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Hideko Takamine

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Hideko Takamine Famous memorial

Birth
Hakodate, Hakodate-shi, Hokkaido, Japan
Death
28 Dec 2010 (aged 86)
Tokyo, Tokyo Metropolis, Japan
Burial
Cremated, Ashes scattered. Specifically: Ashes scattered at her residence Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Actress. Called "Japan's Shirley Temple", she extended her film career over a long span of years. After making her silver screen bow in the 1929 silent "Mother", she had a steady succession of film roles, the depth of her assignments increasing with maturity. Takamine became a freelance performer in 1950 when she took the risk of breaking away from Japan's studio system; her gamble paid-off as she soon became her country's most popular screen actress. Out of a large number of appearances she is perhaps best remembered as a small town school teacher in 1954's "The Twenty-four Eyes", as an aging bar maid in the 1960 "When a Woman Ascends the Stairs", and as a farm girl forced into an arranged marriage in 1961's "Immortal Love". Honored often, she received four Mainichi Film Concours Best Actress Awards for "The Twenty-four Eyes" (1955), "Floating Clouds" (1956), "Times of Joy and Sorrow" (1958), and "Happiness of Us Alone" (1962). Following her 1979 screen retirement she became a respected essayist, and in 1996 she was presented a Japan Academy Prize Lifetime Achievement Award. Takamine died of lung cancer; a number of her movies have been preserved, though some were lost during World War II.
Actress. Called "Japan's Shirley Temple", she extended her film career over a long span of years. After making her silver screen bow in the 1929 silent "Mother", she had a steady succession of film roles, the depth of her assignments increasing with maturity. Takamine became a freelance performer in 1950 when she took the risk of breaking away from Japan's studio system; her gamble paid-off as she soon became her country's most popular screen actress. Out of a large number of appearances she is perhaps best remembered as a small town school teacher in 1954's "The Twenty-four Eyes", as an aging bar maid in the 1960 "When a Woman Ascends the Stairs", and as a farm girl forced into an arranged marriage in 1961's "Immortal Love". Honored often, she received four Mainichi Film Concours Best Actress Awards for "The Twenty-four Eyes" (1955), "Floating Clouds" (1956), "Times of Joy and Sorrow" (1958), and "Happiness of Us Alone" (1962). Following her 1979 screen retirement she became a respected essayist, and in 1996 she was presented a Japan Academy Prize Lifetime Achievement Award. Takamine died of lung cancer; a number of her movies have been preserved, though some were lost during World War II.

Bio by: Bob Hufford


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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Bob Hufford
  • Added: Jan 2, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63662205/hideko-takamine: accessed ), memorial page for Hideko Takamine (27 Mar 1924–28 Dec 2010), Find a Grave Memorial ID 63662205; Cremated, Ashes scattered; Maintained by Find a Grave.