Wakayama Tomisaburo

Wakayama Tomisaburo

Wakayama Tomisaburo (若山富三郎) was born on September 1, 1929. Wakayama Tomisaburo movies and tv shows: Lady Kasuga 1990 (Japan), Company Executives 1989 (Japan), Company-Sponsored Funeral 1989 (Japan), Samurai Reincarnation 1981 (Japan), The Phoenix 1978 (Japan)...

Profile

First Name: Masao
Family Name: Okumura
Native Name: 若山富三郎
Also Known As: Kenzaburo Jo;
Nationality: Japanese
Gender: Male
Born: September 1, 1929
Wakayama was born on September 1, 1929, in Fukagawa, a district in Tokyo, Japan. His father was Tohiji Katsu (or Katsutōji Kineya), a noted kabuki performer and nagauta singer, and the family as a whole were kabuki performers. He and his younger brother, Shintaro Katsu, followed their father in the theater. Wakayama tired of this; at the age of 13, he began to study judo, eventually achieving the rank of 4th dan black belt in the art.
In 1952, as part of the Azuma Kabuki troupe, Wakayama toured the United States of America for nine months. He gave up theater performance completely after his two-year term with the troupe was over. Wakayama taught judo until Toho recruited him as a new martial arts star in their jidaigeki movies. He prepared for these movies by practicing other disciplines, including kenpō, iaidō, kendo, and bōjutsu. All this helped him for roles in the television series The Mute Samurai, the 1975 television series Shokin Kasegi (The Bounty Hunter), and his most famous role: Ogami Ittō, the Lone Wolf.
Wakayama went on to star in many films, performing in a variety of roles. It has been estimated that he appeared in between 250 and 500 films. His only roles in American movies were as a baseball coach in The Bad News Bears Go to Japan (1978) and as a yakuza boss, Sugai, in Ridley Scott's Black Rain (1989).
Wakayama died of acute heart failure on April 2, 1992, in a hospital in Kyoto. He was survived by a son, Kiichiro Wakayama (born c. 1965), also an actor.

(Source: Wikipedia)