial spots directed by Wong Kar-wai, including the short film wkw/tk/1996@7'55"hk.net.

    Asano and his father left the actors' agency Anore Inc. (now Adonis A) in 2022. After leaving the agency, he continued to give it his support.[13]

    Personal life

    edit

    Asano met J-pop singer Chara on the set of Iwai's Picnic (1994). They were married in March 1995 while Chara was pregnant with their first child, a daughter named Sumire, who was born on July 4 that same year.[14] In 1999, they had a son named Himi.[15] In July 2009, Chara announced on her website that the couple was divorcing. She received custody of both their children.[16]

    In August 2022, Asano announced through his Twitter and Instagram accounts that he had married model and actress Kurumi Nakata who is eighteen years younger than him (b. 1991). The two had reportedly been in a relationship for over six years.[17][18]

    Awards

    edit

    Asano won the Most Popular Performer award at the 1997 Japanese Academy Awards for Acri and was nominated in the Best Supporting Actor category in 2004 for his performance in Zatôichi. He also received the Upstream Prize for Best Actor at the 2003 Venice Film Festival for his role in Last Life in the Universe.[19][20] In 2014, he won the award for Best Actor at the 36th Moscow International Film Festival for his role in My Man.[21]

    Filmography

    edit

    Film

    edit

    Year

    Title

    Role

    Notes

    1990

    Bataashi kingyo

    Ushi

    1991

    Aitsu

    Sadahito Iwata

    1992

    Seishun Dendekedekedeke

    Seiichi Shirai

    1993

    Nemuranai Machi: Shinjuku Same

    Koichi Sunagami

    1994

    119

    Satoshi Matsushita

    1995

    Yonshimai Monogatari

    Akira Higuchi

    Maborosi

    Ikuo

    1996

    wkw/tk/1996@7'55"hk.net

    Man

    Short film

    Picnic

    Tsumuji

    Helpless

    Kenji Shiraishi

    Acri

    Hisoka

    Swallowtail Butterfly

    Customer in club

    Focus

    Kanemura

    1997

    Yume no Ginga

    Tatsuo Niitaka

    Tokyo Biyori

    1998

    Love & Pop

    Captain XX

    Screwed (Neji-shiki)

    Tsube

    Shark Skin Man and Peach Hip Girl

    Kuroo Samehada

    Rakka Suru Yugata

    1999

    Away with Words

    Asano Takashi

    Gemini

    Revenger with Sword

    Hakuchi

    Isawa

    One Step on a Mine, It's All Over

    Taizo Ichinose

    Gohatto

    Samurai Hyozo Tashiro

    2000

    Gojoe: Spirit War Chronicle

    Shanao

    Kaza-hana

    Sawaki

    Party 7

    Okita Souji

    2001

    Electric Dragon 80.000 V

    Dragon Eye Morrison

    Distance

    Sakata

    Ichi the Killer

    Kakihara

    2002

    Woman of Water

    Yusaku

    2003

    Bright Future

    Mamoru Arita

    My Grandpa

    S. Nakatoh

    Last Life in the Universe

    Kenji

    Zatoichi

    Hattori Gennosuke

    Dead End Run

    Café Lumière

    Hajime Takeuchi

    2004

    Tori

    Short film

    The Taste of Tea

    Ayano, the Uncle

    Vital

    Hiroshi Takagi

    The Face of Jizo

    Kinoshita

    Survive Style 5+

    Aman

    2005

    The Buried Forest

    San-chan

    Takeshis'

    My God, My God, Why Hast Thou Forsaken Me?

