Acting
Chishū Ryū
Born 1904-05-13 · Tachibana, Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan · Died 1993-03-16
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Chishu Ryu (May 13, 1904 in Kumamoto, Japan – March 16, 1993 in Yokohama, Japan) was a famous Japanese film actor, a favourite of the director Yasujiro Ozu. From 1928 to 1992 he appeared in at least 155 films, including Ozu's Tokyo Story (1953) and Yoshitaro Nomura's Castle of Sand (1974). From 1969 until his death, Ryu became familiar to a new generation as the curmudgeonly but benevolent Buddhist priest in Yoji Yamada's Tora-san movie series (a role he parodied to great effect in a cameo in Juzo Itami's 1984 comedy, The Funeral). Description above from the Wikipedia article Chishû Ryû, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known for

Tokyo Story

Until the End of the World

Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters

Red Beard

The Funeral

Late Autumn

Early Summer

Dreams

The End of Summer

The Bad Sleep Well

An Autumn Afternoon

Equinox Flower

The Human Condition III: A Soldier's Prayer

Late Spring

The Castle of Sand

Twenty-Four Eyes

Tokyo Twilight

The Flavor of Green Tea Over Rice

The Only Son

Japan's Longest Day

Good Morning

Foster Daddy, Tora!

Floating Weeds

The Munekata Sisters

Tokyo-Ga

A Story of Floating Weeds

Passing Fancy

Dragnet Girl

There Was a Father

Tora-san, the Matchmaker

Early Spring

Miyamoto Musashi

Tora-san's Cherished Mother

Daughters, Wives and a Mother

Seishoku no ishibumi

Ornamental Hairpin

Tora-san's Song of Love

The Human Bullet

Tora-san Makes Excuses

Home from the Sea
