
Actor
Kinya Kitaoji
Born 1943 · Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan
Early life: He was born in Kyoto, son of jidaigeki film star Ichikawa Utaemon, and graduated from Waseda University School of Letters, Arts and Sciences Ⅱ in Tokyo. Acting career: Kin'ya made his debut with his father in the 1956 Toei film Oyakodaka in the role of Katsu Kaishū. He is a contemporary of, and was taken to be a rival of, Hiroki Matsukata, who was also the son of a famous actor (Jūshirō Konoe). In 1964, Kin'ya made his first appearance on stage in Cyrano de Bergerac. The 1960s and 1970s saw him in many contemporary roles. He appeared in Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Deadly Fight in Hiroshima and Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode as well as Karei naru Ichizoku. The title role in the 1975 film Takehisa Yumeji was his. On television, Kitaōji portrayed Miyamoto Musashi in the Nippon Television show of the same name. A major historical role was Sakamoto Ryōma in the year-long prime-time NHK Taiga drama Ryōma ga Yuku (1968). He landed the title role in the long-running cop show Zenigata Heiji, set in the Edo period. In the 1985 twelve-hour New Year special Fūun Yagyū Bugeichō, he played Yagyū Jūbei, and in the following year's special, he portrayed both Tokugawa Yoshimune and Yagyū Shinrokurō. The role of another shogun fell to him in the following new year as TV Tokyo tapped him to play Tokugawa Iemitsu. Kin'ya returned to NHK for the 1987 Taiga drama Dokuganryū Masamune as Date Terumune, father of title character Date Masamune. Another role he took had been created by his father. Saotome Mondonosuke was the title character in the series Gozonji! Hatamoto Taikutsu Otoko. It ran from 1988 to 1994 on TV Asahi. His father, Ichikawa Utaemon, had appeared in numerous films as Mondonosuke. Kin'ya reprised the part of Miyamoto Musashi in the 1990 New Year's special. Toshirō Mifune had portrayed Musashi in the earlier film, also based on the Eiji Yoshikawa story, that had won an Academy Award. He returned to the New Year's special in 1996, again as the famous swordsman, in Tokugawa Kengōden Sore kara no Musashi. His first portrayal of Ōishi Kuranosuke was in the 1996 Chūshingura. He took up the role again in 2004 for the NHK Saigo no Chūshingura and in 2007, in the New Year special Chūshingura Yōzei-in no Inbō. Other historical roles from the Sengoku period include Azai Nagamasa, Saitō Dōsan, and Yamamoto Kansuke. In addition to historical parts, he appeared in fictional series. His portrayal of Ogami Ittō in the Lone Wolf and Cub ( Kozure 2) Which was a series for Asahi TV in Japan is representative of these appearances. In 2008, Kitaōji revisited the role of Katsu Kaishū in the Taiga drama Atsuhime. He had portrayed Katsu in his 1956 debut. He won the award for best actor at the 10th Hochi Film Award for Fire Festival and Haru no kane. Kitaōji played one of the lead roles in Hideo Nakata's psychological thriller film The Incite Mill. In recent times, Kitaōji voices the Hokkaido-inu character of "Father" in SoftBank Mobile's White Family advertising campaign.
Acting

One Piece Film: GOLD
Raise Max (voice) · 2016

Hanzawa Naoki
Ken Nakanowatari · 2013

Asura
Monk · 2012

Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Deadly Fight in Hiroshima
Shoji Yamanaka · 1973

Legal High SP
Isao Teshigawara · 2013

Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Final Episode
Tamotsu Matsumura · 1974

Doctor-X: Surgeon Michiko Daimon
Yoshito Tendo(天堂 義人) · 2012

Masamune Shogun
伊達輝宗 · 1987

The Incite Mill
Yoshi Ando · 2010

Shinsengumi: Assassins of Honor
Soji Okita · 1969
The Notorious Bored Samurai
Mondosuke · 1988

三屋清左衛門残日録 完結篇
Mitsuya Seizaemon · 2017

三屋清左衛門残日録
Mitsuya Seizaemon · 2016

Absolute Zero
Hideo Nagashima · 2010

THE LEGEND & BUTTERFLY
Saitō Dōsan · 2023

Kukai
Kukai · 1984

The Confidence Man JP – Episode of the Princess –
Raymond Fuu · 2020

The Family
Daisuke Manpyo · 2007

Whistleblower
Ikuo Yakuyama · 2019

Wolves, Pigs & Men
Sabu, the third brother · 1964

Lord Tokugawa Ieyasu
松平三郎元信(後の徳川家康) · 1965

I'm Home
Yozo Ieji · 2015

Dynamite Don-Don
Ginji Tachibana · 1978

Mount Hakkoda
Captain Kanda · 1977