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  1. Jūzō Itami (伊丹十三, 'Itami Jūzō'?) (* 15 de mayo de 1933; † 20 de diciembre de 1997). Nombre real, Yoshihiro Ikeuchi. Actor y director de cine japonés, nacido en la Ciudad de Matsuyama, en la Prefectura de Ehime.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Juzo_ItamiJuzo Itami - Wikipedia

    Juzo Itami (伊丹 十三, Itami Jūzō), born Yoshihiro Ikeuchi (池内 義弘, Ikeuchi Yoshihiro, May 15, 1933 – December 20, 1997), was a Japanese actor, screenwriter and film director. He directed eleven films (one short and ten features), all of which he wrote himself. He is the namesake of the Juzo Itami Award, founded in 2009 to honor his legacy. Early life.

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0411631Jûzô Itami - IMDb

    Jûzô Itami (1933-1997) Actor. Writer. Director. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. A tragic end belies a life led with purpose. The son of a successful filmmaker, Juzo Itami made his name acting in television and films before making a late career shift into screenwriting and directing at age 50.

  4. 1 de may. de 2024 · Dec. 20, 1997, Tokyo (aged 64) Itami Jūzō (born May 15, 1933, Kyōto, Japan—died Dec. 20, 1997, Tokyo) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter. He had a successful 20-year career as an actor in films such as 55 Days at Peking (1963), an American vehicle, before venturing into directing.

  5. Directed by Juzo Itami • 1995 • Japan Starring Atsuro Watanabe, Hinako Saeki, Masayuki Imai. Based on a novel by Nobel prizewinner Kenzaburo Oe (the brother-in-law of director Juzo Itami) this radically empathetic melodrama—inspired by the story of the writer’s own children—evokes the world of a ...

  6. www.wikiwand.com › es › Jūzō_ItamiJūzō Itami - Wikiwand

    Jūzō Itami . Nombre real, Yoshihiro Ikeuchi. Actor y director de cine japonés, nacido en la Ciudad de Matsuyama, en la Prefectura de Ehime.

  7. Biography. Jūzō Itami (1933–1997) was a Japanese actor and, later, a popular modern screenwriter and film director. Many critics came to regard him as Japan's greatest director since Akira Kurosawa. His ten feature-length movies and one short film, all of which he wrote himself, are comic satires on elements of Japanese culture.