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Machida Kō | |
---|---|
Native name | 町田康 |
Born | Machida Yasushi (1962-01-15) January 15, 1962 (age 62) Sakai, Osaka Prefecture |
Pen name | Machida Machizō |
Occupation | Author, punk rock singer, poet, actor |
Nationality | Japanese |
Notable works | Kūge Gussun Daikoku Kiregire |
Notable awards | Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Award, Akutagawa Prize, Tanizaki Prize |
Machida Kō (町田 康, Machida Kō, born Machida Yasushi on January 15, 1962 in Sakai, Osaka Prefecture) is a Japanese author, punk rock singer, poet, and actor.
History
Machida formed a punk rock band called Inu (meaning "dog" in Japanese) in 1978, for which he used the stage name Machida Machizō (町田町蔵). Inu released their first album, Meshi Kuuna! (literally "Don't eat!") in 1981. The band split shortly after the album release. He went on to form a number of bands and released several albums. His albums earned reasonable critical acclaims but the commercial success was limited.
His first literary work, Kūge, was published in 1992, and included a selection of his poems. His first novel, Gussun Daikoku, was published in 1996. It earned him the Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Award. His unique style of story-telling marked by non-sense, irreverence, and slapstick is influenced by Kamigata (Kansai) Rakugo and Jidaigeki (samurai dramas). Some critics link him to self-destructive I Novel writers before the World War II such as Kamura Isota and Chikamatsu Shūkō. Oda Sakunosuke is also cited as one of his influences.
He won the 123rd Akutagawa Prize with Kiregire ("Shreds") in 2000 and the Tanizaki Prize with Kokuhaku ("Confession") in 2005.
On June 14, 2007, Machida got into an argument with his friend and rock musician Tomoyasu Hotei about a band they planned on forming together. There was a physical altercation and after learning that his injuries would take two weeks to heal, Machida filed a police report on June 18. Hotei was ordered to pay a fine of 300,000 yen on October 1.
Discography
Albums
- Meshi Kuuna! by Inu (1981)
- Ushiwakamaru Nametottara Dotsuitaru Zo by Inu (Published in 1984, recorded in 1979)
- Doterai Yatsura by Machida Machizo from Shifuku Dan (1986)
- Hona, Donaisee Iune by Machida Machizo (1987)
- Harafuri by Machida Machizo + Kitazawa Gumi (1992)
- Chūshajō no Yohane by Machida Machizo + Kitazawa Gumi (1994)
- Dōnikanaru by Machida Ko + The Glory (1995)
- Nōnai Shuffle Kakumei by Machida Ko (1997)
- Miracle Young by Miracle Young (2003)
- Machida Kō Group Live 2004 Oct 6th by Machida Ko Group (2004)
Singles
- Kokoro no Unitto by Machi Tai (2002)
Selected filmography
He played major roles in the following films.
- Burst City directed by Gakuryū Ishii (1982)
- Endless Waltz directed by Kōji Wakamatsu (1995)
- H Story directed by Nobuhiro Suwa (2001)
- Goldfish directed by Shin'ichi Fujinuma (2023)
Selected literary works
- Kūge (供花) - His debut poem selection 1992
- Kussun Daikoku (くっすん大黒) - Bunkamura Deux Magots Literary Award 1996
- Ore, Nanshin Shite (俺、南進して) 1999 co-authored with Nobuyoshi Araki
- Shreds (切れ切れ) - Akutagawa Prize 2000
- Gonge no Odoriko (権現の踊り子) - Kawabata Yasunari Literary Award 2003
- Confession (告白) - Tanizaki Prize 2005
References
- ^ Machida wrote a novel, Kokuhaku, based on the killing spree committed by Kumatarō Kido and Yagorō Tani in 1893. "Musicians Hotei, Machida fight over music". tokyograph.com. Retrieved 2012-02-02.
- "Hotei fined 300,000 yen in assault case". tokyograph.com. Retrieved 2012-02-02.
- "GOLDFISH". eiga.com. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
- Kou Machida at IMDb
External links
- Official Machida Kou WebSite (in Japanese)
- Ko Machida at J'Lit Books from Japan (in English)
- Synopsis of Punk Samurai and the Cult (Panku Samurai Kiraretesoro) at JLPP (Japanese Literature Publishing Project) (in English)
- 1962 births
- Living people
- Japanese punk rock singers
- Japanese male actors
- Akutagawa Prize winners
- Singers from Sakai, Osaka
- Male actors from Osaka Prefecture
- 20th-century Japanese singers
- 20th-century Japanese male singers
- Japanese male short story writers
- 21st-century Japanese short story writers
- 21st-century Japanese male writers