Setsuko Hara


Setsuko Hara was a Japanese actress. In the West, she is best known for her performances in Yasujirō Ozu's films Late Spring and Tokyo Story, although she had already appeared in 67 films before working with Ozu.

Early career

Setsuko Hara was born Masae Aida in what is now Hodogaya-ku, Yokohama in a family with three sons and five daughters. Her elder sister was married to film director Hisatora Kumagai, which gave her an entry into the world of the cinema: he encouraged her to drop out of school, which she did and went to work for Nikkatsu Studios in Tamagawa, outside Tokyo, in 1935. She debuted at the age of 15 with a stage name that the studio gave her in Do Not Hesitate Young Folks!
She came to prominence as an actress in the 1937 German-Japanese co-production Die Tochter des Samurai, known in Japan as Atarashiki Tsuchi, directed by Arnold Fanck and Mansaku Itami. In the film, Hara plays a woman who unsuccessfully attempts to immolate herself in a volcano. She continued to portray tragic heroines in many of her films until the end of World War II, like “The Suicide Troops of the Watchtower” and “The Green Mountains”, directed by Tadashi Imai, and “Toward the Decisive Battle in the Sky,” directed by Kunio Watanabe.

Postwar career

Hara remained in Japan after 1945 and continued making anti-communist films. She starred in Akira Kurosawa’s first postwar film, No Regrets for Our Youth. She also worked with director Kimisaburo Yoshimura in A Ball at the Anjo House and Keisuke Kinoshita in Here’s to the Girls. In all of these films, she was portrayed as the “new” Japanese woman, looking forward to a bright future. However, in most of her movies, especially those directed by Yasujirō Ozu and Mikio Naruse she plays the typical Japanese woman, as either daughter, wife, or mother.
Hara’s first film of six with Yasujirō Ozu was Late Spring, and their collaboration would last for the next twelve years. In Late Spring, she plays Noriko, a devoted daughter who prefers to stay at home and take care of her father than to marry, despite the urgings of her family members. In Early Summer, she played an unrelated character also called Noriko, who wanted to get married, and finds the courage to do so without her family’s approval. This was followed by Tokyo Story, perhaps her and Ozu's best-known film, in which she played a widow, also called Noriko whose husband was killed in the war. Her devotion to her deceased husband worries her in-laws, who insist that she should move on and remarry.
Hara's last major role was Riku, the wife of Ōishi Yoshio, in the film .

Later years

Hara, who never married, is nicknamed "the Eternal Virgin" in Japan and is a symbol of the golden era of Japanese cinema of the 1950s. She quit acting in 1963, and subsequently led a secluded life in Kamakura, where many of her films with Ozu were made, refusing all interviews and photographs. For years, people would speculate about her reasons for leaving the public eye. Hara herself confessed during her final press conference that she never really enjoyed acting and was only using it as a means to support her family; however, many people continued to speculate over her possible romantic involvement with Ozu, or the possibility of failing eyesight.
After seeing a Setsuko Hara film, the novelist Shūsaku Endō wrote: "We would sigh or let out a great breath from the depths of our hearts, for what we felt was precisely this: Can it be possible that there is such a woman in this world?"
After more than half a century of seclusion, Hara died of pneumonia at a hospital in Kanagawa prefecture, on September 5, 2015, at the age of 95. Her death was not reported by the media until November 25 of that year due to her family only approaching them later. The anime film Millennium Actress, directed by Satoshi Kon, is partly based on her life, although it was produced and released more than a decade prior to her death.

Selected filmography