Junichi Okada | |
Native Name: | 岡田 准一 |
Native Name Lang: | ja |
Birth Date: | 1980 11, mf=yes |
Birth Place: | Hirakata, Osaka, Japan |
Module: | |
Years Active: | –present |
Children: | 1 |
is an actor, fight choreographer[1] and a former member of Japanese boy band V6.
In the summer of 1995, Okada participated in Johnny's Pre-School, part of the NTV program . He passed the audition and joined Johnny & Associates at the age of 14. After being in Johnny's for only a short period of three months, he made his debut as the youngest member of the idol group V6. Unlike the rest of the members in the group, he did not have much experience as Johnny's Jr. The first time that he had been on a music program was only after the debut of V6. Their debut song was "Music For the People".
Okada can play the guitar, as well as the piano. His mother is a piano teacher. His voice is in the middle range, and hence his solos usually include slower ballads. Later in his career as member of V6, he was given longer solo songs, such as "Way of Life".[2] He also revealed that during V6's 2008 concert Vibes, he was directing most of the lightning, staging, and costumes.[3]
Besides being known as a member of V6, Okada is an accomplished actor in movies and dramas, playing the lead in many of them. In a Shounen Club Premium interview on May 7, 2009, he revealed that it was the Japanese drama Kisarazu Cat's Eye that caught the attention of viewers and directors, and made them aware of his acting ability.[3] The success of the drama led to the making of two movie sequels, Kisarazu Cat's Eye: Nihon Series and Kisarazu Cat's Eye: World Series. His other notable dramas include Tiger & Dragon, a comedy drama about rakugo, a form of Japanese comedy acted only by one person telling that story.[4] and SP (also known as Security Police), an action suspense drama about a team of security police bodyguards in charge of protecting important people in the government. With Shinichi Tsutsumi as his co-star, the drama drew in overall ratings of 15.35% despite its Saturday 11:00 p.m. (JST) time slot;[5] its special episode broadcast in 2008 also received a viewership rating of 21.5%.[6]
After several years of "drama hiatus", Okada played the main character, Kuroda Kanbei, in the January 2014 NHK historical drama, . Kanbei was a man of ambition who served as the chief strategist under Toyotomi Hideyoshi in the Sengoku period.[7]
He made a big leap in his movie career with Tokyo Tower in 2005. In the movie he portrayed a young college student torn between his love for a lady twenty years his senior and the views society has on these kinds of relationship.[8] After that came Hana, directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda. In the movie, Okada portrayed Sōza, a samurai uninterested in killing his enemy and focused on what he could do today to be a better person instead. The movie earned him a nomination for the Blue Ribbon Awards, but he declined this nomination.[9] Nevertheless, he was awarded the Ishihara Yujiro New Actor Award at Nikkan Sports Film Award for his role in Hana.[10] Later, he was involved in movies such as Flowers in the Shadows, portraying a young man in debt because of pachinko,[11] and, an unconventional love story between two neighbors who have never met each other and only follow the other person's life through the sounds they hear from the other side of the wall.[12]
In 2012, Okada played the role of Shibukawa Shunkai, an astronomer who invented the Jōkyō calendar used for many decades, in the movie , directed by Yōjirō Takita.[13] The director has previously won an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, Departures, in 2009.[14] Later that year, it was announced that Okada would appear in another film set for a spring 2013 release, The Eternal Zero, directed by Takashi Yamazaki. The film follows the journey of a kamikaze pilot named Kyuzo Miyabe, a man described as a coward who volunteered to die for his country.[15]
Okada is known for being reserved. He does not meet with many people within the agency.[16] In an interview on Shounen Club Premium, Okada said that when he was little, whenever his name was called up to read something in class, he would feel like vomiting and purposely avoided school on those days. Within V6, he was also the most quiet person. He enjoys carpentry and has carved wooden bears for children.[17]
He married actress Aoi Miyazaki on 23 December 2017.[18] In May 2018, it was announced that he and his wife were expecting their first child. He is the fourth member of V6 to be a father.[19] It was announced via fax message that their son was born in October 2018. [20]
During the Johnny's press conference celebrated October 2, 2023, comments were said about his leaving the office in November. Office vice-president and former V6 co-member Yoshihiko Inohara asked for discretion, and to wait for an official comment by the person himself.[21] [22] The news was confirmed the same day. Okada would be leaving Johnny's on November 30.[23]
In 2010, Okada had reported in a press conference that he is certified to teach Jeet Kune Do and Kali in Japan, the latter was used by him as his main martial art when the SP series was filmed.[24] Trained under USA Shooto instructor Yorinaga Nakamura.[25]
