
Schauspiel
Auch bekannt als: Сёдзо Окада, Хикару Яманоути, Sōzō Okada
Geburtsdatum
15. Juni 1903
Todesdatum
1. September 1983
(verstorben mit 80)
Geburtsort
Tokyo, Japan
Beliebtheit
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Sōzō Okada (岡田 桑三), widely recognized by his acting pseudonym Hikaru Yamanouchi (山内光), was a Japanese actor and producer who played a significant role in both the performing and visual arts of Japan. Born on June 15, 1903, his early life was distinctly shaped by extensive international travel during the 1920s and 1930s, aided by his English ancestry through his grandfather. He initially aspired to be a painter and studied in Germany from 1920 to 1923. Upon returning to Japan, he integrated into the Shochiku studio and began a successful cinematic career under the stage name Hikaru Yamanouchi. Displaying great versatility, he became a highly prolific actor, appearing in nearly 80 films between 1926 and 1940. During this era, he starred in notable productions such as Reijin (1930), Nihon josei no uta (1934), Street Without End (1934), Kajuen no onna (1935), and Courant chaud (1939). Despite his commercial success on screen, Okada maintained a profound interest in the European avant-garde and visual experimentation. In 1929, he traveled to Moscow to study avant-garde cinema, where he met director Sergei Eisenstein and was deeply marked by Soviet photojournalism and Russian constructivism. That same year in Stuttgart, he attended the original Deutscher Werkbund Film und Foto exhibition and successfully proposed to Asahi Shimbunsha to bring this groundbreaking itinerant exhibition to Japan. Driven by a desire to diffuse European avant-garde methods in his home country, he transitioned into production and cultural organization. He co-founded the Kokusai Kōga Kyōkai (International Photography Association) and actively engaged with international creative circles. Continuing his structural impact on Japanese visual media, he co-founded the influential Nippon-Kobo collective in 1933, and later founded the Tokyo Cinema studio, which became the pinnacle of his producing career in the field of documentary filmmaking. Following a multifaceted career that bridged the golden era of screen acting with pioneering documentary and photographic production, he died on September 1, 1983.


1936

1935
1926

Clerk B
1936

1936

1931

Literary faculty member
1939

Hiroshi Yamanouchi
1934

1935

Arakawa
1937

1936
Shiro Kuroki
1930

1948

1938

1939
1932

Ryoichi Uchida
1934

Shuzo Katori
1930

Michiro, Tokiko's brother
1932
Kosaka
1930