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Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 15 films

Né(e) le 11 octobre 1904

Lieu de naissance
Aoyama, Tokyo

Mort le 07 janvier 1970 (à 65 ans)

Kenichi Enomoto

Acteur dans

1962

  • 喜劇 団地親分

1961

  • 乾杯!ごきげん野郎
  • 誰よりも金を愛す

1958

  • 大暴れ東海道
  • 二等兵物語 あゝ戦友の巻

1956

  • 宝島遠征

1954

  • Enoken no tengoku to jigoku

1952

  • Les Hommes qui marchèrent sur la queue du tigre

1949

  • エノケンのとび助冒険旅行

1948

  • Utau Enoken torimonochou
  • エノケンのホームラン王

1944

  • 三尺左吾平

1943

  • 兵六夢物語

1940

  • Enoken no songokû: songokû zenko-hen

1934

  • Enoken no seishun suikoden
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Kenichi Enomoto (October 11, 1904 – January 7, 1970) was a popular Japanese singing comedian, mostly known by his stage name Enoken. A major innovator during his heyday, Enoken's stage shows, radio appearances, and film roles were a major influence within Tokyo theatre before World War II, and was a catalyst for the revival of comedy in the postwar period. Born in Aoyama, Tokyo, the son of rice cracker shop owners, Enomoto fell under the spell of such stars of the Asakusa Opera as Taya Rikizo and Fujiwara Yoshie, and in 1922 he made his stage debut at age 18 as a chorus member of the Asakusa Kinryukan Theatre. The Great Kanto Earthquake of the following year dealt a great blow to the opera world in Tokyo, at which time Enomoto shifted to comic theatre. Playing small roles in various comedy productions, he returned to the Asakusa stage in 1929 as part of the troupe Casino Folly. The following year saw him launch his own troupe, Enoken Gekidan, which would firmly establish him as a leading figure in Tokyo theatrical circles. In 1934, he starred in the movie Enoken no Seishun Suikoden (Enoken’s Tale of Youth’s Folly), and gained national popularity. His subsequent film career saw him parody a whole parade of Japanese historical personages, including Kondo Isami and Sakamoto Ryoma, in a series of "jidai-geki" (historical dramas) and "chanbara" (samurai drama) films, including some directed by Kajirō Yamamoto, Nobuo Nakagawa and Akira Kurosawa. Enomoto became afflicted with necrosis of the right leg in the 1950s, which required amputation, curtailing his film and stage career. He did, however, make a legendary comeback at the Shinjuku Koma Theatre 1963 wearing a prosthetic leg. He died in 1970, and is entombed in Hase Temple in Nishi-Azabu, Minato, Tokyo, on whose tombstone is inscribed "The King of Comedy". Description above from the Wikipedia article Kenichi Enomoto, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.





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