Hiyokko
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Hiyokko | |
---|---|
Original title | ひよっこ |
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Yoshikazu Okada |
Directed by | Hiroshi Kurosaki Tadashi Tanaka Takeshi Fukuoka |
Starring |
|
Narrated by | Akemi Masuda |
Opening theme | "Wakai Hiroba" by Keisuke Kuwata |
Composer | Akira Miyagawa |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 156 |
Production | |
Producer | Hiroshi Kashi |
Running time | 15 minutes |
Production company | NHK |
Release | |
Original network | NHK |
Original release | April 3 September 30, 2017 | –
Chronology | |
Related shows | Hiyyoko 2 (Special drama) |
External links | |
Website |
Hiyokko (ひよっこ) is a Japanese television drama series and the 96th asadora series, following Beppinsan. It was premiered on April 3, 2017, and ended on September 30, 2017.
Plot[]
Mineko Yatabe is a teenager living in a very rural area of Ibaraki Prefecture in 1964, the year of the Tokyo Olympics. Her father, Minoru, is a farmer, and often goes to Tokyo to do extra work for the family. This time, however, he goes missing. Mineko travels to Tokyo to find him, and begins to work at a small electronics factory while continuing her search. She makes many friends there, but the factory goes bankrupt and she is left unemployed. Luckily, she is hired by Suzuko Makino as a waitress at her restaurant, the Suzufuri-tei, which happened to be her father's favorite eatery. She lives at the boarding house next door, in which live a variety of people, from manga artists to college students. Mineko falls in love with a college student, Junichirō Shimatani, but they part when his father forces him to marry to save the family business. Mineko becomes friends with the movie star, Setsuko Kawamoto, who after learning of Mineko's father, reveals that Minoru has been living in her apartment all along. He lost his memory in a fight and Setsuko took him in. Mineko returns Minoru to his family in Ibaraki. Mineko then falls in love with Hidetoshi Maeda, one of the junior chefs at the Suzufuri-tei. She also helps Setsuko, when Setsuko needs to flee from the press after her aunt and uncle misappropriated her money.
Cast[]
Main character[]
- Kasumi Arimura as Mineko Yatabe
Oku-Ibaraki village[]
Yatabe family[]
- as Shigeru Yatabe, Mineko's grandfather
- Ikki Sawamura as Minoru Yatabe, Mineko's father
- Yoshino Kimura as Miyoko Yatabe, Mineko's mother
- as Chiyoko Yatabe, Mineko's sister
- as Susumu Yatabe, Mineko's brother
- Kazunobu Mineta as Muneo Koiwai, Mineko's uncle
- as Shigeko Koiwai, Muneo's wife and Mineko's aunt
Sukegawa family[]
- Yui Sakuma as Tokiko Sukegawa, Mineko's childhood friend and classmate
- Michiko Hada as Kimiko Sukegawa, Tokiko's mother
- as Shōji Sukegawa, Tokiko's father
- as Toyosaku Sukegawa, Tokiko's brother
Sumitani family[]
- as Mitsuo Sumitani, Mineko's childhood friend and classmate
- Rie Shibata as Kiyo Sumitani, Mitsuo's mother
- as Masao Sumitani, Mitsuo's father
- Hiroyuki Onoue as Tarō Sumitani, Mitsuo's brother
Others[]
- Satoru Matsuo as Jirō Mashiko, a school bus conductor
- Kanji Tsuda as Manabu Tagami, a high school teacher
Tokyo people[]
Suzufuri-tei[]
- Nobuko Miyamoto as Suzuko Makino, the shop owner
- Kuranosuke Sasaki as Shōgo Makino, the chef
- Hitomi Satō as Takako Asakura, the hall clerk
- as Kenji Igawa
- Hayato Isomura as Hidetoshi Maeda
Mukoujima Radio Factory[]
- Emi Wakui as Aiko Nagai
- Fujiko Kojima as Sachiko Akiba
- as Yūko Natsui
- as Sumiko Nabatame
- as Toyoko Kanehira
Others[]
- Ryo Ryusei as Masayoshi Watahiki
- Kayoko Shiraishi as Tomi Tachibana
- Ryoma Takeuchi as Junichirō Shimatani
- Kavka Shishido as Sanae Kusaka
- as Yūji Tsubouchi
- Amane Okayama as Keisuke Nitta
- as Ichirō Kashiwagi
- Ken Mitsuishi as Gorō Fukuda
- Tomoko Ikuta as Yasue Fukuda
- Miho Shiraishi as Kuniko Takeuchi
- as Yasuharu Kashiwagi
- as Zenzou Abe
- Sairi Ito as Saori Abe
- Haruka Shimazaki as Yuka Makino
- Miho Kanno as Setsuko Kawamoto
- Kai Inowaki as Yudai Takashima
Hiyokko 2[]
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Reception[]
The series was a ratings success, averaging 20.4% over the length of the series, with ratings improving as the show progressed.[1]
References[]
- ^ "ひよっこ:記録にも記憶にも残る作品に 視聴率を分析 - 毎日新聞". 毎日新聞 (in Japanese). Retrieved 20 April 2018.
External links[]
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Hiyokko at IMDb
- Asadora
- 2017 Japanese television series debuts
- 2017 Japanese television series endings
- Television series set in 1964