Tatsuya Nakadai

Tatsuya Nakadai
仲代 達矢
Nakadai in 2009
Born
Motohisa Nakadai
(仲代 元久, Nakadai Motohisa)

(1932-12-13)December 13, 1932
DiedNovember 8, 2025(2025-11-08) (aged 92)
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationActor
Years active1952–2025
Spouse
(m. 1957; died 1996)​
Children1
HonoursMedal with Purple Ribbon (1996)
Order of Culture (2015)

Tatsuya Nakadai (仲代 達矢, Nakadai Tatsuya; born Motohisa Nakadai; December 13, 1932 – November 8, 2025) was a Japanese actor. Widely regarded as one of the greatest actors in the history of cinema,[1][2][3] he collaborated extensively with many of Japan's best-known and acclaimed directors. In his over seven decade career, he appeared in more than 160 films,[4] and received numerous accolades. He was honored with a Medal with Purple Ribbon in 1996 and Japan's Order of Culture in 2015.

Discovered on the streets of Tokyo by director Masaki Kobayashi, Nakadai rose to prominence starring in Kobayashi's films, with his breakthrough being in the epic anti-war trilogy The Human Condition (1959–1961). He won the Blue Ribbon Award for Best Actor for his performance as the vengeful ronin in Harakiri (1962), a role he considered his finest. Nakadai collaborated on eleven films with Kobayashi—including Kwaidan (1964) and Samurai Rebellion (1967)—and five with Akira Kurosawa, most notably as the doomed warlord in Ran (1985), a performance that earned global acclaim. His other notable credits include Seven Samurai (1954), Conflagration (1958), When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (1960), Yojimbo (1961), Sanjuro (1962), High and Low (1963), The Sword of Doom, The Face of Another (both 1966), Kill! (1968), Goyokin (1969), Kagemusha (1980), and The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2013).

A lifelong stage actor, he founded the acting school Mumeijuku [ja] in 1975 and continued performing on stage into his nineties.

Early life

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Tatsuya Nakadai was born on December 13, 1932, in Tokyo as the second of four children and was raised in Chiba. His father worked as a bus driver, and after his death in 1941 due to tuberculosis, the family moved to Aoyama. His mother eventually began working as a live-in employee at a law firm in the Aoyama area of Akasaka Ward (now Minato Ward, Tokyo), and he transferred to Seinan Elementary School in Aoyama Minamimachi. During the war, he left his mother in Aoyama and evacuated to Daijisan Eikyuin Shoo-ji Temple in Sengawa, Chofu City. He often expressed his dissatisfaction with this situation. He later moved to Chitose-Karasuyama in the neighboring Setagaya Ward.

Career

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As a young man, Nakadai took up acting as a student at the Haiyuza Training School.[5] He made a brief and uncredited cameo in Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai where he is seen for a few seconds as a samurai walking through town.[6] Nakadai's role in Seven Samurai was technically his debut as The Thick-Walled Room's release was delayed for three years due to controversial subject matter. His major breakthrough as an actor came when he was given the part of Jo, a young yakuza in Black River, another film directed by Kobayashi. Nakadai continued to work with Kobayashi into the 1960s and won his first Blue Ribbon Award for his role in Harakiri (his personal favorite among his own films)[citation needed] as the aging rōnin Hanshiro Tsugumo.

he appeared in the Italian film Today We Kill... Tomorrow We Die! (1968), playing an American villain of Mexican-Indian descent rather than Asian descent. In the 1960s, he became a representative of the declining film industry and established himself in the theater world as a leading actor for the Haiyuza Theatre Company.

Nakadai appeared in two more Kurosawa films in the 1980s. In Kagemusha, Nakadai plays both the titular thief turned body-double and the famous daimyō Takeda Shingen whom the thief is tasked with impersonating. This dual role helped him win his second Blue Ribbon Award for Best Actor. In Ran, Nakadai plays another daimyō, Hidetora Ichimonji (loosely based on King Lear from Shakespeare's play King Lear and inspired by the historical daimyō Mōri Motonari).

