Rie Miyazawa

Rie Miyazawa
photo
Rie Miyazawa at the 27th Tokyo International Film Festival
Native name 宮沢 りえ
Born (1973-04-06) April 6, 1973
Tokyo, Japan
Nationality Japanese
Occupation
Years active 1985–present
Height 1.67 m (5 ft 5 12 in)
Spouse(s)
Go Morita (m. 2018)

Rie Miyazawa (宮沢 りえ, Miyazawa Rie, born April 6, 1973)[1] is a Japanese actress and former fashion model and singer. She has done glamour modeling too, having released four photobooks.[2] She is also well known as former fiancé of sumo wrestler Takanohana, to whom she was engaged for 2 months, and for her years of fighting anorexia nervosa.[3]

Life and career

Rie Miyazawa was born in Tokyo to a Dutch father and a Japanese mother. Since her debut at age 11 in an advertisement for Kit Kat, she has many films, television shows, commercials, stage appearances and photo books to her credit. She starred in the children's comedy Bokura no Nanokakan Sensō (Seven Days' War) and Tokyo Elevator Girl. Miyazawa made her debut as a singer on 15 September 1989, with her debut album MU.

She gained notoriety in 1991 with the publication of a Fine art nude photography book, Santa Fe, and even more publicity in 1992 by her engagement to sumo star Takanohana. The engagement was called off in 1993. In September 1994 she cut her wrists with a broken glass in what she described as an "accident".[4] The tabloids focused on Miyazawa's drinking session, fights with her mother, and her escape to a nearby hotel as signs of a failed suicide attempt.[4] Miyazawa continued to pursue her career as an actress, including a performance in Kon Ichikawa's movie Chushingura that year. But the following February she pulled out of the drama Kura and in November backed out of the musical Kyote.

In early 1996 Miyazawa moved to Coastal California, but by May she was back on TV reporting from the Cannes Film Festival and later that year she appeared in two TV dramas: Hanayome Kaizoebito and Kyosokyoku. In 1997 she made Mikeneko Homes (tasogare) Hoteru and also appeared on stage.

In 2001, Miyazawa won the Best Actress Award at the 23rd Moscow International Film Festival by portraying a Chinese Kunqu performer in the Hong Kong film Peony Pavilion, directed by Yonfan. Then in 2002, she starred alongside Hiroyuki Sanada in Tasogare Seibei (The Twilight Samurai), the year's hit movie that won numerous awards at home, including ones for the lead actors, and was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Foreign Language Film. In 2003 she played the role of Oshino in the NHK TV series Musashi.

Tony Takitani (2004)—a rare adaptation of a short story by bestselling author Haruki Murakami—received critical acclaim, with Miyazawa playing two roles alongside Issey Ogata. The film, which was entered at the Sundance Film Festival, has been described as "a perfectly controlled minimalist film masterpiece". In 2005, she starred as Tsubaki in Ashurajō no Hitomi (あしゅらじょう の ひとみ), which is a movie adaptation of a 16th-century play.

Most recently, she received the 40th Japan Academy Prize for Best Actress for her performance in Her Love Boils Bathwater.

Personal life

On February 13, 2009, she announced to the public that she was six months pregnant and would soon marry the father of the child who is reported to be Hiroyuki Nakatsu, an ex-pro surfer from Hawaii turned entrepreneur.[5] On May 20, 2009 in Tokyo she gave birth to a baby girl.[6]

On March 23, 2016, she announced that her divorce from Hiroyuki Nakatsu has been finalized.[7]

Filmography

Films

Television

Japanese dub

Stage

  • Gypsy (1991)
  • Kaijin Bessō (1994)
  • Tenshu monogatari (1994, 1996)
  • Furu-amerika ni Sode wa Nurasaji (1994)
  • Tezuka's Ancestor Dr. Ryoan (1998)
  • Rainbow Parakeet (2000)
  • The Tale of Genji (2000)
  • The Kiss of an Invisible Man (2004)
  • Rope (2006–07)
  • Dorakuru-God Fearing Dracul (2007)
  • A Doll's House (2008)
  • Piper (2009)
  • The Character (2010)

Awards

  • A Doll's House
    • Yomiuri Theater Award—Best Actress
  • Rope
    • The 41st Kinokuniya Stage Award—Individual Award
  • Art Encouragement Prize for 2004—from Agency for Cultural Affairs
  • The Face of Jizō
    • Blue Ribbon Award—Best Actress
    • Kinema Junpo Awards—Best Actress
    • Yamaji Fumiko Award—Best Actress
  • The Kiss of an Invisible Man
    • Yomiuri Theater Award—Best Actress
  • Twilight Samurai
    • Japan Academy Award—Best Actress
    • Blue Ribbon Award—Best Supporting Actress
    • Nikkan Sports Movie Award—Best Actress
    • Kinema Junpo Awards—Best Actress
    • Mainichi Film Concours—Best Supporting Actress
    • Hochi Film Award—Best Actress[8]
  • Utsutsu
    • Kinema Junpo Awards—Best Actress
    • Blue Ribbon Award—Best Supporting Actress
  • Peony Pavilion
  • Seven Days' War
    • Japan Academy Award—Best New Actor
    • Nikkan Sports Movie Award—Best New Talent
  • Who Do I Choose?
    • Nikkan Sports Film Award—Best New Talent

References

  1. "Rie MIyazawa" Archived 2011-09-23 at the Wayback Machine. Naver (in Japanese)
  2. "Avtivities of Rie Miyazawa" Naver (in Japanese)
  3. 「宮沢りえは彼女の"作品"だった」りえママの豪腕伝説 Cyzo, February 2009 (in Japanese)
  4. 1 2 Schilling, Mark (1997). "Rie Miyazawa". The Encyclopedia of Japanese Pop Culture. New York: Weatherhill. p. 149. ISBN 0-8348-0380-1.
  5. "Rie Miyazawa - profile, stats, and trivia".
  6. "Rie Miyazawa gives birth to baby girl".
  7. "Actress Rie Miyazawa announces divorce".
  8. 報知映画賞ヒストリー (in Japanese). Cinema Hochi. Archived from the original on 2009-01-31. Retrieved 2010-01-27.
  • Profile at Japan Zone
  • Miyazawa Rie on IMDb
  • Metropolis - Big in Japan: Rie Miyazawa
  • Idol*80 Discography (in Japanese)
  • Sharp, Jasper. "Erotic Liaisons (film review with biographical data on Rie Miyazawa)". midnighteye.com. Retrieved 2007-05-14.
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