- Born
- Died
- Place
Sadako Sawamura
Sadako Sawamura (沢村貞子, Sawamura Sadako; 11 November 1908 – 16 August 1996) was a Japanese stage and film actress and essayist who appeared in more than 350 films between 1935 and 1976.
Sawamura was born in the Asakusa district of Tokyo. After dropping out of Japan Women's University, she was active in left-wing theatre groups and was twice arrested for her political beliefs, spending over a year in prison with much of it in solitary confinement. She started acting in films in 1934, first at the Nikkatsu studio, later at Toho. She appeared in many supporting roles after the war, often working with director Mikio Naruse. Sawamura also acted in films by directors including Kenji Mizoguchi, Yasujirō Ozu, Keisuke Kinoshita and Kaneto Shindō.
Her brothers were the actors Daisuke Katō and Kunitarō Sawamura. Her autobiography Watashi no Asakusa has been translated into English as My Asakusa. She was married three times: to actor Shigeo Imamura (1931-33), actor Kamatari Fujiwara (1936-46) and subsequently to film magazine editor and critic Yasuhiko Ohashi (1968-96, though domestic partners from 1946 onward).
As actor
When Winter Comes
Japan Beauty Story: A Woman Among Women
The Street Car Game
The Song from My Heart
The Young Eagles of the Kamikaze
Nunnery Confidential
My Brother, My Love
Lemon in the Rainbow
A Comedy in Front of the Station: Fortune
Swift Current
Thoroughbred Women Gamblers
The Rickshaw Man’s Son
Flower Cards Chivalry
A Sky Full of Tears
Night Bitch
Once a Rainy Day
The Kii River
Bad Reputation: Cherry Blossoms
Sayonara ressha
A Fugitive from the Past
Nami kage
That Cute Girl
Snow Country
Love on the Rainbow
The Passionate Spinster
Salaryman's Medal
Night Scandal in Japan
A Story from Echigo
Eddy Currents of Life
Whirlpool of Flesh