Takako Matsu
Takako Matsu, born Takako Fujima, on June 10, 1977, is a Japanese actress and pop singer.
Personal life
Matsu was born to a family of buyō and kabuki actors, including her father Matsumoto Hakuō II, her mother and businesswoman Noriko Fujima, her uncle, Nakamura Kichiemon II, her elder brother Matsumoto Kōshirō X, her sister Kio Matsumoto, and stage director Kazuhisa Kawahara. She married guitarist and record producer Yoshiyuki Sahashi on December 28, 2007, and her married name is now Takako Sahashi. She also has the name of Natori of the Matsumoto school of Nippon Buyō ; Shodai Matsumoto Kōka. She chose the surname "Matsu" to honor the family. In a interview, she and her two brothers and sisters are close to their mother.Career
Matsu made her stage debut role in Ninjō-banashi: Bunshichi Mottoi at Kabuki-za. Her first lead role in television was in the NHK Drama Hana no Ran in 1994, and she also starred in NHK Drama Kura in 1995. Because Shirayuri Gakuen, her high school, prohibited working in the entertainment industry, she transferred to Horikoshi High School. Matsu starred in the drama Long Vacation after matriculating to college. She was a supporting role, but, began to establish in full-scale her position as an actress because the drama was a major hit. That same year, she hosted the 47th NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen. In 1997, she debuted with the single "Ashita, Haru ga Kitara". She appeared on NHK's Kōhaku Uta Gassen again as a singer on the last day of the year. In an interview with NHK in 2007, Matsu recalled the incident that triggered her musical debut. At the wrap-up ceremony of the drama, Matsu sang karaoke which was heard by its director who suggested that she give singing a try. Although she refused at first, as she was not confident enough in her singing, Matsu eventually accepted because she saw it as " chance that not everyone got". In the same year, she starred in the drama Love Generationin a leading role. In 2001, she starred in Hero. In 2003, she published a photo essay book, Matsu no Hitorigoto, through Asahi Shimbun Publishers. In 2004, she was Kim in Miss Saigon. In September 2004, she released "Toki no Fune", which was composed by the Japanese singer Akeboshi. It is similar to his song, "A nine days' wonder", which was released after the "Toki no Fune" single. The single also contains a cover of Akeboshi's "White Reply" previously recorded on her sixth album, Harvest Songs. Matsu won the Best Actress of the Year of the 29th Hochi Film Award and the 28th Japan Academy Prize at the same time for The Hidden Blade. In July 2006, she and Takuya Kimura starred in a special one-night edition of Hero. In October 2006, Matsu was in a weekly drama for the first time in over three years titled Yakusha Damashii for Fuji TV alongside 73-year-old actor Makoto Fujita, a family friend. In May 2007, Matsu kicked off her third concert tour to commemorate her tenth year as a singer. In releasing her album Cherish you in 2007, the song "Ashita Haru ga Kitara" was redone to combine Matsu's voice as a 20-year-old with her current one. On November 27, 2014, Matsu revealed on her official website that she was pregnant with her first child. On March 30, 2015, she gave birth to her daughter. She revealed on her website that the baby was 3466 grams. On February 9, 2020, Matsu was called to join Idina Menzel, Aurora and eight more of Elsa's international dubbers to perform the song “Into the Unknown” during the 92nd Academy Awards. Every international performer sang one line of the song in a different language: Maria Lucia Heiberg Rosenberg in Danish, Willemijn Verkaik in German, Matsu in Japanese, Carmen Sarahí in Latin American Spanish, Lisa Stokke in Norwegian, Kasia Łaska in Polish, Anna Buturlina in Russian, Gisela in European Spanish and Gam Wichayanee in Thai.Musical style
Matsu worked with the producers. Her third album, Sakura no Ame, Itsuka was released at Universal Music.Filmography
Film
TV dramas
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1994 | Hana no Ran | Tsubaki, Later, she was called Hino Tomiko | NHK, Taiga drama |
