Chishū Ryū
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.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Chishû Ryû, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known For
280 titles
Tora-san's Love Call
The Crowded Train
Tora-san Goes North
Woman of Tokyo
An Early Autumn
Army
Love Letter
A Hen in the Wind
Marriage Counselor Tora-san
Four Sisters
Tora-san, My Uncle
The Lady and the Beard
Tora-san's Lullaby
The Wandering Princess
Tora-san Goes Religious?
Mole Alley
I Flunked, But...
Hearts and Flowers for Tora-san
Tora-san, the Go-Between
A Mother Should Be Loved
And Then
And Then
Where Now Are the Dreams of Youth?
Tora-san's Pure Love
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