He was also active in stage.[7] His final performance was in May 2025 in Noto, Ishikawa, as part of a stage tour.[8]

In 1975, he founded the acting school Mumeijuku [ja] with his wife Yasuko Miyazaki [ja].[9] There, he taught and trained promising young actors including Kōji Yakusho, Mayumi Wakamura, Azusa Watanabe, and Kenichi Takitō, among others.[10] In 1996, he received the Medal with Purple Ribbon, and in 2015, he received the Order of Culture.[1][9][11]

Personal life

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Nakadai and his wife expericed loss of stillbirth child in 1962. In 1978, he and Yasuko adopted Yasuko's niece Nao as a daughter because of the divorce of his sister-in-law Fusako and Fuji Television announcer Takeo Yamakawa.

Death

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Nakadai died from pneumonia in a Tokyo hospital on November 8, 2025, at the age of 92.[8][12][13] His death was disclosed three days later, on November 11.[5][14][15][16] Some sources erroneously claimed that he died on November 11, however, according to his talent agency, he died at 12:25 a.m. on November 8 (Japan Standard Time).[12] He had been hospitalized two weeks prior to his death due to injuries. His daughter was at his side at the time of his death.[8] It was announced that his funeral and memorial service would be held over the coming days, and that it would only be open to close relatives.[12]

