Hitoshi Ueki
Japanese actor, comedian, singer, guitarist

Hitoshi Ueki

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Japanese actor, comedian, singer, guitarist
Gender:
Male
Places:
Birth:
25 December 1926(Nagoya, Japan)
Death:
27 March 2007(Tokyo, Japan)
Star sign:
Instruments:
Education:
Toyo University
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The details
Biography

Introduction

Hitoshi Ueki (植木 等, Ueki Hitoshi, December 25, 1926 – March 27, 2007) was a Japanese actor, comedian, singer, and guitarist. He won six awards for acting. His film credits stretch from 1960 to 1995.

Ueki came to fame through the comic jazz-band The Crazy Cats led by Hajime Hana. His major appearances were in the Musekinin Otoko film series, the comedy variety show Shabondama Holiday, the prime-time television series The Hangman, and the ten 2-hour television shows in the Nagoya Yomeiri Monogatari franchise. He appeared in the Akira Kurosawa epic jidaigeki film Ran, and received a nomination for the Japan Academy Prize for Outstanding Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role. In 1978, he won that honor for his performance in Shukuji, directed by Tomio Kuriyama. On stage, he portrayed Billy Flynn in the musical Chicago.

Additionally, Ueki voiced the Roddy McDowall role in Planet of the Apes.

His hit song with Hana Hajime and the Crazy Cats, Sūdara-bushi, placed in the Oricon top ten, and landed him an appearance on the NHK annual music spectacular Kōhaku Uta Gassen.

Ueki received the Purple Ribbon Medal of Honour in 1993 and the 4th Class Order of the Rising Sun in 1999.

He also served as a narrator in the Japanese version of Tom and Jerry.

Currently, new technology is being used to create a Vocaloid voicebank using his voice.

Discography

Albums

  • "Hai, oyobi desu" (ハイ、およびです, Hi, I come here), 1966
  • "Onna no sekai" (女の世界, The World of Women), 1971
  • "Sūdara-Densetsu" (スーダラ伝説, The Legend of "Sūdara"), 1990
  • "Ueki Hitoshi, The Concert" (植木等ザ・コンサート, Hitoshi Ueki, The Concert), 1991
  • "Sūdara-Gaiden" (スーダラ外伝, The Legend of "Sūdara" part2), 1992
  • "Ueki Hitoshi teki ongaku" (植木等的音楽, Music of Hitoshi Ueki), 1995

Sources

This article includes material translated from 植木等 (Ueki Hitoshi) in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved on June 21, 2008.