Toshiro Mifune
Toshiro Mifune was a Japanese actor who appeared in over 150 feature films. He is best known for his 16-film collaboration with Akira Kurosawa in such works as Rashomon, Seven Samurai, The Hidden Fortress, Throne of Blood, and Yojimbo. He also portrayed Miyamoto Musashi in Hiroshi Inagaki's Samurai Trilogy and one earlier Inagaki film, Lord Toranaga in the NBC television miniseries Shōgun, and Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto in three different films.
Early life
Toshiro Mifune was born on 1 April 1920 in Qingdao, Shandong, China, which was at the time still under Japanese occupation following their capture of the city from German colonial rule during WWI. Hoping to preserve their control of the region, the Japanese government maintained a large garrison and encouraged Japanese citizens to move there with promises of important and rewarding work. Among the Japanese living there before the Republic of China took over the city in 1922 were Toshiro's parents, who were working as Methodist missionaries. Mifune grew up with his parents and two younger siblings in Dalian, Fengtian, and, from 4 to 19 years of age, in Manchukuo.In his youth, Mifune worked in the photography shop of his father Tokuzo, a commercial photographer and importer who had emigrated from northern Japan. After spending the first 19 years of his life in China, as a Japanese citizen, he was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army Aviation division, where he served in the Aerial Photography unit during World War II.
Early work
In 1947, one of Mifune's friends who worked for the Photography Department of Toho Productions suggested Mifune try out for the Photography Department. He was accepted for a position as an assistant cameraman.At this time, a large number of Toho actors, after a prolonged strike, had left to form their own company, Shin Toho. Toho then organized a "new faces" contest to find new talent. Mifune's friends submitted an application and photo, without his knowledge. He was accepted, along with 48 others, and allowed to take a screen test for Kajirō Yamamoto. Instructed to mime anger, he drew from his wartime experiences. Yamamoto took a liking to Mifune, recommending him to director Senkichi Taniguchi. This led to Mifune's first feature role, in Shin Baka Jidai.
Mifune first encountered director Akira Kurosawa when Toho Studios, the largest film production company in Japan, was conducting a massive talent search, during which hundreds of aspiring actors auditioned before a team of judges. Kurosawa was originally going to skip the event, but showed up when Hideko Takamine told him of one actor who seemed especially promising. Kurosawa later wrote that he entered the audition to see "a young man reeling around the room in a violent frenzy ... it was as frightening as watching a wounded beast trying to break loose. I was transfixed." When Mifune, exhausted, finished his scene, he sat down and gave the judges an ominous stare. He lost the competition but Kurosawa was impressed. "I am a person rarely impressed by actors," he later said. "But in the case of Mifune I was completely overwhelmed."
Marriage
Among Mifune's fellow performers, one of the 32 women chosen during the new faces contest was Sachiko Yoshimine. Eight years Mifune's junior, she came from a respected Tokyo family. They fell in love and Mifune soon proposed marriage.Director Senkichi Taniguchi, with the help of Akira Kurosawa, convinced the Yoshimine family to allow the marriage. The wedding took place in February 1950 at the Aoyama Gakuin Methodist Church. Yoshimine was a Buddhist but since Mifune was a Christian, they were married in church as per Christian tradition.
In November of the same year, their first son, Shirō was born. In 1955, they had a second son, Takeshi. Mifune's daughter was born to his mistress, actress Mika Kitagawa, in 1982.
Period of prosperity
His imposing bearing, acting range, facility with foreign languages and lengthy partnership with acclaimed director Akira Kurosawa made him the most famous Japanese actor of his time, and easily the best known to Western audiences. He often portrayed samurai or rōnin who were usually coarse and gruff, inverting the popular stereotype of the genteel, clean-cut samurai. In such films as Seven Samurai and Yojimbo, he played characters who were often comically lacking in manners, but replete with practical wisdom and experience, understated nobility, and, in the case of Yojimbo, unmatched fighting prowess. Sanjuro in particular contrasts this earthy warrior spirit with the useless, sheltered propriety of the court samurai. Kurosawa highly valued Mifune for his effortless portrayal of unvarnished emotion, once commenting that he could convey in only three feet of film an emotion for which the average Japanese actor would require ten feet.He was also known for the effort he put into his performances. To prepare for Seven Samurai and Rashomon, Mifune reportedly studied footage of lions in the wild; for Ánimas Trujano, he studied tapes of Mexican actors speaking, so he could recite all his lines in Spanish.