Filmography

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Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Director Notes Ref.
1953 The Thick-Walled Room Prisoner Masaki Kobayashi Released 1956; uncredited [17]
1954 Seven Samurai Samurai Wandering Through Town Akira Kurosawa Uncredited [17]
1956 Hi no tori Keiichi Naganuma Umetsugu Inoue
Hadashi no Seishun Yūji Wada Senkichi Taniguchi
Sazae-san Norisuke Namino Nobuo Aoyagi
Oshidori no Ma Andō Keigo Kimura
1957 Black River Joe Masaki Kobayashi [17]
Oban Shin-don Yasuki Chiba
Untamed Kimura Mikio Naruse [17]
Hikage no Musume Motohashi Shūe Matsubayashi
Zoku Oban: Fuun hen Shin-don Yasuki Chiba
A Dangerous Hero (Kiken na eiyu) Imamura Hideo Suzuki
Zokuzoku Oban: Dotou hen Shin-don Yasuki Chiba
Sazae's Youth (Sazae-san no seishun) Norisuke Namino Nobuo Aoyagi
1958 A Boy and Three Mothers Kensaku Seiji Hisamatsu [17]
All About Marriage (Kekkon no subete) Akira Nakayama Kihachi Okamoto [17]
Go and Get It (Buttsuke honban) Hara Kozo Saeki [17]
Conflagration (Enjō) Togari Kon Ichikawa [17]
Naked Sun Jirō Maeda Miyoji Ieki [17]
1959 The Human Condition: No Greater Love Kaji Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
Odd Obsession Kimura Kon Ichikawa [17]
The Human Condition: Road to Eternity Kaji Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
Yaju shisubeshi Kunihiko Date Eizo Sugawa Lead role
Three Dolls in Ginza (Ginza no onéchan) Kyōsuke Tamura Toshio Sugie
An'ya Kōro Kaname Shirō Toyoda
1960 When a Woman Ascends the Stairs (Onna ga Kaidan wo Noboru Toki) Kenichi Komatsu Mikio Naruse [17]
Daughters, Wives, and a Mother (Musume tsuma haha) Shingo Kuroki Mikio Naruse [17]
The Blue Beast (Aoi yaju) Yasuhiko Kuroki Hiromichi Horikawa [17]
Get 'em All ("Minagoroshi no uta" yori kenju-yo saraba!) Tsubota Eizō Sugawa [17]
1961 As a Wife, As a Woman (Tsuma to shite onna to shite) Minami Mikio Naruse [17]
Yōjimbō Unosuke Akira Kurosawa [17]
The Human Condition: A Soldier's Prayer Kaji Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
Kumo ga chigieru toki James Kimura Heinosuke Gosho [17]
Immortal Love Heibei Keisuke Kinoshita [17]
1962 Sanjuro Muroto Hanbei Akira Kurosawa [17]
Love Under the Crucifix (Oginsama) Takayama Ukon Kinuyo Tanaka Lead role [17]
The Inheritance (Karami-ai) Kikuo Furukawa Masaki Kobayashi [17]
Harakiri Tsugumo Hanshirō Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
Madame Aki Uojirō Tatsumi Shirō Toyoda
1963 High and Low Chief Detective Tokura Akira Kurosawa [17]
Pressure of Guilt (Shiro to kuro) Ichirō Hamano Hiromichi Horikawa Lead role [17]
Legacy of the 500,000 Mitsuru Gunji Toshiro Mifune [17]
Miren Ryōta Kinoshita Yasuki Chiba
A Woman's Life (Onna no rekishi) Takashi Akimoto Mikio Naruse [17]
1964 Arijigoku sakusen Ishiki Takashi Tsuboshima Lead role
Kwaidan Minokichi Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
1965 Saigo no shinpan Jirō Hiromichi Horikawa Lead role
Fort Graveyard (Chi to suna) Sakuma Kihachi Okamoto [17]
Illusion of Blood Iemon Shirō Toyoda Lead role [17]
1966 Cash Calls Hell (Gohiki no shinshi) Oida Hideo Gosha Lead role [17]
The Sword of Doom Ryunosuke Tsukue Kihachi Okamoto Lead role [17][18]
The Face of Another Mr. Okuyama Hiroshi Teshigahara Lead role [17]
The Daphne (Jinchoge) Professor Kanahira Yasuki Chiba [17]
1967 The Age of Assassins (Satsujin kyo jidai) Shinji Kikyo Kihachi Okamoto Lead role [17]
Kojiro Miyamoto Musashi Hiroshi Inagaki [17]
Samurai Rebellion Asano Tatewaki Masaki Kobayashi [17]
Japan's Longest Day Narrator Kihachi Okamoto
1968 Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Die! James Elfego Tonino Cervi [17]
Kill! Genta Kihachi Okamoto Lead role [17]
Admiral Yamamoto Narrator Seiji Maruyama [17][19]
The Human Bullet Narrator Kihachi Okamoto [17]
1969 Goyokin Magobei Hideo Gosha Lead role [17]
Eiko's 5000 Kilograms (Eiko e no 5,000 kiro) Takeuchi Koreyoshi Kurahara
Battle of the Japan Sea Akashi Motojiro Seiji Maruyama [17]
Hitokiri Takechi Hanpeita Hideo Gosha
Blood End (Tengu-to) Sentarō Satsuo Yamamoto Lead role
Portrait of Hell Yoshihide Shirō Toyoda Lead role [17]
