Naoko Iijima Explained

Naoko Iijima
Native Name:飯島直子
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:29 February 1968
Birth Place:Yokohama, Japan
Occupation:Actress
Years Active:1988–present
Spouse:

    is a Japanese television and film actress and a former gravure idol who was born on February 29, 1968, in Kōhoku-ku, a ward of the city of Yokohama in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.[1]

    Life and career

    Early career - Zero Woman

    Iijima began her entertainment career in 1988 on the late night Japanese TV show 11 PM, followed by a number of appearances in commercials and as a Race Queen.[2] An early cinema role was the December 1990 straight-to-video V-cinema drama which also starred Risa Tachibana and Mari Ayukawa.[3] The next year, she was featured in the comedy which was released to theaters by the Toei Company in December 1991.[4] [5] Over the next four years, Iijima starred in more than a dozen V-cinema productions[1] as well as posing for gravure (non-nude) photobooks[6] and performing in gravure videos.[7] [8]

    In January 1995, Iijima was cast as the lead in the action feature film, a revival of the Zero Woman character from Miki Sugimoto's 1974 film. Despite the title of this film, the Zero Woman franchise continued with a number of sequels.[9] [10] The film was released in an English-language version on VHS and DVD in May 2002 as Zero Woman: Final Mission.[11] [12]

    Early TV work

    After Zero Woman, Iijima worked largely in the domain of Japanese TV dramas (J-dorama)[1] including the Fuji Television suspense drama starring Atsuko Asano which aired from July to September 1995[13] and the 1998 comedy also on Fuji TV,, co-starring Masahiko Nishimura, which had a setting in New York City.[14] In August 1999, Iijima starred in the Fuji TV produced theatrical film . In this romantic comedy, Iijima's character, Naomi Shimizu, is a spoiled rich girl in a dream job who is brought down by circumstances to being a bicycle delivery messenger. Various complications ensue including a romance with her new boss played by Tsuyoshi Kusanagi.[15] [16]

    Iijima returned to television in 2000 with the Fuji TV series which ran in twelve episode from July to September 2000. Her role was once again the poor little rich girl (as in the film Messengers) but this time she has to resurrect a fading bus company in Tokyo with Teruyoshi Uchimura as the love interest.[17] In the 2001 Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) drama, Iijima is cast against type as a breadwinner housewife with a sullen stay-at-home husband.[18] For her 2002 TV series, Iijima returned to Fuji TV and the romantic comedy genre as the vice president of a company in the bridal industry.[19] In late 2002 she appeared as the oldest of four daughters of a widowed father (played by Masakazu Tamura) in the TBS domestic drama .[20]

    Iijima wed musician Nobuteru Maeda in September 1997 but their marriage ended in divorce in March 2001.[21] [22]

    Later TV work

    Iijima continued acting in Japanese TV serials including the 2003 Fuji TV romance [23] and the 2005 TBS romantic drama .[24] but she also starred in a serious drama about World War II. In the October 2005 TV movie Iijima played Yukiko Sugihara, who helped her husband, Japanese Consul Chiune Sugihara, write visas which saved the lives of six thousand Lithuanian Jews in 1940.[25] For the 2008 TV series, broadcast March to September 2008, Iijima, no longer the ingenue, plays the mother of the twenty-year-old heroine Hitomi (Nana Eikura).[26] The romantic comedy has a 23-year-old "salaryman" (Hayato Ichihara) falling in love with Iijima's character, an "around 40 year old" beautician. The series was originally aired on the mobile phone channel BeeTV but its popularity led Fuji TV to combine the episodes into a TV movie broadcast in December 2009.[27] [28]

    Iijima took on her first stage role in May 2010 with the play, playing a receptionist at a bank where a hostage crisis occurs. Also in the "suspenseful comedy" was actor Masahiko Nishimura who had previously worked with Iijima in the 1998 TV series Sometime Somewhere.[29] In early 2013, Iijima shared top billing with Aya Ueto in the NHK ten part television series about two women who meet in prison, one (Ueto) who committed a crime for her lover while the other (Iijima) killed her abusive husband. The series, based on the books by Asa Nonami, follows the lives of the two women after their release from prison.[30]

