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Matsutarō Kawaguchi

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Occupation
  
Novelist, Screenwriter

Role
  
Novelist

Name
  
Matsutaro Kawaguchi

Died
  
June 9, 1985, Japan

Matsutaro Kawaguchi
Born
  
1 October 1899 Tokyo, Japan (
1899-10-01
)

Spouse
  
Aiko Mimasu (m. 1951–1982)

Books
  
Mistress Oriku: Stories from a Tokyo Teahouse, Re-visiting Hong Kong Paradise: A Study of Japanese Net Surfers

Children
  
Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Hisashi Kawaguchi, Atsushi Kawaguchi

Movies
  
Ugetsu, The Crucified Lovers, The Story of the Last Chrysanthemums, The Kiss, Tsuruhachi and Tsurujiro

Similar People
  
Yoshikata Yoda, Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Kenji Mizoguchi, Masaichi Nagata, Ueda Akinari

Matsutarō Kawaguchi (川口 松太郎, Kawaguchi Matsutarō, 1 October 1899 – 9 June 1985) was a Japanese novelist, playwright and movie producer active during the Shōwa period of Japan.

Biography

Matsutarō Kawaguchi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen66dKaw

Kawaguchi was born in the plebeian Asakusa district of Tokyo into an impoverished family. He was forced to leave home at the age of 14 to seek employment. He started to write in his spare time, while working at various jobs, which included working in a pawn shop, as a tailor, a policeman and as a postman at one point in his life. He came to be acquainted with author Kubota Mantaro, who encouraged him in his literary efforts.

Kawaguchi was arrested in Kamakura, Kanagawa in 1933, along with fellow literati Kume Masao and Satomi Ton for illegal card gambling.

In 1935, Kawaguchi won the first Naoki Prize for a short story titled Tsuruhachi Tsurujirō. He followed this with a serialized novel, Aizen Katsura, a melodramatic love story involving a nurse and a doctor, which ran from 1936-1938. The story became a tremendously popular bestseller and gained him considerable fame. It was later made into a movie starring Kinuyo Tanaka and Ken Uehara, and was the basis of numerous television series.

After World War II, Kawaguchi resumed his literary activity, publishing plays and novels. He won the Yoshikawa Eiji Prize for his novel Shigurejaya Oriku, a nostalgic series of episodes involving a prostitute who rose to become a brothel owner.

Many of Kawaguchi's novels were adapted to film, and he was long associated with Daiei Motion Picture Company. In 1965, he became a member of the Japan Academy of the Arts. He was awarded the Order of Culture by the Japanese government in 1973. His wife was the movie actress Aiko Mimasu.

Kawaguchi won the Yoshikawa Eiji Prize for his novel Shigurejaya Oriku, a nostalgic series of episodes involving a farm girl, sold to a brothel, who rose to become owner of a famous Tokyo teahouse. The story was eventually translated into English by Royall Tyler.

References

Matsutarō Kawaguchi Wikipedia