Mifune has been credited as originating the "roving warrior" archetype, which he perfected during his collaboration with Kurosawa. His martial arts instructor was Yoshio Sugino of the Tenshin Shōden Katori Shintō-ryū. Sugino created the fight choreography for films such as Seven Samurai and Yojimbo, and Kurosawa instructed his actors to emulate his movements and bearing.
Clint Eastwood was among the first of many actors to adopt this wandering ronin with no name persona for foreign films, which he used to great effect in his Western roles, especially in Spaghetti Westerns directed by Sergio Leone where he played the Man with No Name, a character similar to Mifune's seemingly-nameless ronin in Yojimbo.
Mifune may also be credited with originating the Yakuza archetype, with his performance as a mobster in Kurosawa's Drunken Angel, the first Yakuza film. Most of the sixteen Kurosawa–Mifune films are considered cinema classics. These include Drunken Angel, Stray Dog, Rashomon, Seven Samurai, The Hidden Fortress, High and Low, Throne of Blood, Yojimbo, and Sanjuro.
Mifune and Kurosawa finally parted ways after Red Beard. Several factors contributed to the rift that ended this career-spanning collaboration. Most of Mifune's contemporaries acted in several different movies throughout the year. Since Red Beard required Mifune to grow a natural beard — one he had to keep for the entirety of the film's two years of shooting — he was unable to act in any other films during the production. This put Mifune and his financially strapped production company deeply into debt, creating friction between him and Kurosawa. Although Red Beard played to packed houses in Japan and Europe, which helped Mifune recoup some of his losses, the ensuing years held varying outcomes for both Mifune and Kurosawa. After the film's release, the careers of each man took different arcs: Mifune continued to enjoy success with a range of samurai and war-themed films. In contrast, Kurosawa's output of films dwindled and drew mixed responses. During this time, Kurosawa attempted suicide. In 1980, Mifune experienced popularity with mainstream American audiences through his role as Lord Toranaga in the television miniseries Shogun. Yet Kurosawa did not rejoice in his estranged friend's success, and publicly made derisive remarks about Shogun''.
According to his daughter, Mifune turned down an offer from George Lucas to play either Darth Vader or Obi-Wan Kenobi.
Later life and death
Early in the 1980s, Mifune founded an acting school, Mifune Geijutsu Gakuin. The school failed after only three years, due to mismanaged finances.Mifune received wide acclaim in the West after playing Toranaga in the 1980 TV miniseries Shogun. However, the series' blunt portrayal of the Japanese shogunate and the greatly abridged version shown in Japan meant that it was not as well received in his homeland.
The relationship between Kurosawa and Mifune remained ambivalent. While Kurosawa made some very uncharitable comments about Mifune's acting, he also admitted in Interview magazine that "All the films that I made with Mifune, without him, they would not exist". He also presented Mifune with the Kawashita award which he himself had won two years prior. They finally made something of a reconciliation in 1993 at the funeral of their friend Ishirō Honda, though they never collaborated again.
In 1992, Mifune began suffering from a serious unknown health problem. It has been variously suggested that he destroyed his health with overwork, suffered a heart attack, or experienced a stroke. For whatever reason, he abruptly retreated from public life and remained largely confined to his home, cared for by his estranged wife Sachiko. When she succumbed to pancreatic cancer in 1995, Mifune's physical and mental state began to decline rapidly.
On Christmas Eve 1997, he died in Mitaka, Tokyo, of multiple organ failure at the age of 77. He was survived by his two sons, his daughter, a grandson and two granddaughters.