1995 | Kura | Retsu Tanouchi | NHK, lead role, broadcast prior to the film version. |
1996 | Long Vacation | Ryoko Okusawa | Fuji TV |
1996 | Hideyoshi | Cha cha, the second wife of Hideyoshi | NHK, Taiga drama |
1996 | Furuhata Ninzaburō | Saki Mōri | Fuji TV |
1996 | Konna Watashi ni Dare ga Shita | Natsuko Iwasaki | Fuji TV |
1997 | Ryōma ga Yuku | Sanako Chiba | TBS |
1997 | Boku ga Boku de Aru Tame ni | Hiroko Muranaka | Fuji TV, broadcast on January 3 |
1997 | Koto no Koiuta | Momoyo Naito | TBS, broadcast on March 17 |
1997 | Under One Roof | Miki Mochizuki | Fuji TV |
1997 | Shuntō | Ayako Tomita | NHK, lead role |
1997 | Love Generation | Riko Uesugi | Fuji TV, second lead role |
1998 | Karasu-goi | Kaoruko Yamashita | TBS |
1998 | Jinbē | Miku Takanashi | Fuji TV, second lead role |
1999 | Kai | Kiwa Tomita | NHK, lead role |
1999 | Konya wa Eigyōchū | Kanako Takamatsu | NTV |
2000 | Omiai Kekkon | Setsuko Nakatani | Fuji TV, lead role |
2001 | Hero | Maiko Amamiya, second lead role | Fuji TV |
2001 | Akarui Hō e, Akarui Hō e | Teru Kaneko | TBS, lead role |
2001 | Chūshingura 1/47 | Aguri | Fuji TV |
2002 | Tokyo Story | Noriko Hirayama | Fuji TV, second lead role, remake of the movie "Tokyo story", 27 Hour TV Special Drama |
2003 | Itsumo Futari de | Mizuho Tanimachi | Fuji TV, lead role |
2004 | Ryōma ga Yuku | Okei Ōura | TV Tokyo |
2005 | Hiroshima Showa 20 nen 8 Gatsu Muika | Shinobu Yajima | TBS, lead role |
2006 | Hero | Maiko Amamiya | Fuji TV, second lead role, broadcast on July 3 |
2006 | Yakusha Damashi! | Hitomi Karasuyama | Fuji TV, lead role, broadcast on October 17 |
2009-2011 | Saka no Ue no Kumo | Tami Sakuma | NHK |
2012 | Unmei no Hito | Yuriko Yuminari | TBS, second lead role |
2014 | Oyagi no Setaka episode 1 | Hitomiko Higuchi | TBS, second lead role, broadcast on July 13 |
2016 | Futsu ga Ichiban | Kazuko Kosuge | TBS, second lead role, broadcast on July 4 |
2017 | Quartet | Maki Maki | TBS, lead role, broadcast on January 17 |
2017 | Côte d'Azur N゚10 | Shimako Shibata | Wowow・Hulu |
2019 | No Side Manager | Maki Kimishima | TBS |
Japanese dub
Television
Video games
Theater
- Rakugo - Ohisa
- Koiki na Yūrei - Botan
- Ajisai - Omitsu
- Taki no Shiraito - Kikyō
- Jyunsaihan - Oume
- Man of La Mancha
- * - Antonia
- *,,, - Aldonza
- Hamlet - Ophelia
- Tengai no Hana - Tamako Taira
- The Good Person of Szechwan - Shen Te/ Shui Ta
- Okepi - Shinonome
- Voyage ~Senjō no Syanikusai~ -
- Natsu Hoteru - Kaoru
- Wuthering Heights - Catherine Earnshaw
- Mozart! - Constanze Mozart
- Noda Map: Oil - Fuji
- Ohatsu - Ohatsu
- Roningai - Oshin
- Miss Saigon - Kim
- The Caucasian Chalk Circle - Gursha
- Noda Map: Fake Crime and Punishment - Hanabusa Sanjo
- Metal Macbeth - Mrs. RandomStar
- Hibari - Joan of Arc
- Romance - Maria Chekhova
- Sisters - Kaoru Ozaki
- Noda Map: Piper - Deimos
- Jane Eyre - Jane Eyre
- Futari no Otto to Watashi no Jijou - Victoria
- Twelfth Night - Sebastian/ Viola
- Oto no Inai Sekai de - Sei
- Motto Naiteyo Flapper - Trunk Jill
- Kagami no kanata wa tanaka no naka de - Keiko
- Noda Map: Gekirin - Ningyo
- Metropolis - Maria/ Parody
- Sekai wa hitori - Miko Tanaka/ Kazue Mori
- Noda Map: Q: A Night At The Kabuki - Sore kara no Julie
Awards and prizes
Discography
Studio albums
- Sora no Kagami
- Ai no Tobira
- Itsuka, Sakura no Ame ni...
- A Piece of Life
- Home Grown
- Harvest Songs
- Bokura ga Ita
- Cherish You
- Time for Music
- Ashita wa Doko kara
Compilation albums
- Five Years: Singles
- Takako Matsu Single Collection 1999–2005
- Footsteps: 10th Anniversary Complete Best
Live albums
- Takako Matsu Concert Tour Vol. 1 "A Piece of Life"
- Takako Matsu Concert Tour 2003 "Second Wave"
Music Video/Concert DVD
- film Sora no Kagami
- Film Itsuka, Sakura no Ame ni…
- MATSU TAKAKO concert tour vol.1 "a piece of life" on film
- 「tour documentary film "diary"」〜 concert tour vol.1 "apiece of life"〜
- matsu takako concert tour 2003 "second wave" on film
- MATSU TAKAKO concert tour 2007 "I Cherish You" on film
- Takako Matsu Concert Tour 2010 "Time for Music"