Ryōko Shinohara
Ryoko Shinohara | |
---|---|
篠原 涼子 | |
Born | |
Occupation(s) | Actress and singer |
Years active | 1989–present |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Ryoko Shinohara (篠原 涼子, Shinohara Ryōko, born August 13, 1973) is a Japanese singer and actress.
As a singer, she is best known for the 1994 song "Itoshisa to Setsunasa to Kokoro Zuyosa to" with producer Tetsuya Komuro, which charted at number one and made her the first female artist in Japan to record a double million in CD single sales. It was followed by the number one album Lady Generation: Shukujo no Jidai (1995). Shinohara's musical output saw waning commercial reception in the latter half of the decade, at which she began concentrating on her acting career.
Highlighted by the Japan Times for her "long reign as a TV drama queen", Shinohara's best known acting credits include detective Yukihira Natsumi in the drama series Unfair, which spawned three feature films and several specials; and temp worker Haruko Oomae in Haken no Hinkaku.[1][2] She has starred in several acclaimed films, winning two Japan Academy Film Prizes for her roles in The House Where the Mermaid Sleeps and Sakura Guardian in the North, both in 2018.
Career
Shinohara appeared in Tetsuya Nakashima's 2004 film Kamikaze Girls.[3]
Filmography
Films
- Shin Funky Monkey Teacher Dotsukaretarunen (1994)
- Funky Monkey Teacher Forever (1995)
- Happy People (1996)
- June Bride (1998)
- Beru Epokku (1998)
- Go-Con! Japanese Love Culture (2000)
- Red Shadow (2001)
- Calmi Cuori Appassionati (2001)
- Totunyuuseyo! Asama Sansou Jiken (2002)
- Dawn of a New Day: The Man Behind VHS (2002)
- Kendama (2002)
- Blessing Bell (2003)
- Kamikaze Girls (2004) as Momoko's mom.
- The Uchoten Hotel (2006)
- Unfair (2006) as Natsumi Yukihira
- Hanada Shōnen Shi (2006)
- Unfair: The Movie (2007) as Natsumi Yukihira
- Unfair 2: The Answer (2011) as Natsumi Yukihira
- One Piece Film: Z (2012) as Ain (voice)
- Unfair: The End (2015) as Natsumi Yukihira
- Sakura Guardian in the North (2018)
- Sunny: Our Hearts Beat Together (2018) as Nami Abe (adult)
- The House Where the Mermaid Sleeps (2018) as Kaoruko Harima
- Bento Harassment (2019) as Kaori Mochimaru
- Wedding High (2022) as Maho Nakagoshi[4]
Television
- Houkago (1992)
- Sugao no Mama de (1992)
- Ninshin Desuyo 2 (1995)
- Kagayaku Toki no Naka de (1995)
- Rennai Zenya: Ichidodake no Koi 2 (1996)
- Pure (1996)
- Naniwa Kinyudo 2 (1996)
- Shinryounaikai Ryouko (1997)
- Gift (1997)
- Bayside Shakedown (1997)
- Ao no Jidai (1998)
- Nanisama (1998)
- Beach Boys Special (1998)
- Kira Kira Hikaru (1998)
- Kiken na Kankei (1999)
- Genroku Ryoran (1999)
- Kabachitare (2000)
- Tokimune Hojo (2000)
- Saotome Typhoon (2001)
- Mukodono! (2001)
- HR (2002)
- Hatsu Taiken (2002)
- Renai Hensachi (2002)
- Boku no Mahou Tsukai (2003)
- Mukodono (2003)
- Mother and Lover (2004)
- Hikari to Tomo ni (2004)
- At Home Dad (2004)
- Yankee Bokou ni Kaeru (2004)
- Naniwa Kinyudo 6 (2005)
- Anego (2005) as Naoko Noda
- Unfair SP (2006) as Natsumi Yukihira
- Message (2006)
- Hanayome wa Yakudoshi (2006)
- Unfair (2006) as Natsumi Yukihira
- Woman's Island (2006)
- The Pride of the Temp (2007)
- Hataraku Gon! (2009)
- Ogon no Buta (2010)
- Tsuki no Koibito (2010)
- Unfair Double Meaning ~ Yes or No? SP 2 (2013)
- Last Cinderella (2013)
- Lady Girls (2015) as Aki Nakahara
- The Pride of the Temp 2 (2020)
- Ochoyan (2020–21) as Shizu Okada
- Fishbowl Wives (2022)[5]
Dubbing
- World War Z, Karin Lane (Mireille Enos)[6]
Discography
Studio albums
- Ryoko from Tokyo Performance Doll (1993)
- Lady Generation (1995)
Compilation albums
- Sweets: Best of Ryoko Shinohara (1997)
Singles
- "Koi wa Chanson" (1991)
- "Squall" (1992)
- "Sincerely" (1994)
- "Itoshisa to Setsunasa to Kokoro Zuyosa to" (1994) (Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie theme)
- "Motto Motto..." (1995)
- "Lady Generation" (1995)
- "Dame!" (1995)
- "Heibon na Happy ja Monotarinai" (1996)
- "Shiawase wa Soba ni Aru" (1996)
- "Party o Nukedasō!" (1996)
- "Goodbye Baby" (1997)
- "Blow Up" (1998)
- "A Place in the Sun" (1998)
- "Rhythm to Rule" (2000)
- "Someday Somewhere" (2001)
- "Time of Gold" with Junpei Shiina (2003)
Kōhaku Uta Gassen appearances
Year / Broadcast | Appearance | Song | Appearance order | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 (Heisei 6) / 45th | Debut | "Itoshisa to Setsunasa to Kokoro Zuyosa to" | 2/25 | Tokio |
2022 (Reiwa 4) / 73rd | 2 | "Itoshisa to Setsunasa to Kokoro Zuyosa to 2023" | 37/44 | Yuzu |
Awards
Year | Award | Category | Nominated work(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | 43rd Hochi Film Award | Best Actress | The House Where the Mermaid Sleeps, Sunny: Our Hearts Beat Together | Won[7] |
2019 | 61st Blue Ribbon Awards | Best Actress | Nominated | |
42nd Japan Academy Prize | Best Actress | The House Where the Mermaid Sleeps | Nominated | |
Best Supporting Actress | Sakura Guardian in the North | Nominated |
References
- ^ Brasor, Philip (February 4, 2007). "Super temp worker who saves day is a nonconformist heroine". The Japan Times.
- ^ Schilling, Mark (December 25, 2008). "Dueling with a rare Japanese superhero". The Japan Times.
- ^ Schilling, Mark (June 23, 2004). "Naughty and nice, sugar and spice". The Japan Times.
- ^ "ウェディング・ハイ". eiga.com. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
- ^ "岩田剛典がドラマ「金魚妻」で篠原涼子と不倫愛、安藤政信や長谷川京子ら11名解禁". Natalie. Retrieved October 21, 2021.
- ^ "ワールド・ウォーZ". Star Channel. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
- ^ "篠原涼子、自身初の主演女優賞受賞にびっくり!「倒れそうに」". Cinematoday. Retrieved November 29, 2018.
External links
- Official website
- Ryōko Shinohara discography at Discogs
- Ryōko Shinohara at IMDb
- Ryōko Shinohara at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)