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Rei Nakanishi

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Name
  
Rei Nakanishi

Role
  
Novelist

Spouse
  
Yuri Ishida (m. 1971)


Rei Nakanishi wwwnakanishireicomimgportraitjpg

Movies
  
Akai Tsuki, Nagasaki burabura bushi

Similar People
  
Kyohei Tsutsumi, Yasui Kazumi, Masaaki Hirao, Miki Takashi, Kunihiko Murai

le coq sportif | CHARI&CO textile designed by Rei Nakanishi


Rei Nakanishi (なかにし 礼, Nakanishi Rei, born September 2, 1938) is a Japanese novelist and songwriter.

Contents

Rei Nakanishi Rei Nakanishi Net Worth Bio 2017 Wiki REVISED Richest Celebrities

Career

Nakanishi was born Reizō Nakanishi (中西 禮三) in Mudanjiang, Manchukuo. He graduated from Kudan High School in Tokyo and received a degree in French literature from Rikkyo University. He currently lives in Zushi, Kanagawa.

He first worked on translations of French chanson songs, but while on honeymoon he made the acquaintance of Yujiro Ishihara and became a Japanese popular song (kayōkyoku) writer. He is one of the main lyricists in the world of post-World War II kayōkyoku. He gave the world an extensive collection of works—songs such as "Kyou de owakare" and "Kita sakaba" which became big hits, but also a large proportion of unusual songs. In 1969, his total sales exceeded 10 million records. He has displayed talent in many fields, including concert and stage production, movie performance, singing, composing, translation, novel and essay writing, and cultural broadcasting (as a personality on "Sei! Yangu!" and as a regular on NHK's "N-kyō").

However, behind his showy life, he suffered from difficulties such as heart disease, divorce, and having to repay his elder brother's extensive debts. From those personal experiences came novels such as Kyōdai and Sakura no densetsu. He is a pacifist and desires reconciliation with China and Korea, and this shows in his writing style and speech.

He gave up lyric writing at the end of the Shōwa era and concentrated on opera production and performance and novel and essay writing. Kyōdai was nominated in 1998 for the 119th Naoki Prize. Nagasaki burabura-setsu won the 122nd Naoki Prize in 2000.

Recently, Nakanishi serves as a commentator on the Japanese "wide show" Wide! Scramble! on the Asahi Television Network.

References

Rei Nakanishi Wikipedia