• Home

    Movies

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Now Playing
  • Upcoming
  • Top Rated

    TV Shows

  • Discover
  • Popular
  • Airing Today
  • On The Air
  • Top Rated

    People

  • Popular

    Trending

  • Movies
  • TV Shows
    Kyôko Kishida
    An image from A Thousand and One Nights, one of the productions that also features Kyôko Kishida.
    Kyôko Kishida

    Kyôko Kishida

    April 29, 1930 — Suginami, Tokyo, Japan

    Kyōko Kishida (April 29, 1930 – December 17, 2006) was a Japanese actress, voice actress, and writer of children's books.

    Her father was Kunio Kishida, a playwright and the founder of the Bungaku-za. She became an actress in 1950, and starred in a Yukio Mishima production of Salome (1960). Her film and television drama credits number in the hundreds. Among them are four Taiga drama series on NHK television, with roles such as Aguri (the wife of Asano Naganori and Yodo-Dono (the wife of Toyotomi Hideyoshi). She appeared in various roles, including acting and narrating, in various Ōoku series on television. In the series Gokenin Zankurō, she portrayed the mother of the title character (played by Ken Watanabe), and narrated a Lone Wolf and Cub television series.

    Kishida's film credits include Yasujirō Ozu's An Autumn Afternoon (1962), The Broken Commandment (based on a novel by Shimazaki Toson), Hiroshi Teshigahara's The Woman in the Dunes (1964) and The Face of Another (1966) (both from novels by Kōbō Abe), Kon Ichikawa's The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter (1987), based on the classic story, Heaven and Earth (1990), and Spring Snow, the 2005 Isao Yukisada adaptation of the Mishima novel.

    Anime fans know Kishida as the voice of Moomin in the original 1960s television series. She provided narration for Vampire Princess Miyu and Princess Tutu as well as the 2005 Book of the Dead. In addition, she dubbed roles for Columbo and Miss Marple, and narrated Prophecies of Nostradamus. Kishida appeared in commercials for Nestle, TDK, and Asahi Shimbun.

    Kyōko Kishida died on December 17, 2006 in Tokyo from respiratory failure caused by a brain tumor.

    Description above from the Wikipedia article Kyōko Kishida, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

    Woman in the Dunes

    Woman in the Dunes

    1964

    The Face of Another

    The Face of Another

    1966

    The Human Condition III: A Soldier's Prayer

    The Human Condition III: A Soldier's Prayer

    1961

    A Thousand and One Nights

    A Thousand and One Nights

    1969

    Manji

    Manji

    1964

    Rikyu

    Rikyu

    1989

    Princess Tutu

    Princess Tutu

    2002

    Bushido: The Cruel Code of the Samurai

    Bushido: The Cruel Code of the Samurai

    1963