Kei Fujiwara

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Kei Fujiwara
Born (1957-03-12) March 12, 1957 (age 64)
Occupationactress, director

Kei Fujiwara (不二稿 京, Fujiwara Kei, born March 12, 1957) is a Japanese actress, cinematographer, writer, film director, and theater director. Her first role was in the American film The Neptune Factor, but she is perhaps best known for starring in the Japanese cult film, Tetsuo: The Iron Man.[1] More recently she has devoted her time to writing and directing, and is known for her surreal and violent experimental films[1] as well as her experimental theater company Organ Vital.[2]

Biography[]

Fujiwara was born into a poor family in a rural part of Kumamoto in 1957, and moved to Tokyo to pursue a career in theater.[2][3] Playwright Jūrō Kara wrote roles for her to act in his plays and eventually became her mentor. She spent years creating underground theater companies, and collaborated with Shinya Tsukamoto on the plays and 8mm films he created. For Tsukamoto's film Tetsuo: The Iron Man, she participated both in front of the camera as the unnamed Girlfriend character, as well as behind the camera as the prop artist and one of the cinematographers.[2]

After the production of Tetsuo, she returned to underground theater and working with Jūrō Kara.[2] She also formed the Organ Vital company, which produced the play Organ and adapted the play into the film of the same name.[3] Organ and her later 2005 film never gained financial or critical success, but have become noted examples of the Japanese horror genre.[1] She has continued producing theatre work through Organ Vital: a new "nomadic" theatre project called Ibunkitan debuted in 2019, and has been presented in shops, salons, and temples.[2]

She lives in a remote part of the Nagano mountains.[2]

Filmography[]

As actress
As director

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Murguia, Salvador (2016). The encyclopedia of Japanese horror films. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 83–85. ISBN 9781442261662. Retrieved 18 January 2020 – via GoogleBooks.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Noé, Amber (27 November 2019). "Capturing a World in a Crystal Ball: A Conversation with Kei Fujiwara". Mubi. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Mes, Tom; Sharp, Jasper (2005). The Midnight Eye guide to new Japanese film. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 1880656892.

External links[]

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