1970 Duel at Ezo (Ezo yakata no ketto) Daizennokami Honjo Kengo Furusawa [17]
Bakumatsu Nakaoka Shintarō Daisuke Itō
The Scandalous Adventures of Buraikan Kataoka Naojirō Masahiro Shinoda [17]
Zatoichi Goes to the Fire Festival Ronin Kenji Misumi [17]
Will to Conquer (Tenka no abarembo) Yoshida Tōyō Seiji Maruyama [17]
1971 Inn of Evil (Inochi boni furo) Sadashichi Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
Battle of Okinawa Colonel Hiromichi Yahara Kihachi Okamoto Lead role [17]
The Wolves (Shussho Iwai) Seji Iwahashi Hideo Gosha Lead role
1973 Osho Sekine Hiromichi Horikawa
The Human Revolution Nichiren Toshio Masuda
Rise, Fair Sun Sakuzo Kei Kumai Lead role [17]
1974 Karei-naru Ichizoku Teppei Manpyō Satsuo Yamamoto Lead role
1975 The Gate of Youth (Seishun no mon) Jūzō Ibuki Kirio Urayama
Tokkan Hijikata Toshizō Kihachi Okamoto
I Am a Cat (Wagahai wa neko de aru) Kushami Chin'no Kon Ichikawa Lead role
Kinkanshoku Yasuo Hoshino Satsuo Yamamoto Lead role
1976 Banka Setsuo Katsuragi Yoshisuke Kawasaki
Zoku ningen kakumei Nichiren Toshio Masuda
Fumō Chitai Tadashi Iki Satsuo Yamamoto Lead role
1977 Sugata Sanshiro Shōgorō Yano Kihachi Okamoto
1978 Blue Christmas Minami Kihachi Okamoto [17]
Queen Bee (Jo-oh-bachi) Ginzo Daidoji Kon Ichikawa [17]
Bandits vs. Samurai Squadron Kumokiri Nizaemon Hideo Gosha Lead role [17]
Hi no Tori (Hi no tori) Ninigi Kon Ichikawa [17]
1979 Hunter in the Dark (Yami no karyudo) Gomyo Kiyoemon Hideo Gosha Lead role [17]
1980 Kagemusha Takeda Shingen / Kagemusha Akira Kurosawa Lead role [17]
The Battle of Port Arthur (also known as 203 kochi) General Nogi Maresuke Toshio Masuda Lead role [17][20]
1981 Willful Murder Yashiro Kei Kumai Lead role [17]
1982 Onimasa Masagoro Kiryuin Hideo Gosha Lead role
1984 Fireflies in the North Takeshi Tsukigata Hideo Gosha Lead role [17]
1985 Ran Lord Hidetora Ichimonji Akira Kurosawa Lead role [17]
The Empty Table (Shokutaku no nai ie) Nobuyuki Kidoji Masaki Kobayashi Lead role [17]
1986 Atami satsujin jiken Denbei Nikaido Kazuo Takahashi Lead role
Michi Seiji Tajima Koreyoshi Kurahara Lead role [17]
1987 Hachiko Monogatari Hidejiro Ueno Seijirō Kōyama Lead role [17]
1988 Return from the River Kwai Major Harada Andrew V. McLaglen
Oracion (Yushun) Heihachiro Wagu Shigemichi Sugita [17]
1989 Four Days of Snow and Blood (Ni-ni-roku) Hajime Sugiyama Hideo Gosha [17]
1991 Heat Wave (Kagero) Tsunejiro Murai Hideo Gosha
Florence My Love Sakazaki Seiji Izumi
1992 The Wicked City Daishu (Yuen Tai Chung) Mak Tai-Kit
Basara – The Princess Goh (Goh-hime) Furuta Oribe Hiroshi Teshigahara
Tōki Rakujitsu Sakae Kobayashi Seijirō Kōyama [17]
1993 Lone Wolf and Cub: Final Conflict Yagyu Retsudo Akira Inoue
Summer of the Moonlight Sonata (Gekko no natsu) Kazama (postwar) Seijirō Kōyama
1995 East Meets West Katsu Rintarō Kihachi Okamoto
1996 Miyazawa Kenji sono ai Seijirō Miyazawa Seijirō Kōyama
1999 After the Rain Tsuji Gettan Takashi Koizumi
Spellbound Hideaki Sasaki Masato Harada
2001 Vengeance for Sale (Sukedachi-ya Sukeroku) Umetaro Katakura Kihachi Okamoto
2002 To Dance With the White Dog (Shiroi inu to Waltz wo) Eisuke Nakamoto Takashi Tsukinoki Lead role
Dawn of a New Day: The Man Behind VHS Konosuke Matsushita Kiyoshi Sasabe
2003 Like Asura Kotaro Takezawa Yoshimitsu Morita
2005 Yamato Katsumi Kamio (75 years old) Junya Sato
2006 The Inugamis Sahei Inugami Kon Ichikawa
2009 Listen to My Heart Kyozo Hayami Shinichi Mishiro
2010 Haru's Journey Tadao Nakai Masahiro Kobayashi Lead role
Zatoichi: The Last Tendo Junji Sakamoto [5]
2012 Until The Break Of Dawn Sadayuki Akiyama Yūichirō Hirakawa
2013 Human Trust Nobuhiko Sasakura Junji Sakamoto
2015 Yuzuriha no koro Kenichiro Miya Mineko Okamoto
A Duel Tale (Hatashiai) Shoji Sanosuke Shigemichi Sugita Lead role
2017 Lear on the Shore Chōkitsu Kuwabatake Masahiro Kobayashi Lead role
2018 The Negotiator: Behind The Reversion of Okinawa Narrator Tsuyoshi Yanagawa
2019 Kikyo – The Return Unokichi Shigemichi Sugita Lead role [21]
2020 The Pass: Last Days of the Samurai Makino Tadayuki Takashi Koizumi [22]