Honors
Mifune won Volpi Cup for Best Actor twice, in 1961 and 1965. Mifune was awarded the Medal of Honor with Purple Ribbon in 1986 and the Order of the Sacred Treasure by the Japanese government in 1993. In 1973 he was a member of the jury at the 8th Moscow International Film Festival. In 1977 he was a member of the jury at the 10th Moscow International Film Festival.On November 14, 2016, Mifune received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his work in the motion pictures industry, located at 6912 Hollywood Boulevard.
Personal quotations
Of Akira Kurosawa, Toshiro Mifune said, "I know. I have never as an actor done anything that I am proud of other than with him".Filmography
In 2015, Steven Okazaki released , a documentary chronicling Mifune's life and career. Due to variations in translation from the Japanese and other factors, there are multiple titles to many of Mifune's films. The titles shown here are the most common ones used in the United States, with the original Japanese title listed below it in parentheses. Mifune's filmography mainly consists of Japanese productions, unless noted otherwise.Films
||Special appearanceTelevision
All programs originally aired in Japan except for Shōgun which aired in the U.S. on NBC in September 1980 before being subsequently broadcast in Japan on TV Asahi from March 30 to April 6, 1981.Date | Title | Role | Notes |
1967.05.11 | He of the Sun | Himself | 1 episode |
1968–1969 | Five Freelance Samurai | Jirō Yoshikage Funayama | 6 episodes |
1971 | Daichūshingura | Kuranosuke Ōishi | All 52 episodes |
1972–1974 | Ronin of the Wilderness | Kujūrō Tōge | All 104 episodes, over two seasons |
1973 | Yojimbo of the Wilderness | Kujūrō Tōge | 5 episodes |
1975 | The Sword, the Wind, and the Lullaby | Jūzaburō Toride | All 27 episodes |
1976 | The Secret Inspectors | Naizen-no-shō Tsukumo/Izu-no-kami Nobuakira Matsudaira |松平伊豆守信明 | 10 episodes |
1976 | Ronin in a Lawless Town | Mister Danna | All 23 episodes |
1977.07.16 | Ōedo Sōsamō | Yūgen Ōtaki | 1 episode |
1978 | Falcons of Edo | Kanbei Uchiyama | All 38 episodes |
1979.04.02 | Edo o Kiru IV | Shūsaku Chiba | 1 episode special appearance |
1979 | Prosecutor Saburo Kirishima | Chief Prosecutor Mori | |
1979 | Akō Rōshi | Sakon Tachibana | 1 episode |
1979–1980 | Fangs of Edo | Gunbei Asahina | 3 episodes |
1979 | Hideout in Room 7 | Gōsuke Saegusa | |
1980 | Shōgun | Toranaga Yoshii | All 5 parts |
1980.12.27 | It's 8 O'Clock! Everybody Gather 'Round | Himself | 1 episode |
1981 | Sekigahara | Sakon Shima | All 3 parts |
1981–1982 | Ten Duels of Young Shingo | Tamon Umei | Two of three parts |
1981.07.09 | My Daughter! Fly on the Wings of Love and Tears | TV film | |
1981.09.29 | Tuesday Suspense Theater: The Spherical Wilderness | Kenichirō Nogami | TV film |
1981–1982 | Bungo Detective Story | Shūsaku Chiba | 5 episodes |
1981–1983 | The Lowly Ronin | Lowly Ronin Shūtō Shunka | TV film series, all 6 parts |
1982.09.19 | The Happy Yellow Handkerchief | Kenzō Shima | 1 episode |
1983 | The Brave Man Says Little | Ryūzō Kawana | All 4 episodes |
1983.11.03 | The Women of Osaka Castle | Tokugawa Ieyasu | TV film |
1983.11.10 | The Secret of Cruel Valley | Lowly Rōnin | TV film |
1984 | The Burning Mountain River | Otoshichi Amō | |
1984.04.02 | Okita Soji: Swordsman of Fire | Shūsai Kondō | TV film |
1984.08.26 | Toshiba Sunday Theater #1442: Summer Encounter | Takeya Ōnuki | TV film |
1987.09.10 | Masterpiece Jidaigeki: National Advisor Breakthrough! Hikozaemon Geki | Hikozaemon Ōkubo | 1 episode |
1990.04.20 | Heaven and Earth: Dawn Episode | Nagao Tamekage | TV film |