Sad news from Variety, we have learned that actress Hideko Takamine has died at 86.
Takamine began her illustrious career as a child, and ultimately spent three decades in front of the camera. She got her first start in the 1929 film, Mother. Often compared to the likes of Shirley Temple as a child, she then moved into films like Kajiro Yamamoto’s Tsuzurikata Kyoshitsu.
During the 1950s, the actress beginning working as a ‘freelance’ actress, and became the muse for the likes of Keisuke Kinoshita (Twenty-Four Eyes) and Mikio Naruse, with whom she crafted 12 separate features, including the film When A Woman Ascends The Stairs.
She was married to writer/director Zenzo Matsuyama, and ultimately retired from films in 1979. She went on to become a beloved essayist. She passed away on December 28, due to compilations from a battle with lung cancer.
The actress can be seen in four films from the Criterion Collection, including Twenty-Four Eyes, When A Woman Ascends The Stairs, Tokyo Chorus and Masaki Kobayashi’s The Human Condition. This is a truly sad loss for the world of film, and Takamine will be missed.
Source: Variety