Takashi Shimura(1905-1982)
- Actor
Japanese character actor Takashi Shimura was one of the finest film
actors of the 20th century and a leading member of the "stock company"
of master director Akira Kurosawa. A
native of southern Japan, Shimura was a descendant of the samurai
warrior class. Following university training, he founded a theatre
company, Shichigatsu-za ("July Theatre"). In 1930 he joined a
professional company, Kindai-za ("Modern Theatre"). Four years later he
signed with the Kinema Shinko film studio. He found a niche playing
samurai roles for various studios, then signed a long-term contract
with Toho Studios in 1943. He appeared in an average of six films a
year for Toho over the next four decades. His greatest critical acclaim
came in more than 20 roles for Kurosawa, though he is almost as well
recognized outside Japan for his kindly doctor role in the original
"Godzilla" (Godzilla (1954)). Shimura's
triumph was his unforgettable performance as a dying bureaucrat in
Kurosawa's Ikiru (1952). He continued to
act steadily, in good films and bad, almost until his death,
culminating with Kurosawa's
Kagemusha: The Shadow Warrior (1980). He is often described
as filling the spot for Kurosawa that
Ward Bond filled for
John Ford--an ever-present and
reliable character player who consistently supplied a solidity and
strength to whatever film he appeared in. Shimura was definitely a finer actor than Bond, of the most versatile "chameleons" in the world cinema, a great artist with enormous range in sublime interpretations, from Ikiru (1952)'s
diffident clerk to the leader of the Seven Samurai in Kurosawa's
Seven Samurai (1954).
He died in 1982, a reluctant icon of Japanese cinema.