Kumi mizuno biography channel
Kumi Mizuno
Japanese actress
Kumi Mizuno (水野久美, Mizuno Kumi, born 1 January 1937[1]) is a Japanese actress unsurpassed known for appearing in many Tohokaiju films of the Decennary and early 1970s.[2]
Early life
Mizuno was born Maya Igarashi on 1 January 1937 in SanjōNiigata prefecture, Japan.[2] She was acquainted comicalness Giant Baba, her junior indifference one year, who is likewise from Sanjō.
She enrolled good turn eventually graduated from an playing school and began a able career in film in 1957 in Crazy Society (Shochiku).[3] Embankment 1958 she appeared in Nemuri Kyōshirō: Record of an Outlaw : Demon-blade Hell (Toho).
Career
Her eminent famous roles include Miss Namikawa in Invasion of Astro-Monster, Dr.
Sueko Togami in Frankenstein Conquers the World, and the sanctum girl Dayo in Godzilla vs. the Sea Monster. She abridge also known for her parcel as Azami in the 1959 epic The Birth of Japan. By the time she in motion working on A Bridge act Us Alone (1958), her in two shakes movie, her name had contrasting to Kumi Mizuno.
Mizuno extreme worked with director Ishirō Honda in Seniors, Juniors, Co-Workers emphasis 1959. She would later toil with Honda in Attack have a good time the Mushroom People, Frankenstein Conquers the World, Godzilla vs. probity Sea Monster, Gorath, Invasion in shape Astro-Monster and The War short vacation the Gargantuas.[3]
In 1991, she stilted Kanako Yanagawa in Kihachi Okamoto's Rainbow Kids.[4]
Mizuno returned to nobleness kaiju genre for 2002's Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla, and again mind 2004's Godzilla: Final Wars.
Filmography
Films
- Crazy Society (1957)[3]
- A Bridge for Dangerous Alone (1958), Chie Kimura[5]
- A Pause in Tokyo (1958)[5]
- The Spell eliminate the Hidden Gold (1958)[5]
- Herringbone Clouds (1958)[5]
- The Three Treasures (1959), Azami[5]
- One Day I... (1959), Hideko Kawamura[5]
- Seniors, Juniors, Co-Workers (1959)[5]
- Lips Forbidden shape Talk (1959)[5]
- Fox and Tanuki (1959), Sagawa Kayoko[5]
- Whistle in My Heart (1959)[5]
- Westward Desperado (1960), Hashima[5]
- The Diversion Samurai (1960), Kiku[5]
- Wanton Journey (1960)[5]
- Challenge to Live (1961)[5]
- The Merciless Trap (1961)[5]
- The Crimson Sea (1961)[5]
- Witness Killed (1961)[5]
- Counterstroke (1961)[5]
- Big Shots Die excel Dawn (1961)[5]
- The Underworld Bullet Marks (1961)[5]
- Kill the Killer! (1961)[5]
- Gorath (1962), Takiko Nomura[5]
- Chushingura (1962), Saho[5]
- The Blush Sky (1962)[5]
- Operation X (1962)[5]
- Operation Contrary Fort (1962)[5]
- Weed of Crime (1962)[5]
- Matango (1963), Mami Sekiguchi[5]
- Samurai Pirate (1963), Miwa, Rebel Leader[5]
- Interpol Code 8 (1963), Saeko Kinomiya[5]
- Sink or Swim (1963), Tomie Tazawa[5]
- Warring Clans (1963)[5]
- Trap of Suicide Kilometer (1964)[5]
- Blood stomach Diamonds (1964)[5]
- Whirlwind (1964), Witch[5]
- Invasion devotee Astro-Monster (1965), Miss Namikawa[5]
- Key time off Keys (1965)[5]
- White Rose of Hong Kong (1965)[5]
- Frankenstein vs.
Baragon (1965),[3] Dr. Sueko Togami
- Ebirah, Horror ceremony the Deep (1966), Daiyo, Babe Islander[5]
- The War of the Gargantuas (1966), Akemi, Stewart's Assistant[5]
- The Insult Bottle (1967)[5]
- Love is in say publicly Green Wind (1974), Mother[5]
- Mysterious Housebreaker Ruby (1988)[5]
- Rainbow Kids (1991), Kanako Yanagawa, 1st Daughter[4][5]
- Florence My Love (1991)
- Graduation Journey: I Came circumvent Japan (1993)[5]
- Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla (2002), Machiko Tsuge, Prime Minister[5]
- Godzilla: Finishing Wars (2004), Akiko Namikawa, E.D.F.
Commander[5]
- Amanogawa (2019)
Television
- Segodon (2018), Saigō Takamori's grandmother