Uraji Yamakawa


Uraji Yamakawa was a Japanese actress, also credited as Ura Mita.

Career

In 1912, she and her actor husband were co-founders of the Modern Theatre Society in Tokyo, formed to bring new Western works to Japanese audiences. In 1914, Yamakawa was considered one of "the foremost interpreters of roles in Western translations" among Japanese actresses. Among her notable roles were Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler, Gretchen in Goethe's Faust, and Lady Macbeth, in which role she gave "a most remarkably untraditional sleep-walking scene". The Modern Theatre Society ended in 1919, when the founders moved to the United States.
She had small roles in two films during her time in America: The Devil Dancer and Wu Li Chang.

Personal life

Uraji Yamakawa was married to fellow Japanese actor Sōjin Kamiyama; they lived in California while Sōjin was appearing in American films. After they separated, Yamakawa took bit parts, sold makeup, and cared for her adult son, Edward, who had tuberculosis. During this period, she was friends with novelist Toshiko Tamura. Yamakawa died in 1947, aged 62 years.