Tetsuya Takeda
Tetsuya Takeda | |
---|---|
Born |
Hakata-ku, Fukuoka, Japan | April 11, 1949
Genres | Folk, Pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer, Composer, Actor |
Tetsuya Takeda (武田鉄矢), born April 11, 1949, is a Japanese folk singer and actor. Takeda is perhaps most known in Japan for his starring role in the Tokyo Broadcasting System's (TBS) long-running, highly rated television drama Sannen B Gumi Kimpachi Sensei (Mr. Kimpachi of the Third-Year B Class). The program, targeted at junior high and high school-aged adolescents, ran on TBS with Takeda at various times from 1979 until 2011.
Takeda wrote and performed several well-known songs, including the theme song for the 1985 animated movie Doraemon: Nobita's Little Star Wars (のび太の宇宙小戦争). Takeda's 1980 song Okuru Kotoba (The Word I Give to You) is often sung or performed at junior high school and high school graduation ceremonies in Japan.[1]
Previous to his appearance on Sannen B, Takeda studied to be a teacher at Fukuoka University of Education. He later formed a folk music group called Kaientai. The song Okuru Kotoba, which Takeda wrote and performed with Kaientai, actually had nothing to do with schooling, but is reportedly associated with education because of Takeda's role in the Sannen B show.[1]
Filmography
Films
- The Yellow Handkerchief (1977) - Kinya Hanada
- Stage-Struck Tora-san (1978) - Tomekichi Gotō
- A Distant Cry from Spring (1980) - Tamiko's cousin
- Bakumatsu seishun graffiti: Ronin Sakamoto Ryoma (1986) - Sakamoto Ryōma
- Sailor Suit and Machine Gun: Graduation (2016)
- Hanakatami (2017)
Television
- Kinpachi-sensei (TBS, 1979–2011) - Kinpachi Sakamoto
- Tokugawa Ieyasu (NHK, 1983) - Toyotomi Hideyoshi
- Byakuyakō [Journey Under the Midnight Sun] (TBS, 2006) - Junzō Sasagaki
- Jin (TBS, 2009) - Ogata Kōan
- Ryōmaden (NHK, 2010) - Katsu Kaishū
- Jun to Ai (NHK, 2012–2013) - Zenkō Kanō
- The Emperor's Cook (TBS, 2015) - Professor Shōgo Kirizuka
- Asa ga Kita (NHK, 2015) - Fukuzawa Yukichi
- Totto TV (NHK, 2016) - Tatsuo Ōoka
Notes
- 1 2 Schilling 1997, pp. 218–220
References
- Schilling, Mark (1997). The Encyclopedia of Japanese Pop Culture. Weatherhill. pp. {{{p}}}. ISBN 0-8348-0380-1.
- Referenced in the Manga Akumetsu Chapter 79 volume 09 as a character Called Takeya Tesuda