Akihiko Hirata(1927-1984)
- Actor
He had an unusual background for an actor: his formal education began
in a kindergarten founded by the wartime-era Japanese Imperial Army,
and continued in a military academy which was Tokyo's answer to West
Point. Upon graduating from Tokyo University (Japan's most
prestigious), Hirata confounded many family expectations of him by
pursuing a career in acting. His first roles in Tetsuwan namida ari (1953) and The Last Embrace (1953) brought him to the attention of director
Ishirô Honda, who promptly cast Hirata first in his WW2 romance
Farewell Rabaul Saraba Rabauru (1954) and then, later that year, in the role that
would come to define Hirata's career: the tormented, one-eyed scientist
Daisuke Serizawa, who alone has figured out a way to destroy the
monster Gojira Godzilla (1954). That movie made stars out of all of the younger actors
who were fortunate enough to star in it, though Hirata tended more
towards second leads and character parts. He was often called the
best-known of all actors to appear in Gojira movies (he would turn up
in six of the sequels), but this was due as much to his popularity with
directors as with his exposure through the monster movies. He was a
favorite of directors Ishiro Honda, Jun Fukuda, Hiroshi Inagaki, and
much beloved by virtually all the actors who knew him: honest and
humorous, highly intellectual but never pretentious. He appeared in
literally every kind of movie Toho Studios made, from the monster
pictures to samurai dramas (including his one movie for Akira Kurosawa,
Sanjuro (1962)) to war dramas to comedies. Still, he remained identified most
directly in the public's mind with the original Gojira; his character
Serizawa is among the best remembered and most admired in all Japanese
films, both inside Japan and out. Hirata was chosen by Toho to announce
the monster's return in Godzilla 1985 (1985), and was tapped for a major role;
but he died tragically of lung cancer before he could begin
shooting.