    In January 2013, Iijima announced that she had married a company CEO one year older than her on December 25, 2012, and that a wedding ceremony was planned for early 2013.[21] [22] They divorced on October 27, 2021.[31]

    Filmography

    Television

    Films

    Dubbing

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_p.php?num_p=123676. ja:飯島直子 いいじま・なおこ. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-16. Japanese.
    2. Web site: Biography. [Naoko Iijima Official Website]. 2013-07-20. Japanese. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100830004457/http://iijimanaoko.com/sub3.html. 2010-08-30.
    3. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=237464. ja:ストロベリータイムス4 如月三姉妹の逆襲. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-16. Japanese.
    4. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=151565. ja:ファンキー・モンキー・ティーチャー. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-16. Japanese.
    5. Web site: Funky Monkey Teacher. [IMDb]. 2013-07-16.
    6. Web site: Profile Naoko Iijima 飯島直子 : Books. [Urabon Navigator]. 2013-07-16.
    7. Web site: EXCELLENCE . [www.amazon.co.jp]. 2013-07-16. Japanese.
    8. Web site: http://www.arzon.jp/item_519446.html. ja:そそられてゴージャス 飯島直子. [www.arzon.jp]. 2013-07-16. Japanese.
    9. Web site: Zero WOMAN 警視庁0課の女(1995). [AllCinema]. 2013-07-14. Japanese.
    10. Web site: Zero Woman: Red Handcuffs. Midnight Eye]. 2013-07-14.
    11. Web site: Zero Woman: Final Mission (VHS). [amazon.com]. 2013-07-17.
    12. Web site: Zero Woman: Final Mission 2002. [amazon.com]. 2013-07-17.
    13. Book: Clements, Jonathan. Motoko Tamamuro. The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953. 2003. Stone Bridge Press. Berkeley. 1-88065681-7. 303–304.
    14. Clements p. 281-282
    15. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=159722. ja:メッセンジャー. AllCinema]. 2013-07-18. Japanese.
    16. Web site: Review: Messengers. [Toronto J-Film Pow-Wow]. 2013-07-18.
    17. Clements p. 33-34
    18. Clements p. 66
    19. Clements p. 347
    20. Clements p. 159-160
    21. Web site: Iijima Naoko remarries on Christmas Day. [Tokyohive]. 2013-07-18.
    22. Web site: http://www.zakzak.co.jp/entertainment/ent-news/news/20121226/enn1212261126004-n1.htm. ja:飯島直子、クリスマス再婚!"ぐっさん似"の会社経営者と. December 26, 2012. [ZakZak]. 2013-07-18. Japanese.
    23. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=318813. ja:ハコイリムスメ!. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-21. Japanese.
    24. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=322130. ja:汚れた舌. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-21. Japanese.
    25. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=323495. ja:日本のシンドラー 杉原千畝物語/六千人の命のビザ. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-21. Japanese.
    26. Web site: http://www.allcinema.net/prog/show_c.php?num_c=330317. ja:瞳. [AllCinema]. 2013-07-22. Japanese.
    27. Web site: 40 Onna to 90 Nichi Kan de Kekkon Suru Houhou. [Metropolis Mutimedia]. 2013-07-22.
    28. Web site: BeeTV presents「40女と90日間で結婚する方法」. [Fuji TV]. 2013-07-22. Japanese.
    29. Web site: Naoko Iijima to make theater debut. [Tokyograph]. 2013-07-21.
    30. Web site: いつか陽のあたる場所で NHK. [NHK]. 2013-07-22. Japanese.
    31. Web site: 53歳飯島直子、離婚していた 1歳上の会社経営者と12年に再婚 - 離婚・破局 : 日刊スポーツ. 2021-11-25. nikkansports.com. ja.
    32. Book: Jonathan Clements. Motoko Tamamuro. The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953. 1 November 2003. Stone Bridge Press. 978-1-880656-81-5. 33–34.
    33. Web site: 室井慎次 敗れざる者. June 28, 2024. eiga.com.
    34. Web site: 室井慎次 生き続ける者. June 28, 2024. eiga.com.
    35. Web site: プリティ・ブライド[吹]. July 21, 2019. Star Channel.