Skip to main content
obituary

Japanese actor Ken Takakura is shown in Tokyo in 2012.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP / Getty Images

Acclaimed Japanese film star Ken Takakura, known for many stoic heroes he played on the silver screen, has died of lymphoma. He was 83.

Takakura died Nov. 10 at a Tokyo hospital where he had been treated for the illness, according to his office and media reports Tuesday.

Takakura, perhaps best known abroad for his police inspector role in Ridley Scott's Black Rain in 1989, debuted in Japan in 1956 and surged to stardom starring in yakuza films such as Abashiri Prison in the 1960s. He also starred in detective stories and dramas including 1977's The Yellow Handkerchief and 1999's Railroad Man, for which he was named best actor in the Montreal World Film Festival.

The news of his death topped Japanese news programs almost non-stop, and major newspapers distributed extras in downtown Tokyo.

Born as Goichi Oda in Fukuoka, southern Japan in 1931, he was recruited by a major film production when he was applying for a managerial position when he was having trouble finding a job after graduating from a university in Tokyo.

The 2012 award-winning Dearest became his last of more than 200 films he starred.

According to the fax released by his office, Takakura was preparing for his next project while in hospital.

Interact with The Globe