Animated film

[edit]
Year Title Role Director Notes Ref.
1973 Kanashimi no Belladonna The Devil Eiichi Yamamoto
1983 Final Yamato Narrator Tomoharu Katsumata / Yoshinobu Nishizaki / Takeshi Shirado / Toshio Masuda
2013 The Tale of the Princess Kaguya Sumiyaki no Roujini Isao Takahata [5]
2014 Giovanni's Island[23] Junpei Senō (Old) Mizuho Nishikubo

Theater

[edit]
Year Title Role Director Notes Ref.
1964 Hamlet Hamlet Koreya Senda [5]
1968 Yotsuya Kaidan Tamiya Iemon Eitaro Ozawa
1971 Othello Othello Koreya Senda [5]
1974 Richard III Richard Toshikiyo Masumi [5]
1975 The Lower Depths Satine Toshikiyo Masumi
1978 Oedipus Rex Oedipus Tomoe Ryu (Yasuko Miyazaki)
1982 Macbeth Macbeth Tomoe Ryu (Yasuko Miyazaki) [5]
1990 Cyrano de Bergerac Cyrano de Bergerac Tomoe Ryu (Yasuko Miyazaki)
2000 Death of a Salesman William "Willy" Loman Kiyoto Hayashi [5]
2001 The Merry Wives of Windsor John Falstaff Kiyoto Hayashi
2005 Driving Miss Daisy Hoke Ikumi Tanno
2008 Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes Ikumi Tanno [5]
2010 John Gabriel Borkman John Gabriel Borkman Tamiya Kuriyama
2013 Bluebeard's Castle The Bard Michiyoshi Inoue
2014 Barrymore John Barrymore Ikumi Tanno [5]
2014 Romeo and Juliet Father Lawrence Ikumi Tanno

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1971 Shin Heike Monogatari Taira no Kiyomori Lead role, Taiga drama
1977 Castle of Sand Eitaro Imanishi Lead role
1990 13 Assassins (Jusan-nin no Shikaku) Shimada Shinzaemon Lead role
1995 Daichi no Ko Kōji Matsumoto Lead role
1996 Hideyoshi Sen no Rikyū Taiga drama [24]
2004 Socrates in Love Kentarō Matsumoto Special appearance
2007 Fūrin Kazan Takeda Nobutora Taiga drama [25]
2014 Zainin no Uso Kenzō Haneda
2015 Haretsu Kuraki
Hatashiai Sanosuke Lead role, TV movie
2016 Kyoaku wa Nemurasenai Yōhei Tachibana
Cold Case
2017 Henkan Kōshōnin Narrator TV movie

