加山雄三 (1937) Yûzô Kayama
演员
The son of one of one of Japan's biggest male stars of the 1930s,
'Ken Uehara', the handsome and likable Yuzo Kayama became one of Japan's
biggest male stars of the 1960s. And just as Uehara embodied the idea
of a modern Japanese wartime hero, Kayama became symbolic of postwar
Japanese affluence and confidence, most famously in his title role in
the 17 original "Young Guy" (Wakadaishô) movies for his father's home
studio, Toho. A popular singer as well as an actor, Kayama specialized
in romantic comedies that encouraged him to break spontaneously into
song, as showcased even in movies where he wasn't playing the Young
Guy, such as Oyome ni oide (1966). Though like his father he also starred in some of
Toho's war films, and crime and action thrillers such as his debut
Otoko tai otoko (1960), he largely bypassed serious dramas until Akira Kurosawa tapped him
for the lead alongside 'Toshiro Mifune' in Akahige (1965), the two-year shoot of which
Kayama found the most difficult experience of his life, but which also
yielded the work of which he is proudest. Other than a single return to
the Young Guy character, Kaettekita wakadaishô (1981), ten years after leaving the series,
Kayama, also like his father, in later years moved towards playing a
series of kindly authority figures, while still maintaining his
romantic appeal to nostalgic audiences with musical appearances on the
stage and on television.