Chieko Nakakita(1926-2005)
- Actress
A character actress who never quite got her due, despite roles in
numerous high-profile movies from the 1940s onward. Although a vigorous
participant in Toho's labor disputes of that early period, like so many
others she never really left, in part because she had married studio
producer Tomoyuki Tanaka. An excellent performer with a lively and genuine
presence, Nakakita was never fated for great stardom, although Akira Kurosawa
early on spotted her potential as a realistic romantic lead, and cast
her as the optimistic girlfriend in One Wonderful Sunday (1947). A superlative later
performance appeared in Sekai daisensô (1961), in which she essayed the role of a
single mother vainly struggling across Tokyo to be reunited with her
young daughter before war breaks out. For the most part however, she
appeared to come to regard acting as more of a hobby than a profession,
turning up in bit roles for Toho movies of all kinds, usually in the
kind of maternal roles for which she was extremely suited, many of them
produced by her husband, although it would be mistaken to assume that
someone with her obvious talent had to rely on Tanaka just to get a
job. By the end of the 1960s she appears to have retired altogether,
and concentrated on her family.