Yūsaku Matsuda

Yūsaku Matsuda (松田 優作, Matsuda Yūsaku, September 21, 1949 – November 6, 1989) was a Japanese actor. In Japan, he was best known for roles in action films and a variety of television series in the 1970s as well as a switch to a wider range of roles in the 1980s. His final film appearance was as the villain Sato in Ridley Scott's Black Rain. He died in 1989 at the age of 40.

Yūsaku Matsuda
松田 優作
Born(1949-09-21)September 21, 1949
DiedNovember 6, 1989(1989-11-06) (aged 40)
OccupationActor
Years active1972–1989
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Spouses
Michiko Kumamoto
(m. 1975; div. 1981)
    (m. 19831989)
    Children Yuki Matsuda (daughter)

    He is considered one of Japan's most important film actors.[1] Several manga, anime and video game characters are based on him, including Kenshiro in Fist of the North Star, Spike Spiegel in Cowboy Bebop, Aokiji in One Piece, Wabisube in Summer Wars, and Jubei Yagyu in Onimusha 2.

    Career

    He began acting after graduating from high school, moving through several theatre companies before joining the Bungakuza theatre group at around the same time as Kaori Momoi. His career as a screen actor started in 1973 with a role as a junior police officer in a TV detective drama called Taiyō ni Hoero! He went on to appear in various television series and action films during the seventies. His most remembered role on television was in Tantei Monogatari, in which he starred as an unlikely private detective.[2] In films, he was known for such gun-toting roles as assassin Shōhei Narumi in the Yūgi (Game) series of films, and master criminal Asakura in Resurrection of the Golden Wolf.

    In the 1980s, desiring to be seen as more than an action star, he moved from action films to a wider range of dramatic roles.[2] He made a dramatic weight loss to appear in the film The Beast to Die in 1980. The following year he appeared in another action film, Yokohama BJ Blues, which also featured his singing, and the surreal art film Kagerō-za. In 1983, he won the award for best actor at the 8th Hochi Film Award for Detective Story and The Family Game.[3] In 1985 he took the lead role in the award-winning Sorekara. In 1986, he directed A Homansu, after the scheduled director left due to disagreements. This was the only film he directed. During the eighties, he also appeared in many commercials, such as for Gatsby hair products or Triangle shochu. In addition to acting, from the late seventies to the eighties he toured as a singer, releasing several albums of music.[4]

    In 1989, although already diagnosed with cancer, he starred as the villain, Sato, in Black Rain. Director Ridley Scott and co-stars Michael Douglas, Andy Garcia, and Kate Capshaw praised his professionalism and performance, despite his suffering. He died shortly afterwards, after making a final appearance in a special television drama with Florence Griffith-Joyner, in which he was supposed to run against her, but was unable to do so because of his illness.[5]

    After his death, his image continued to be used in commercials, such as a 2000 campaign for Schick razors using his image from the Tantei Monogatari television series. Books, films, television specials, and other products, such as scale models of his most famous characters,[6] continue to appear long after his death. In 1998, a film called Yomigaeru Yūsaku: Tantei Monogatari Tokubetsu-hen was released, containing two episodes of the Tantei Monogatari television series and some additional material. In 2009, his second wife, Miyuki Matsuda, produced a tribute film, Soul Red, including clips from his films and interviews with actors such as Andy Garcia, as well as his two sons.

    Personal life

    Matsuda was born out of wedlock in Shimonoseki, to a Japanese father, a probation officer, whom he never met, and a Zainichi Korean mother, Kaneko Matsuda, originally Kim.[4] She was a Korean who had married a Japanese man who died during World War II. Kaneko wrote his birth year incorrectly as 1950 on his birth records deliberately.[4]