    Mizui

    Portrait of the Wind

    Tamio Murase

    Funky Forest

    Masaru Tanaka

    Rampo Noir

    Kogorô Akechi/Man/Masaki

    Tokyo Zombie

    Fujio

    2006

    Invisible Waves

    Kyôji

    Hana

    Jubei Kanazawa

    2007

    Mongol

    Temujin

    Sad Vacation

    Kenji Shiraishi

    2008

    Kabei: Our Mother

    Yamazaki Toru

    R246 Story

    Yume no Mani Mani

    Black Marketeer

    2009

    42 One Dream Rush

    Short film

    Mt. Tsurugidake

    Shibasaki

    Dumbeast

    Dekogawa

    Redline

    Frisbee (voice)

    Villon's Wife

    Otani

    Snow Prince

    Haigo

    2010

    Wandering Home

    Vengeance Can Wait

    Hidenori Yamane

    2011

    Gekkō no Kamen

    Okamoto

    Thor

    Hogun

    Korede Iinoda! Eiga Akatsuka Fujio

    Fujio Akatsuka

    A Ghost of a Chance

    Ken'ichi Kido

    2012

    Battleship

    Captain Yugi Nagata

    Anata e

    A Terminal Trust

    Takai

    Fly with the Gold

    Kitagawa

    2013

    Thor: The Dark World

    Hogun

    47 Ronin[1]

    Lord Kira

    The Kiyosu Conference

    Maeda Toshiie

    2014

    Lupin III

    Inspector Koichi Zenigata

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    Dr. Ishi

    Parasyte: Part 1

    Goto

    2015

    Parasyte: Part 2

    Goto

    Grasshopper

    Kujira

    Journey to the Shore

    Yūsuke

    Haha to Kuraseba

    Kuroda

    2016

    Harmonium

    Yasaka

    Silence

    Interpreter

    The Wasted Times

    Watabe

    2017

    Dear Etranger

    Makoto Tanaka

    Thor: Ragnarok

    Hogun

    Shinjuku Swan II

    Masaki Taki

    2018

    The Outsider

    Kiyoshi

    Kuso-yarō to Utsukushiki Sekai

    Punk Samurai Slash Down

    Chayama Hanrō

    Kasane

    Kingo Habuta

    2019

    Chiwawa

    Sakata

    They Say Nothing Stays the Same

    Noroshi ga Yobu

    Short film

    Midway

    Rear Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi

    2020

    Minamata

    Tatsuo Matsumura

    Labyrinth of Cinema

    Lt. Sako

    Independence of Japan

    Jirō Shirasu

    2021

    Detective Chinatown 3

    Naoki Tanaka

    Chinese film

    Mortal Kombat

    Lord Raiden

    Kate

    Renji

    2023

    We're Broke, My Lord!

    Isogai Heihachirō

    Kubi

    Kuroda Kanbei

    [22]

    2024

    The Box Man

    [23]

    The Women in the Lakes

    Isami

    [24]

    Kanasando

    [25]

