Hikari Ōta Explained

Hikari Ota
Birth Date:13 May 1965
Birth Place:Kamifukuoka, Saitama, Japan
Medium:Owarai
Television
Nationality:Japanese
Active:1988  - Present
Genre:Owarai

is a Japanese television comedian.[1] [2]

He is most famous as one half of the owarai duo Bakushō Mondai along with Yūji Tanaka, where he acts as the boke. He was born in Kamifukuoka, Saitama.

Unique character

Ōta is known for his strained, long-winded speeches, though it is perhaps his profound and sometimes dangerous comments that make him a staple of modern Japanese entertainment, and reflect his rather remarkable personality. As a boke, one is generally expected to fulfill a more ignorant comedy role, but Ōta's boke has him frequently overstepping classical boundaries into new and often controversial territories, often prompting Tanaka (as the tsukkomi) to bring him back down to reality. Ōta is a bibliophile - reportedly reading over 100 books a year - and some of his favorite authors include Kurt Vonnegut, John Irving, J. D. Salinger, and Osamu Dazai (of whom Ōta's father was a student), many of them holding some similitude to his often absurdist view of the world.

His opinions almost never synch with Tanaka's, that is to say, he often avoids agreeing with Tanaka by intentionally taking the opposing side simply out of spite, making their boke/tsukkomi relationship much more lively, and perhaps realistic.

He is an active essayist and has published a number of collections.

Literary career

In 2010, Ōta published his first fictional literary work, a collection of short stories, "Maboroshi no Tori"[3] (マボロシの鳥 / Legendary Bird) which he followed with a novel "Bunmei No Ko[4] " (文明の子 / Child of Civilisation) in 2012.

Now showing

Ōta has recently found a niche for his relatively extremist and sometimes ridiculous world views as the main speaker in the Nippon TV show, Hikari Ōta's If I Were Prime Minister... Secretary Tanaka, where he acts as the Japanese Prime Minister and addresses various social problems with his own style of radical solutions. The guests of the show often include high-profile members of the Japanese Diet and famous Japanese of various backgrounds.

Ōta also voiced Sid the Sloth in the Japanese dubbed version of the animated franchise Ice Age.[5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: ja:『爆笑問題のツーショット』に見る、太田光の"3種類のボケ"とは?. http://woman.infoseek.co.jp/news/entertainment/story.html?q=cyzo_03Jan2011_19862. 6 January 2011. インフォシーク. 3 January 2011. ラリー遠田. Japanese. https://web.archive.org/web/20110902142652/http://woman.infoseek.co.jp/news/entertainment/story.html?q=cyzo_03Jan2011_19862. 2 September 2011. dead.
  2. News: Pushing the Boundaries of Political Satire in Japan . 6 January 2011. New York Times. 12 August 2006.
  3. Web site: 文明の子 感想 太田 光 - 読書メーター. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130104234513/http://book.akahoshitakuya.com/b/4478017719 . 2013-01-04 .
  4. Book: Bunmei no ko (Book, 2012) [WorldCat.org]]. 773566017 .
  5. Web site: アイス・エイジ. February 20, 2023. The Cinema.
  6. Web site: アイス・エイジ2. February 20, 2023. The Cinema.
  7. Web site: アイス・エイジ3/ティラノのおとしもの. February 20, 2023. The Cinema.
  8. Web site: アイス・エイジ4/パイレーツ大冒険. February 20, 2023. The Cinema.
  9. Web site: アイス・エイジ5 止めろ! 惑星大衝突. February 20, 2023. The Cinema.
  10. Web site: アイス・エイジ クリスマス. August 12, 2020. Fox Japan. September 22, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200922020828/http://www.foxjapan.com/ice-age-a-mammoth-christmas. dead.