Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Tsuru Aoki

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1913–1924; 1960

Name
  
Tsuru Aoki

Role
  
Actress


Tsuru Aoki Tsuru Aoki Women Film Pioneers Project

Born
  
September 9, 1892 (
1892-09-09
)

Occupation
  
Actress (stage and screen)

Died
  
October 18, 1961, Tokyo, Japan

Spouse
  
Sessue Hayakawa (m. 1914–1961)

Movies
  
The Dragon Painter, The Wrath of the Gods

Children
  
Yoshiko Hayakawa, Fujiko Hayakawa, Yukio Hayakawa

Similar People
  
Sessue Hayakawa, William Worthington, Reginald Barker, Thomas H Ince, Frank Borzage

How to Pronounce Tsuru Aoki?


Tsuru Aoki (青木 鶴子, Aoki Tsuruko, September 9, 1892 – October 18, 1961) was a popular Japanese stage and screen actress whose career was most prolific during the silent film era of the 1910s through the 1920s. Aoki may have been the first Asian actress to garner top-billing in American motion pictures.

Contents

Tsuru Aoki Tsuru Aoki Women Film Pioneers Project

Life and career

Tsuru Aoki httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Born in Tokyo, Japan, Aoki emigrated to Los Angeles, California in 1903 with her aunt and uncle, Otojirō Kawakami, who had previously owned a theatrical group called "Kawakami-za" in Japan. Aoki was later adopted by another uncle Aoki Toshio and relocated to San Francisco. Toshio worked as a sketch artist for a local newspaper. Tsuru Aoki started taking lessons in ballet dance in New York, when she went along with her uncle Toshio, who was hired by David Belasco for The Darling of the Gods. After Toshio's death a reporter looked after Aoki. Aoki began her acting career after returning to Los Angeles and performing in stage productions in the city's Japanese Theatre where she was noticed by film producer Thomas Ince who placed the young actress under contract. She was also responsible for recruiting Japanese actors for Imperial Japanese Company, a subsidiary of New York Motion Picture Corporation. Aoki made her film debut in the Majestic film studios release The Oath of Tsuru San in 1913 opposite actor William Garwood. Her follow-up film was the 1914 Ince produced O Mimi San, which starred the American child actress Mildred Harris and a handsome young newcomer named Sessue Hayakawa, whom Aoki had acted with onstage at the Japanese Theatre the previous year. The couple began a romantic relationship that would culminate in their marriage on May 1, 1914, just weeks before the release of their critically acclaimed and publicly successful film The Wrath of the Gods – a melodrama about an interracial romance between a man portrayed by Caucasian actor/director Frank Borzage and an Asian woman portrayed by Aoki. The film also starred Sessue Hayakawa and featured actress Gladys Brockwell. Hayakawa and Aoki would eventually make more than twenty films together throughout the 1910s and 1920s.

Tsuru Aoki TSURU AOKI FREE Wallpapers amp Background images

One of Aoki's most recalled films of the silent period is the 1919 William Worthington-directed The Dragon Painter, in which Aoki starred, playing a young woman who convinces an isolated, mentally deranged artist named Tatsu (portrayed by Hayakawa) to come down from the mountains so that she may civilize him and he may further his artistic abilities. Other notable films of the period were The Typhoon (1914), The Vigil (1914), The Geisha (1914), The Chinatown Mystery (1915), His Birthright (1918), and The Breath of the Gods (1920). Throughout the 1910s, Aoki would appear in approximately forty films, often in leading-lady roles which was a first for an Asian actress. Some of her co-stars of the era included such notable names as Marin Sais, Frank Borzage, Gladys Brockwell, Mildred Harris, Jack Holt, Jane Wolfe, Dagmar Godowsky, Vola Vale, Florence Vidor, Earle Foxe, and Walter Long. After a series of moderately successful Ince-produced two-reel serials, Aoki's career in the United States began to falter (while her husband's career began to build momentum), and the couple travelled to France in 1923 and filmed the popular Édouard-Émile Violet-directed drama La Bataille. After returning to America, however, Aoki made only three more films before retiring from the screen to raise her and Hayakawa's three adopted children. Her last silent screen performance was the 1924 release The Danger Line. Aoki would only return to the screen in 1960 (her first talkie) to once again appear with her husband in the drama Hell to Eternity. She died the following year in Japan of acute peritonitis at the age of 69.

Filmography

Actress
1960
Hell to Eternity as
Mother Une (as Tsuru Aoki Hayakawa)
1924
Sen Yan's Devotion as
Sen Yan's Wife
1924
The Great Prince Shan as
Nita
1924
The Danger Line as
Marquise Yorisaka
1923
La bataille as
La Marquise Yorisaka
1922
Five Days to Live as
Ko Ai
1921
Black Roses as
Blossom (as Tsura Aoki)
1920
The Breath of the Gods as
Yuki Onda
1920
A Tokio Siren as
Asuti Hishuri
1920
Locked Lips as
Lotus Blossom
1919
The Dragon Painter as
Ume-Ko
1919
The Gray Horizon as
O Haru San
1919
The Courageous Coward as
Rei Oaki
1919
A Heart in Pawn as
Sada
1919
Bonds of Honor as
Toku-ko (as Tsuri Aoki)
1918
His Birthright as
Saki San
1918
The Bravest Way as
Sat-u
1918
The Curse of Iku as
Omi San
1917
The Call of the East as
O'Mitsu - Arai's Sister
1917
Each to His Kind as
Princess Nada
1916
The Soul of Kura San as
Kura-San
1916
The Honorable Friend as
Toki-Ye (as Tsuri Aoki)
1916
Alien Souls as
Yuri Chan
1915
The Beckoning Flame (Short) as
Janira
1915
The Chinatown Mystery (Short) as
Woo
1915
The Famine (Short) as
Misao
1914
The Last of the Line (Short) as
Girl at Riverside
1914
Mother of the Shadows (Short) as
Laughing Moon
1914
The Vigil (Short) as
Mira (as Miss Tsuru Aoki)
1914
Nipped (Short) as
San Toy Nakado
1914
The Typhoon
1914
The Death Mask (Short) as
Princess Nona
1914
The Village 'Neath the Sea (Short) as
Little Fawn
1914
The Curse of Caste (Short) as
Kissmoia
1914
Star of the North (Short) as
Star of the North
1914
Desert Thieves (Short) as
Owanono
1914
A Relic of Old Japan (Short) as
Katuma
1914
A Tragedy of the Orient (Short) as
Kissmoia
1914
The Wrath of the Gods as
Toya San
1914
Love's Sacrifice (Short) as
Little Faun
1914
The Geisha (Short) as
Myo
1914
The Courtship of O San (Short) as
O San
1914
O Mimi San (Short) as
O Mimi San
1913
The Oath of Tsuru San (Short) as
Tsuru San
Art Department
1920
The Breath of the Gods (supervising set constructor - uncredited)
Self
1922
Night Life in Hollywood as
Self
1921
Screen Snapshots, Series 2, No. 14-F (Documentary short) as
Self
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 6 (Documentary short) as
Self
Archive Footage
2002
Decasia (Documentary) as
Geisha

References

Tsuru Aoki Wikipedia