While filming for The Fable: The Killer Who Doesn't Kill, Okada trained for a fight scene using jiu-jitsu. He continued training under jiu-jitsu artist Tomoyuki Hashimoto (CARPE DIEM), getting a brown belt in 2022. Okada participated for the first time in a public match in the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation (IBJJF) World Master 2023 in Las Vegas, USA, on 31 August 2023, in the Master 3 Brown Belt Light Featherweight Division,[26] [27] winning his first round, but losing on the quarterfinals against Andrew Steve Slackta.[28] [29]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Cosmic Rescue | Azuma Sawada | Lead role | |
Kisarazu Cats Eye: Nihon Series | Kōhei Tabuchi (Bussan) | Lead role | ||
Hard Luck Hero | Takashi Asai | Lead role | ||
2005 | Tokyo Tower | Toru Kojima | Lead role | |
Hold Up Down | Koichi Sawamura | Lead role | [30] | |
Fly, Daddy, Fly | Soon-Shin Park | Lead role | [31] | |
2006 | Hana | Sōzaemon Aoki (Sōza) | Lead role | [32] |
Kisarazu Cats Eye: World Series | Kōhei Tabuchi (Bussan) | Lead role | [33] | |
Tales from Earthsea | Prince Arren (voice) | Lead role | [34] | |
2008 | Flowers in the Shadows | Shin'ya | Lead role | [35] |
2009 | Romantic Prelude | Satoshi Nojima | Lead role | [36] |
2010 | SP: The Motion Picture | Kaoru Inoue | Lead role | [37] |
2011 | SP: The Motion Picture II | Kaoru Inoue | Lead role | |
From Up on Poppy Hill | Shun Kazama (voice) | Lead role | [38] | |
2012 | Shibukawa Shunkai (Santetsu Yasui) | Lead role | [39] | |
2013 | Library Wars | Atsushi Dojo | Lead role | [40] |
The Eternal Zero | Kyūzō Miyabe | Lead role | ||
2014 | A Samurai Chronicle | Shōzaburō Dan'no | Lead role | |
2015 | Atsushi Dojo | Lead role | [41] | |
2016 | Everest: The Summit of the Gods | Makoto Fukamachi | Lead role | [42] |
Tetsuzō Kunioka | Lead role | |||
2017 | Reminiscence | Detective Atsushi Shikata | Lead role | |
Sekigahara | Ishida Mitsunari | Lead role | ||
2018 | Samurai's Promise | Shinbei Uryū | Lead role | |
It Comes | Nozaki | Lead role | ||
2019 | The Fable | Akira Satō | Lead role | |
2021 | The Fable: The Killer Who Doesn't Kill | Akira Satō | Lead role | [43] |
Hijikata Toshizō | Lead role | [44] | ||
2022 | Hell Dogs | Shōgo Kanetaka | Lead role | [45] |
A Life of Climber | Narrator | Documentary | [46] | |
2023 | Hard Days | Kudō | Lead role | [47] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | V no Honoo | Junichi Okada | ||
1997 | D×D | Toranosuke Kihara | ||
1998 | Pu-Pu-Pu Jump | Kazuya Omine | Lead role | |
1999 | Shin Oretachi no Tabi | Shinroku Kumazawa | ||
Dear Friend | Yuuji Yamamuro | TV movie | ||
2000 | Mona Lisa no Hohoemi | Takuro Okajima | ||
Oyaji | Tadashi Kanzaki | |||
2001 | Chūshingura 1/47 | Chikara Oishi | TV movie | [48] |
Hanran no Voyage | Kunpei Sakaue | |||
2002 | Love Quotient | Ryuji | ||
Kisarazu Cat's Eye | Kōhei Tabuchi (Bussan) | Lead role | ||
2003 | The Eldest Boy and His Three Elder Sisters | Ichiro Kashiwakura | [49] | |
2005 | Taika no Kaishin | Nakatomi no Kamatari | Lead role, miniseries | [50] |
Fuyu no Undokai | Kikuo Kitazawa | Lead role, TV movie | [51] | |
Tiger & Dragon | Ryuji Yanaka (Kotatsu) | [52] | ||
2006 | Niji wo Kakeru Ōhi | Yi Un | Miniseries | [53] |
2007 | SP | Kaoru Inoue | Lead role | |
2014 | Gunshi Kanbei | Kuroda Kanbei | Lead role; Taiga drama | [54] |
2015 | Library Wars: Book of Memories | Atsushi Dōjō | Lead role, TV movie | |
2019 | The Great White Tower | Gorō Zaizen | Lead role, miniseries | |
2023 | What Will You Do, Ieyasu? | Oda Nobunaga | Taiga drama | [55] |
TBA | Last Samurai Standing | Saga Shūjirō | Lead role; also producer and action planner | [56] |
Year | Title | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
2012–present | The Profiler | As host | [58] | |
2013 | 64th NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen | As a judge | [59] |
2002 | 32nd Television Drama Academy Awards (ja) | Best Actor | Kisarazu Cat's Eye | [60] | |
2005 | 9th Nikkan Sports Drama Grand Prix | Best Supporting Actor | Tiger & Dragon | [61] | |
2006 | 19th Nikkan Sports Film Awards | Ishihara Yujiro New Actor Award | Hana Yori mo Naho, Kisarazu Cat's Eye: World Series | [62] | |
2008 | 56th Television Drama Academy Awards | Best Actor | SP | [63] | |
2014 | 27th Nikkan Sports Film Awards | Best Actor | The Eternal Zero, A Samurai Chronicle | [64] | |
39th Hochi Film Awards | Best Actor | The Eternal Zero | [65] | ||
2015 | 57th Blue Ribbon Awards | Best Actor | A Samurai Chronicle | [66] | |
38th Japan Academy Film Prize | Best Actor | The Eternal Zero | [67] | ||
Best Supporting Actor | A Samurai Chronicle | ||||
83rd Television Drama Academy Awards | Best Actor | Gunshi Kanbei | [68] | ||
2017 | 40th Japan Academy Film Prize | Best Actor | Fueled: The Man They Called Pirate | ||
2018 | 60th Blue Ribbon Awards | Best Actor | Reminiscence, Sekigahara | ||
27th Tokyo Sports Film Awards | Best Actor | Sekigahara | |||
41st Japan Academy Film Prize | Best Actor | ||||
43rd Hochi Film Awards | Best Actor | Samurai's Promise | |||
2019 | 73rd Mainichi Film Awards | Best Actor | |||
42nd Japan Academy Film Prize | Best Actor | ||||
2021 | 34th Nikkan Sports Film Awards | Best Actor | Baragaki: Unbroken Samurai, The Fable: The Killer Who Doesn't Kill | [69] | |
46th Hochi Film Awards | Best Actor | [70] | |||
2022 | Best Actor | [71] | |||
47th Hochi Film Awards | Best Actor | Hell Dogs | [72] |