Honours

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ a b Rahman, Abid (24 October 2019). "Tokyo: Tatsuya Nakadai Set to Receive Lifetime Achievement Honor". The Hollywood Reporter.
  2. ^ Mermelstein, David (2025-11-13). "Remembering Tatsuya Nakadai, Japan's Man of a Thousand Faces". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2025-12-15.
  3. ^ Ramsden, Kristian (2025-11-13). "The golden age of Japanese cinema: 5 Tatsuya Nakadai films you must see". The Conversation. Retrieved 2025-12-15.
  4. ^ Nakadai, Tatsuya (2016-11-17). "Interview: The Legendary Nakadai Tatsuya on Counterculture Cinema and Japan's Current Nationalism". ScreenAnarchy. Interviewed by Diva Vélez. Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Murphy 2025.
  6. ^ Stephens, Chuck (11 December 2019). "The Eighth Samurai: Tatsuya Nakadai". Current. Retrieved 2013-10-10.
  7. ^ "Tatsuya Nakadai". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2013-10-08.
  8. ^ a b c "仲代達矢さん最期の様子 ケガして入院、肺炎を併発 8日に死去、最後の舞台は5月能登での復興公演 - スポニチ Sponichi Annex 芸能". スポニチ Sponichi Annex (in Japanese). Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  9. ^ a b Lin, Weiwen (2025-11-11). "Renowned Japanese actor Tatsuya Nakadai dies at 92". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  10. ^ "無名塾公演「おれたちは天使じゃない」 @ウェスタ川越 大ホール". ARK. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved September 15, 2015.
  11. ^ a b "仲代達矢に文化勲章 高倉健さん以来の俳優5人目". Sanspo. 31 October 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
  12. ^ a b c "【 訃報 】 仲代達矢さん 死因は肺炎 亡くなる前にケガをして入院 葬儀・告別式は近親者のみ". TBS NEWS DIG (in Japanese). 2025-11-11. Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  13. ^ McCurry, Justin (11 November 2025). "Tatsuya Nakadai, Japanese actor of Ran, Yojimbo and Harakiri, dies aged 92". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 November 2025.
  14. ^ "Tatsuya Nakadai, Japanese Actor, Dies at 92; Appeared in Films Including "The Human Condition" and "Ran"". The Yomiuri Shimbun. 11 November 2025.
  15. ^ "俳優の仲代達矢さん死去、92歳 「人間の條件」「影武者」主演". Yahoo News. 2025-11-11. Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  16. ^ Jamieson, Wendell (2025-11-11). "Tatsuya Nakadai, Japanese Star Known for 'Ran' and Other Classics, Dies at 92". The New York Times. Retrieved 2025-11-11.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq Galbraith 1996, p. 48.
  18. ^ Galbraith, Stuart IV (16 May 2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. p. 227. ISBN 978-1-4616-7374-3.
  19. ^ "連合艦隊司令長官 山本五十六". eiga.com. Retrieved May 8, 2023.
  20. ^ The Battle of Port Arthur (203 Kochi) in the Internet Movie Database
  21. ^ "帰郷". eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 15 May 2025.
  22. ^ "峠 最後のサムライ". eiga.com. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  23. ^ "Full Trailer for I.G's Hand-Drawn Anime Film Giovanni's Island Posted". Anime News Network. 2013-12-18. Retrieved 2013-12-21.
  24. ^ "秀吉の出演者・キャスト一覧". The Television. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
  25. ^ "風林火山". Haiyaku Jiten. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
  26. ^ "仲代達矢、名誉都民の顕彰式に出席「思いがけない栄誉。これからも頑張って生きていきたい」小池百合子都知事から称号記を贈られる". Sports Hochi. October 2024. Retrieved 1 October 2024.
  27. ^ "俳優の故仲代達矢氏に従三位 11月に92歳で死去". Sankei Shimbun (in Japanese). 5 December 2025. Retrieved 6 December 2025.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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