
출연
다른 이름: Такако Ириэ
생년월일
1911년 2월 7일
사망일
1995년 1월 12일
(83세에 사망)
출생지
Tokyo, Japan
인기도
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Takako Irie (入江 たか子 Irie Takako, 7 February 1911 – 12 January 1995) was a Japanese film actress. Born in Tokyo into the aristocratic Higashibōjō family (her birth name was Hideko Higashibōjō (東坊城 英子 Higashibōjō Hideko)), she graduated from Bunka Gakuin before debuting as an actress at Nikkatsu in 1927. She became a major star, even starting her own production company, Irie Productions, in 1932. One of Kenji Mizoguchi's silent film masterpieces, The Water Magician, was produced at that company with Irie starring. She appeared in many advertisements, as well as on fans and other commercial goods. Irie was also the subject of a folding screen painting by Nihonga artist Nakamura Daizaburō, which appeared in the 1930 Teiten (Imperial Exhibition), and which is today in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art; toy dolls were also produced based on this image. In the postwar period, Irie became known as a "ghost cat actress" (bakeneko joyū) for appearing in a series of kaidan (ghost story) movies. One of her late memorable roles was in Akira Kurosawa's Sanjuro, where she plays Mutsuta's wife, the lady who warns Sanjuro (Toshirō Mifune) that "the best sword stays in its scabbard".


Tatsu Fukamachi
1983

Self
1975

Michiko Nonoguchi, nurse
1934

1957
Workwoman
1930
1951

Mutsuta's wife
1962

1954

1953

1931
Ohama
1936

1944
1939

1935

1951

Toyomi
1937

Noriko Mizushima, dorm mother
1944
1938

1954

1954