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IMDbPro
Ken Watanabe at an event for Inception (2010)

Biography

Ken Watanabe

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Overview

  • Born
    October 21, 1959 · Uonuma, Japan
  • Birth name
    Kensaku Watanabe
  • Height
    1.84 m

Biography

    • Ken Watanabe was born on October 21, 1959 in Uonuma, Japan. Both of his parents were teachers: his mother taught general education and his dad taught calligraphy. He became interested in acting at the age of 24, when a director of England's National Theater Company, where he was studying, told him that acting was his special gift. In 1978, he moved to Tokyo to pursue acting. He drew the attention of the critics when Yukio Ninagawa, a famous Japanese director, chose him for the lead role in one of his plays, even though Ken was still an acting student. He made his first TV appearance in 1982. His big career breakthrough came when he was chosen to play the lead in the Japanese national TV drama series called "Dokugan ryu Masamune". He played a samurai leader hero, making him a household name in Japan. In 1989, he collapsed while filming a movie in Canada due to leukemia. He made a miraculous comeback & co-starred with Tom Cruise in Le Dernier Samouraï (2003), which pushed him to the center stage of Hollywood.

      Ken has a daughter, model, actress, & singer Anne Watanabe, & a son. He's an avid fan of Hanshin Tigers (Japanese professional baseball team) & Kobe Steel rugby team. He loves noodles.
      - IMDb mini biography by: A. Nonymous and Junko Foley

Family

  • Spouses
      Kaho Minami(December 3, 2005 - May 17, 2018) (divorced)
      Yumiko Watanabe(1983 - March 2005) (divorced, 2 children)
  • Children
      Dai Watanabe
      Anne Watanabe
  • Parents
      Ryoichi Watanabe

Trivia

  • He owns Ken Watanabe Film Productions.
  • Even though some of the characters Watanabe portrayed have varying degrees of fluency in English, Watanabe himself is perfectly fluent in English, having studied acting in England for several years.
  • Japanese actor.

Quotes

  • I'm not a big star in Japan. I'm an actor. I have a very normal life. Four days a week, I cook at home. A star doesn't do that.
  • I have no sense of myself as a sex symbol at all. But the meaning of sex symbol might be a little different in Japan to elsewhere. The Japanese version seems to come with a stronger emphasis on a sort of grownup or mature male charm. And if that's the case, then I guess I'm happy to hear it.
  • Each director is different. Clint Eastwood and Chris Nolan are completely different, and I need to adjust to the story and character and the director and just my duty as an actor.
  • As a Japanese actor, I really want to work with a lot of actors and actresses in the world and many directors who have many different kinds of talents. I feel like nationality doesn't matter at all.
  • About half the scripts sent to me feature characters I just can't identify with, particularly one-dimensional businessmen or, if it's a comedy, some absurd 10-year-old Japanese stereotype, some role related to IT or business... There's no point in getting mad about it; it's just the way things are.

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