Yutaka Abe Explained

Yutaka Abe
Birth Date:February 2, 1895
Birth Place:Yamoto, Miyagi, Japan
Death Place:Kyoto, Japan
Occupation:Actor
Film director
Yearsactive:1915–

was a Japanese film director and actor. He went to America along with a younger brother to visit an uncle living in Los Angeles. There he enrolled in an acting school, and upon hearing that Thomas H. Ince was looking for Japanese extras to work in his studios, he applied and was accepted in 1914.[1] He appeared in such films as The Wrath of the Gods and The Cheat with Sessue Hayakawa. He was often billed as "Jack Abbe" or "Jack Yutake Abbe." He returned to Japan in 1925, finding work at the Nikkatsu studio, and soon made his debut as a director. Among his early works was the 1926 silent film The Woman Who Touched the Legs (Ashi ni sawatta onna), a comedy about a writer and a woman thief. This film, along with most of Abe's early work, is now lost.[2] Before and during World War II, Abe directed a number of nationalistic propaganda films including Moyuru ōzora (Flaming Sky) and Ano hata o ute (Fire on That Flag).

After the war, he directed the 1950 film adaptation of Jun'ichirō Tanizaki's The Makioka Sisters, a film which brought him commercial success.[2] His later films include the 1959 satirical comedy Season of Affairs (Uwaki no kisetsu).[2]

Filmography

Actor

Director

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Abe Yutaka. Nihon jinmei daijiten. Kōdansha. ja. 26 November 2010.
  2. Book: Jacoby, Alexander. A Critical Handbook of Japanese Film Directors. 2008. Stone Bridge Press. Berkeley. 978-1-933330-53-2. 3.
  3. Book: Writing in Light: The Silent Scenario and the Japanese Pure Film Movement. 1 January 2001. Wayne State University Press. 9780814340097. 316. https://books.google.com/books?id=IPyoo6icDZIC&q=Wrath+of+the+Gods+1914&pg=PA316. Joanne Bernardi. 14 May 2014. Notes.