    2025

    Mortal Kombat 2

    Lord Raiden

    Post-production

    Television

    edit

    Year

    Title

    Role

    Network

    Notes

    1988

    Kinpachi-sensei

    Masahiro Azuma

    TBS

    1993

    Fried Dragon Fish

    Natsuro

    Fuji TV

    TV movie

    Haru no Ichizoku

    Tomoki

    NHK

    2006

    Japanorama

    Himself

    BBC Three

    Documentaries

    2011

    Sutekina Kakushi Dori: Kanzen Muketsu no Concierge

    Artist

    Fuji TV

    TV movie

    Yonimo kimyô na Monogatari

    Killer

    Fuji TV

    TV movie

    2017

    A Life: A Love

    Masao Danjō

    TBS

    2019

    Idaten

    Shōjirō Kawashima

    NHK

    Taiga drama

    2021

    Welcome Home, Monet

    Shinji Oikawa

    NHK

    Asadora

    2024

    Shōgun

    Kashigi Yabushige

    FX on Hulu

    Miniseries

    Video games

    edit

    Year

    Title

    Role

    Developer

    Notes

    2011

    Shadows of the Damned

    Garcia Hotspur

    Grasshopper Manufacture

    Debut video game dubbing role

    References

    edit
    1. ^ a b Keanu's 47 Ronin has A-List Japanese Cast Japan-Zone.com March 2, 2011
  • ^ a b c "Tokyo Psycho". Time Magazine. October 21, 2002. Archived from the original on January 28, 2011. Retrieved November 30, 2012.
  • ^ "Profile: Kujun". anore. Archived from the original on March 6, 2018. Retrieved November 30, 2012.
  • ^ Golovnina, Maria (January 25, 2008). "Mongol actress from soldier dreams to Oscar buzz". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Retrieved November 10, 2008.
  • ^ Hadfield, James (July 7, 2011). "Tadanobu Asano: The Interview". Time Out Tokyo. Archived from the original on January 25, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2011.
  • ^ "Thor Update: Warriors Three Cast". Marvel. November 16, 2009. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
  • ^ Clark, Noelene (August 2, 2012). "'Thor: The Dark World': Christopher Eccleston is villain Malekith". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on August 8, 2012. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  • ^ "Thor: Ragnarok Press Kit" (PDF). Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2017. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  • ^ Kit, Borys; Galuppo, Mia (August 16, 2019). "'Mortal Kombat' Movie Adds Fistful of Fighters (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
  • ^ Petski, Denise (September 30, 2021). "'Shōgun': Anna Sawai Joins Hiroyuki Sanada & Cosmo Jarvis In FX Limited Series; Full Cast Set". Deadline. Retrieved October 1, 2021.
  • ^ Donat, Begoña (January 30, 2004). "Johnny Depp tiene un primo japonés (Johnny Depp has a Japanese Cousin)". El Mundo (in Spanish). Retrieved October 28, 2008.
  • ^ Mes, Tom (June 24, 2002). "Tadanobu Asano". Midnight Eye. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
  • ^ Wallace, Bruce (June 13, 2008). "12th century leader, 21st century ideas". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
  • ^ "Chara". November 9, 2000. Archived from the original on November 9, 2000.[dead link]
  • ^ "浅野忠信の息子・佐藤緋美、ドラマ初出演「楽しくてとてもいい経験に」". Oricon. January 27, 2019. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  • ^ "Tadanobu Asano, Chara divorce". Tokyograph. July 24, 2009. Retrieved October 17, 2009.
  • ^ "浅野忠信と中田クルミが18歳差結婚「愛と笑顔が溢れる日々を」14年に交際報道/デイリースポーツ online". デイリースポーツ online (in Japanese). Archived from the original on March 6, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
  • ^ "浅野忠信&中田クルミ結婚発表、18歳差婚「幸せな報告ができてうれしい」" [Tadanobu Asano & Kurumi Nakata announce their marriage, 18 years apart: "I'm happy to report this happy news"]. スポーツ報知 (in Japanese). August 23, 2022. Archived from the original on November 26, 2023. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  • ^ Riggs, Thomas (2007). Contemporary Theatre, Film & Television. Gale Cengage Learning. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-7876-9050-2.
  • ^ "Venice 2003 festival winners list". Screen Daily. September 6, 2003. Archived from the original on March 24, 2024. Retrieved March 24, 2024.
  • ^ "36 MIFF Prizes". MIFF. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
  • ^ "北野武監督『首』今秋公開決定!ティザービジュアルが解禁!". Fan's Voice. April 15, 2023. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
  • ^ "永瀬正敏「20数年の思いこめて」安部公房さん原作映画「箱男」主演 共演は浅野忠信、佐藤浩市". Nikkan Sports. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  • ^ "湖の女たち". eiga.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
  • ^ "かなさんどー". eiga.com. Retrieved April 15, 2024.
  • [1]

    Bibliography

    edit
    edit
  •   Asia
  •   Film
  •   Television
  •   Biography
    1. ^ "Thor: Ragnarok Press Kit" (PDF). Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 3, 2018. Retrieved October 9, 2017.

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tadanobu_Asano&oldid=1232585488"
     



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