    He grew up and was educated in Shimonoseki, attending Kanda elementary school and Bunyo Junior High School, before entering Shimonoseki Secondary School. In 1967, while at high school, at the urging of his mother, he stayed with his aunt in the city of Seaside in America for one year. He attended Seaside High School. However, extremely unhappy in America, malnourished, unable to speak English, and feeling himself the victim of discrimination, he returned to Japan. Because he was afraid of facing his mother, he went to stay with his older brother in Tokyo.[4] He attended Hōnan High School (豊南高等学校) as a night student and graduated in 1969. After graduating, he entered a theatre company called "Rokugatsu Gekijō" (六月劇場), leaving in November 1969. In 1971 he joined a theatre group "Club Marui", then in 1972 he joined "Bungakuza". He met his future wife Michiko through Club Marui in May 1971. At the time he was working as a barman.[7]

    He changed his citizenship from Korean to Japanese while he was starring in Taiyō ni Hoero!, with the help of Michiko, whose father was a member of the Liberal Democratic party who was head of the then-Prime Minister's support office.[4]

    In 1975 he was involved in two fracases, first with two journalists, and then with a student who attacked him with a wooden kendo sword because the student thought he was assaulting a woman. The student ended up in a hospital, and Matsuda received a suspended sentence for assault. This caused a major disruption in his career, with film studios and television companies dropping him.[4]

    He married Michiko Kumamoto in 1975 and had one daughter. They divorced in 1981 after six years of marriage. In 1983, he married Miyuki Kumagai, with whom he had started a relationship in 1979, when she was 17, when she appeared in the television series Tantei Monogatari.[4] They had three children. Two of the children, Ryuhei and Shota, became actors and daughter Yuki became a singer.

    Death

    In 1988, Matsuda was diagnosed with bladder cancer, before shooting began for Black Rain. Matsuda refused chemotherapy, as he thought it would affect his ability to act in the film.[4] After his death, his first wife, who had experienced him ignoring an ear infection until it required surgery to prevent deafness, wrote that she suspected that he did not actually realize the seriousness of his illness.[4] During the filming, he was urinating blood. By the time shooting finished, in March 1989, his cancer had spread to his spine and lungs, making it inoperable. On October 7, 1989, Matsuda was hospitalized. A month after he was admitted, Matsuda died at 6:45 PM JST on November 6 at the age of 40, at a Tokyo hospital. He was buried in Nishitama cemetery (西多摩霊園) in Akiruno, Tokyo.[8]

    A number of manga and anime characters were inspired by Matsuda. Manga author and artist Tetsuo Hara cited Yūsaku Matsuda as one of the two major influences on the character design of Kenshiro, the protagonist of manga and anime series Fist of the North Star. The other major influence was martial artist Bruce Lee, with Hara combining the appearance and character traits of Lee and Matsuda when he came up with the character design of Kenshiro.[9]

    In the anime series Cowboy Bebop, protagonist Spike Spiegel's appearance was primarily based on the main protagonist of Tantei Monogatari, portrayed by Matsuda. Spike's voice actor Kōichi Yamadera was a fan of Matsuda, but avoided imitating Matsuda's distinctive manner of speaking, noting that it "wouldn't have sounded right" for Spike.[10] Matsuda also inspired the character Aokiji from the manga and anime series One Piece.[11]

    In the video game Onimusha 2: Samurai's Destiny, the hero Jubei Yagyu was modelled after Yūsaku Matsuda.[12]

    Filmography

    Film

    Year Title Role Notes
    1973 Horror of the Wolf
    (狼の紋章)
    Dō Haguro
    1974 Tomodachi
    (ともだち)
    Komatsu
    Ryoma Ansatsu
    (竜馬暗殺)
    Yūta
    Aba yo Dachi kō
    (あばよダチ公)
    Onagi Natsuki
    1976 Hito-goroshi
    (ひとごろし)
    Twin Rokubei
    The Classroom of Terror
    (暴力教室)
    Mizuguchi
    1977 Proof of the Man
    (人間の証明)
    Munesue
    1978 The Most Dangerous Game
    (最も危険な遊戯)
    Shōhei Narumi [13]
    The Killing Game
    (殺人遊戯)
    [13]
    1979 Murder in the Doll House Unknown
    Oretachi ni Haka wa Nai Katsuo Shima
    The Resurrection of the Golden Wolf Tetsuya Asakura
    The Execution Game
    (処刑遊戯)
    Shōhei Narumi [13]
    1980 Rape Hunter Nerawareta Onna Insurance Salesman Uncredited
    Bara no Hyōteki Hotel Guest
    The Beast to Die Kunihiko Date
    1981 Yokohama BJ Blues B.J.
    Kagerō-za Shungo Matsuzaki
    1983 The Family Game Katsu Yoshimoto
    Detective Story Shūichi Tsujiyama
    1985 Sorekara Daisuke Nagai
    1986 A Homansu Kaze also director
    1988 Wuthering Heights Onimaru
    A Chaos of Flowers Takeo Arishima
    1989 Black Rain Sato Koji
    1998 Yomigaeru Yūsaku: Tantei Monogatari Tokubetsu-hen Shunsaku Kudō Posthumous role
    2009 Soul Red: Yusaku Matsuda Himself Documentary

