Fujiko Yamamoto (山本富士子, Yamamoto Fujiko) (born 11 December 1931) is a Japanese stage, film and television actress. She was the winner of the first Miss Nippon Grand Prix in 1950, and appeared in over 100 films between 1953 and 1963, including works by directors Yasujirō Ozu, Kon Ichikawa, Shirō Toyoda and Kōzaburō Yoshimura. Yamamoto was born on 11 December 1931 in Nishi ward, Osaka. In 1953, she made her film debut at Daiei Film, and became one of the studio's top actresses. Yamamoto was considered one of Japan's most beautiful women, with, in the words of film historian Catherine Russell, "noble" features that represented the classic ideal of Japanese beauty. As such, she was well-suited for costumed parts in the era's popular period dramas, with her less-frequent modern roles (in films like Ozu's Equinox Flower and Ichikawa's Being Two Isn't Easy) often shot in "movie star" closeups that placed her apart from the films' contemporary storytelling. In 1963, when her co...
Madame Aki
1963
Equinox Flower
1958
Zoku Tange Sazen
1953
The Messenger from the Moon
1954
Princess Sen in Edo
1960
Beauty the Enemy
1959
Ten Dark Women
1961
Utamaro, Painter of the Woman
1959
Stop the Old Fox
1959
Being Two Isn't Easy
1962
Floating Vessel
1957
Flowery Hood 2
1956
Musume no boken
1958
The Swishing Sword
1958
Three Women Around Yoshinaka
1956
The Precipice
1958
Made in Japan
1953
Mother
1958
Inochi wo Kakeru Otoko
1958
Jūdai no yūwaku
1953
The Twilight Story
1960
The Loyal 47 Ronin
1958
Tange Sazen
1953
Nocturne of a Woman
1961
A Girl Isn't Allowed to Love
1955
Jōen
1959
Love of the Princess
1957
Nakayoshi ondo: Nippon ichi dayo
1962
The Venus' Tear
1962
The Dancer and Two Warriors
1955
The Great Wall
1962
The Romance of Yushima
1955
Pilgrimage at Night
1959
Peony on the Skin
1959
京化粧
1961
Secret of Naruto
1957
Thirst
1958
The Actress and the Three Rascals
1962
A Woman's Testament
1960