Three Continents Festival Best Actor (shared), for Not Forgotten (2000)[1]
Tomio Aoki (青木 富夫, Aoki Tomio, October 7, 1923[2] – January 24, 2004)akaTokkan Kozō (突貫小僧) was a Japanese film actor.
Aoki became famous as a child actor after debuting at the age of six in silent films directed by Yasujirō Ozu.[3] His leading role in Ozu's 1929 short comedy Tokkan kozo gave Aoki his nickname. I Was Born, But... (1932), Passing Fancy (1933) and An Inn in Tokyo (1935) were three other Ozu films in which Aoki had notable roles. Aoki disappeared from Japanese cinema in 1940, at the age of 16, but returned to film acting in Kon Ichikawa's The Burmese Harp (1956). During the 1960s he appeared in films for directors Seijun Suzuki and Teruo Ishii before retiring again in 1972. He again returned to the screen in 1995 in Makoto Shinozaki's Okaeri, and appeared in Suzuki's Pistol Opera (2001). He continued appearing in films, and in short comedies by Shinozaki until his death in 2004. He shared the Best Actor award at the French Three Continents Festival with two of his co-stars for Shinozaki's Not Forgotten (2000).[1] By the time of his death, at the age of 80, Aoki had performed in over 300 films.[4]
^ abMes, Tom. "A Salute to Tomio Aoki". www.midnighteye.com. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
^日本映画俳優御写真/男優編1 (in Japanese). Asahi Shimbun. Retrieved 2009-01-04.
^Suzuki, Namiko. ""突貫小僧"青木富夫さん役者人生70年祝賀パーティー("Tokkan Kozo" Aoki Tomiosan yakusha jinsei 70nen shakuga paatii)" ["Tokkan Kozo" Actor Tomio Aoki's 70th Birthday Celebration] (in Japanese). www.cinematopics.com. Archived from the original on 2004-09-21. Retrieved 2009-01-27.
TomioAoki (青木 富夫, AokiTomio, October 7, 1923 – January 24, 2004) aka Tokkan Kozō (突貫小僧) was a Japanese film actor. Aoki became famous as a child actor...
とみお or katakana トミオ. TomioAoki (青木 富夫, 1923–2004), Japanese film actor Tomio Fujii (藤井 富雄, 1924–2021), Japanese politician Tomio Hora (洞 富雄, 1906–2000)...
51, American television and film director and producer, breast cancer. TomioAoki, 80, Japanese film actor, lung cancer. Gordon Brook-Shepherd, 85, British...
Nobuo Kaneko as Denbei, the owner of the Sagami-ya Masumi Okada as Kisuke TomioAoki as Chusuke Shōichi Ozawa as Kinzō, the book lender Shōbun Inoue as Genta...
Tamiyo Kusakari as Satoharu Eri Watanabe as Mameharu Naoto Takenaka as TomioAoki Masahiro Takashima as Yoshio Takai Gaku Hamada as Shuhei Nishino Ittoku...
Passalis, Anna Kalaitzidou I Was Born, But... Janus Films Hideo Sugawara, TomioAoki, Tatsuo Saitō Restrepo Outpost Films Tim Hetherington, Sebastian Junger...
Otaka (known as Emiko Yagumo prior to 1933) Yoshiko Tsubouchi as Otoki TomioAoki as Tomi-boh Reikô Tani as Tomibo's father Rest of cast listed alphabetically:...
Fist (1995) Gonin (1995) East Meets West (1995) Shall We Dance? (1996) – TomioAoki By Player (2000) – Taiji Tonoyama Agitator (2001) Waterboys (2001) The...
(2000) Haregi, Koko Ichiban (2000) Omae no Yukichi ga Naiteiru (2001) TomioAoki (1923-2004) I Was Born, But... (1932) Passing Fancy (1933) An Inn in Tokyo...
Nakahara as Shōji Sumiko Misako Watanabe as Rie Kyōji Aoyama as Yasukawa TomioAoki as Tetsu Kuchibue ga Nagareru Minatomachi (1960) Naked Youth -A Story...
Seiran Kobayashi, actress January 1: Isao Tamagawa, actor January 24: TomioAoki, actor February 2: Michio Hikitsuchi, aikido instructor February 6: Masataka...
Yoshiko Hisayama Shōzaburō Abe as barman Chishū Ryū as Yukihiko Chiba TomioAoki as boy on the telephone Takeshi Sakamoto Kōji Mitsui as café customer...
was screened at the Three Continents Film Festival, where its stars, TomioAoki, Tatsuya Mihashi, and Minoru Ōki, shared the best actor award. Having...
Tatsuko Fuji as Terugiku's mother Yōko Fujita as Misako, Terugiku's sister TomioAoki as Terugiku's brother Jun Arai as Kikue's patron Chōko Iida as landlady...
Prince Takahito August 7 – Ryōtarō Shiba, writer (d. 1996) October 7 – TomioAoki, film actor (d. 2004) January 8 – Shimamura Hayao, Marine Admiral (b....
Shunsuke Kikuchi, lyrics by Tomio Shinoda, vocals by Yuki Hide Ending Theme "Run Tiger Seven" music by Shunsuke Kikuchi, lyrics by Tomio Shinoda, vocals by Columbia...
Yutaka, Tennou no guntai to Nankin jiken, 1998, Aoki shoten, ISBN 4-250-98019-7, p. 160). Professor Tomio Hora at Waseda University in Tokyo writes 50,000–100...
Hurst & Company. pp. 58ff. ISBN 978-1-85065-538-1. Ohtsu, M.; Imanari, Tomio (1999). "Japanese National Values and Confucianism". Japanese Economy. 27...