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・ Junko Hori
・ Junko Hoshino
・ Junko Isoda
・ Junko Itō
・ Junko Iwao
・ Junko Karube
・ Junko Kawada
・ Junko Kawano
・ Junko Kitanishi
・ Junko Kubo
・ Junko Kudō
・ Junko Kusayanagi
・ Junko Mabuki
・ Junko Mihara
・ Junko Minagawa
Junko Miyashita
・ Junko Mizuno
・ Junko Mori
・ Junko Mori (composer)
・ Junko Moriyama
・ Junko Noda
・ Junko Ogata
・ Junko Okada
・ Junko Onishi
・ Junko Onishi (musician)
・ Junko Onishi (swimmer)
・ Junko Sakurada
・ Junko Sakurai
・ Junko Shimakata
・ Junko Tabei


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Junko Miyashita : ウィキペディア英語版
Junko Miyashita

is a Japanese actress who had a long and varied career working both in pink film and mainstream cinema.
== Career ==
Junko Miyashita was born in Tokyo on January 29, 1949. She was working as a waitress at a coffee shop when she was recruited to work in ''Pink films''.
Her debut film was in July 1971 with . Her work in Nikkatsu's Roman Porno genre included eight entries in the ''Apartment Wife'' series from 1972 until 1974. She worked with leading ''pink film'' director Kōji Wakamatsu, and some of the best directors in Nikkatsu's Roman Porno films, including Noboru Tanaka, and Tatsumi Kumashiro. Among the highlights of her early career were starring roles in Tanaka's ''Showa Trilogy'' (''A Woman Called Sada Abe'' (1975), ''Watcher in the Attic'' (1976), and ''Beauty's Exotic Dance: Torture!'' (1977)). An exceptionally good actress for the genre, she was nominated for a Japanese Academy Award for best new actress in her roles in Kihachi Okamoto's film, ''Dynamite Bang Bang'' and Hideo Gosha's ''Bandit vs. Samurai Squad'' (both 1978). She was awarded the Blue Ribbon Award for both of these roles.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Awards for Junko Miyashita )〕 She was again nominated for a Japanese Academy Award in 1979 for best actress for her role in ''Woman with Red Hair'', and won the ''Hochi News'' award for both this role and for ''Wet Weekend''. The following year, she was given a special award for her career at the Yokohama Film Festival.
From the 1980s, she began working more in mainstream films, including two award-winning films for Mitsuo Yanagimachi: ''Fire Festival'' (''Himatsuri'') (1985) and ''About Love, Tokyo'' (''Ai ni tsuite, Tokyo'') (1992). Commenting on his work with Miyashita, director Noboru Tanaka later said, "I liked her natural manner. She always looks very natural, but you can feel the great power and strength that she has. She had a very traditional and conservative Japanese style, but her determination could be seen on the screen... she was a traditional Japanese beauty who also had energy and strength, and that was what I liked about her."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Junko Miyashita」の詳細全文を読む



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