    Television

    Year Program Role Notes
    1973 Taiyō ni Hoero! Jun "Jiipan" Shibata
    1974 Akai Meiro Jun, Momoe's Uncle
    1975 Oretachi no Kunshō Unknown
    1976 Daitokai Himself, Guest
    Saraba Rōnin Himself, Guest
    1977-1978 Daitokai Part II Isao Tokuyoshi
    1978 Daitsuiseki Himself, Guest (final episode)
    1979-1980 Tantei Monogatari Shunsaku Kudō
    1982 Haru ga Kita Unknown
    Shi no Dangai Unknown
    Shin-Jiken Dr Stop Unknown
    Home Sweet Home Himself, Guest
    1982-1983 Anchan Himself, Guest
    1983 Nettai ya Unknown
    Dansen Unknown
    1984 Shin-Yumechiyo Nikki Unknown
    Onna Goroshi Abura no Jigoku Unknown
    1986 Ou Otoko Unknown
    1988 Sakurako wa Warau Unknown
    1989 Kareinaru Tsuiseki] Unknown With Florence Griffith-Joyner

    Video games

    Year Film Role Notes
    2002 Onimusha 2: Samurai's Destiny Jūbei Yagyū Matsuda's likeness was used for that of the lead character.

    References

    1. 四方田犬彦 (2000). 日本映画史100年 (in Japanese). 集英社.
    2. Tom Mes (8 April 2004). "Yusaku Matsuda: Lost Rebel". Retrieved 11 February 2012.
    3. 報知映画賞ヒストリー (in Japanese). Cinema Hochi. Archived from the original on 2011-03-25. Retrieved 2010-01-24.
    4. Matsuda, Michiko (2008). Ekkyōsha-Matsuda Yūsaku [Border-transgressor Yusaku Matsuda] (in Japanese). Shinchosha. ISBN 978-4-10-306451-0.
    5. "Yusaku Matsuda, 39, Japanese Movie Actor". New York Times. 9 November 1989. Retrieved 10 November 2010.
    6. Master Joker, 松田優作フィギュアの館
    7. Matsuda, Mami (pen name of Michiko Matsuda) (31 October 1991). Eien no Chōhatsu: Matsuda Yūsaku to no Nijūichi Nen [Endless Provocation: My Twenty-One Years with Yūsaku Matsuda] (in Japanese). Rimu Shuppan. ISBN 4-87120-259-3.
    8. 世界恩人巡礼大写真館 (in Japanese). Retrieved 10 November 2010.
    9. Lehecka, Eddie (1 March 2019). "Exile Sekai Interviews Tetsuo Hara, Creator of Fist of the North Star". Otaquest. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
    10. "Spike: A Complex Soul". Cowboy Bebop: The Movie (DVD). Culver City, California: Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment. 2003.
    11. Peters, Megan (April 4, 2021). "Kunie Tanaka, Beloved One Piece Inspiration, Dies at 88". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
    12. "Capcom Unveils Onimusha 2". IGN. June 12, 2001. Retrieved August 28, 2013.
    13. Mills, Phil (May 29, 2023). "Blu-ray release: 'Game Trilogy'". Far East Films. Archived from the original on August 4, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2023.
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