Noriko Sengoku
Reiko Mori (April 29, 1922 – December 27, 2012), known by her stage name Noriko Sengoku, was a Japanese film and television actress active primarily in the 1950s and 1960s. She made her film debut in 1947 and starred in several of Akira Kurosawa's early films such as Drunken Angel, The Quiet Duel, Stray Dog, Scandal, The Idiot and Seven Samurai.
During the war, she was a member of the traveling theater troupe Sakura-tai , which was wiped out in the Hiroshima atomic bombing . However, she escaped the atomic bombing because she was away from Hiroshima giving birth
She was highly praised as a great supporting actress, and excelled in the role of a spiteful landlady. She believed that "a supporting role is like a 'screw in each corner'; if even one screw comes loose, the whole thing falls apart."
During the war, she was a member of the traveling theater troupe Sakura-tai , which was wiped out in the Hiroshima atomic bombing . However, she escaped the atomic bombing because she was away from Hiroshima giving birth
She was highly praised as a great supporting actress, and excelled in the role of a spiteful landlady. She believed that "a supporting role is like a 'screw in each corner'; if even one screw comes loose, the whole thing falls apart."
Known For
115 titles
Here Is a Spring
The Shape of Night
Ken
Out
Dotanba
The Stairway to the Distant Past
The Undefeated Woman
Chikuhō no kodomotachi
Foghorn
The Sea and Poison
New Third Class Executive: Travel, Women and Drinking
Leave My Girl Alone
Battle of Roses
The Weed of Crime
The White Orchid
Time Limit
The Trap
A Comedy in Front of the Station: Lunchbox
Rebellion of Japan
Sweet Sweat
恐妻時代
The Lady of Musashino
Police Precinct: The Pickpocket Killer
The Most Terrible Time in My Life
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