Submission declined on 20 February 2024 by MicrobiologyMarcus (talk).
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
|
Submission declined on 9 January 2024 by Kline (talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are: Declined by Kline 5 months ago.
|
Submission declined on 8 January 2024 by CNMall41 (talk). This submission is not adequately supported by reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be verified. If you need help with referencing, please see Referencing for beginners and Citing sources. Declined by CNMall41 5 months ago. |
- Comment: Does not demonstrate how it meets WP:Notability, see WP:NTV for more help. microbiologyMarcus (petri dish·growths) 13:47, 20 February 2024 (UTC)
- Comment: Over use of red links in the article. microbiologyMarcus (petri dish·growths) 13:45, 20 February 2024 (UTC)
- Comment: Please see WP:TVCAST. You will also need to cite the content in the draft as the majority has no sourcing. CNMall41 (talk) 09:54, 8 January 2024 (UTC)
Nobunaga | |
---|---|
Genre | Historical, Jidaigeki |
Screenplay by | Seiken Tamukai |
Directed by | Akihiko Shigemitsu, etc. |
Narrated by | Rancieux Christophe |
Music by | NHK Symphony Orchestra |
Opening theme | Kurōda Mōri |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 49 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Hirofumi Watanabe |
Producer | Masatsugu Yagi |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | NHK |
Release | January 5 – December 13, 1992 |
Nobunaga: King of Zipang (Japanese: 信長 KING OF ZIPANGU) is the 30th Taiga drama that premiered in 1992 on NHK.[1][2][3][4][5][6] The broadcast received an average viewer rating of 24.6 percent in the Kanto area with the highest viewing rating of 33.0%.[7]
Plot
editThe drama is set during the Sengoku period.
The story covers the life of Oda Nobunaga from young childhood to his unexpected end, as narrated by the European missionary Luís Fróis from an outsider's perspective into 16th century Japan.[1]
Cast
editStarring role
edit- Naoto Ogata[1][4][6] as Oda Nobunaga
- Kōsuke Morita as Oda Kippōshi (child Nobunaga)
- Ryūmei Yamane as Oda Nobunaga (teenager)
- Momoko Kikuchi as Nōhime, Nobunaga's wife and Saitō Dōsan's daughter
- Yūki Eimoto as teenager Nōhime
- Keiko Takahashi as Dota Gozen (Rui), Nobuhide's wife and the mother of Nobunaga, Nobuyuki, and Oichi
- Miho Takagi as Lady Ikoma Kitsuno (Shino), Nobunaga's first concubine and mother of Nobutada, Nobukatsu, and Tokuhime
- Isako Washio as Oichi, Nobunaga's younger sister and mother of the Three Azai Sisters
- Miho Nakano as young Oichi
- Mayumi Wakamura as Onabe-no-kata, one of Nobunaga's concubines
- Ryūzō Hayashi as Oda Nobuhide, Nobunaga's father
- Eiji Funakoshi as Oda Nobusada, Nobunaga's grandfather
- Toshihide Tonesaku as Oda Nobutada, Nobunaga's eldest son and heir
- Daichi Ruike as Oda Kimyōmaru (child Nobutada)
- Masazumi Terazawa, Hiroshi Aoki as young Nobutada
- Tetsuya Fujita as teenager Nobutada
- Mamoru Ōizumi as Oda Nobukatsu, Nobunaga's second son
- Shintarō Tahara as Oda Chasenmaru (young Nobukatsu)
- Megumi Narita as Tokuhime, Nobunaga's eldest daughter and wife of Matsudaira Nobuyasu
- Naomi Mikai, Aki Inoue, Yūko Nishimura as young Gotoku
- Kazuto Kishimoto as Oda Nobuhiro, Nobunaga's older brother and Nobuhide's eldest illegitimate son
- Yasunori Murada as teenager Nobuhiro
- Naoki Hosaka as Oda Nobuyuki, Nobunaga's younger brother and rival
- Masato Uchiyama as Oda Kanjūrō (child Nobuyuki)
- Daisuke Ōtomo as teenager Nobuyuki
- Towako Kimijima as Kiyoshi, Nobuyuki's wife and later Ikeda Tsuneoki's wife
- Yūji Kanada as Oda Nobuharu, Nobunaga's younger half-brother
- Akio Hasegawa as Oda (Tsuda) Nobumitsu, Nobunaga's uncle
- Takanori Higuchi as Oda Nobutsugu, Nobunaga's uncle
- Shingō Yatsuda as Oda Hidetaka, Nobunaga's younger brother
- Kōichi Kase as Oda Nobuyasu, Nobunaga's uncle
- Katsuki Tanaka as Oda Nobutoki, Nobunaga's younger half-brother
Nobunaga's vassals and their associations
edit- Ken Utsui as Hayashi Hidesada
- Koji Matoba as Ikeda Tsuneoki
- Noriyuki Sakamoto as young Tsuneoki
- Sakae Takita as Shibata Katsuie
- Tōru Nakamura as Kinoshita Tōkichirō/Hashiba Hideyoshi
- Miho Nakayama as Nene, Hideyoshi's wife
- Michael Tomioka/Michael Anthony Sheridan as Akechi Mitsuhide, Nōhime's first cousin
- Ryō Ono as Akechi Hidemitsu
- Keiko Imamura as Hosokawa Gracia, Mitsuhide's daughter
- Tomoko Ikuta as Yui, Mitsuhide's daughter and Gracia's older sister
- Saburō Shinoda as Inaba Yoshimichi
- Ken Tanaka as Sakuma Nobumori
- Kojiro Hongo as Sakuma Morishige
- Hideaki Nitani as Hirate Masahide
- Arthur Kuroda as Hirate Hisahide
- Nobuo Tsukamoto as Naitō Katsusuke
- Toshio Shiba as Takigawa Kazumasu
- Tetta Sugimoto as Niwa Nagahide
- Jun Hashizume to Maeda Toshiie
- Hiroshi Katsuno as Hosokawa Fujitaka
- Hideki Kobayashi as Hosokawa Tadaoki, Gracia's husband
- Junpei Morita as Kawajiri Hidetaka
- Shinichirō Mikami as Mori Yoshinari
- Tadamasa Nojiri as Mori Nagayoshi
- Kotarō Ryū as Mori Ranmaru
- Shōtarō Ashida as Mori Bōmaru
- Shunta Fuchino as Saitō Toshimitsu
- Teruo Ishiyama as Fuwa Mitsuharu
- Akira Nishida as Murai Sadakatsu
- Ken Aoki as Mōri Yoshikatsu
- Kōji Katata as Hattori Kazutada
- Kōji Shimizu as Matsunaga Hisahide
- Hirotarō Honda as Araki Murashige
- Zensō Shimizu as Takayama Tomoteru
- Norimasa Fuke as Dom Justo Takayama
Other daimyō/warlords
edit- Hiromi Go as Matsudaira Motonobu/Tokugawa Ieyasu, Lord of Mikawa Province and Nobunaga's ally
- Yoshie Shimamura as Lady Tsukiyama, Ieyasu's first wife
- Ryō Hayakawa as Matsudaira Nobuyasu, Ieyasu's first heir, Tokuhime's husband, and Nobunaga's son-in-law
- Shō Kawashima as young Nobuyasu
- Takeshi Ōbayashi as Mizuno Nobumoto, Ieyasu's maternal uncle
- Shinya Owada as Sakai Masachika, Matsudaira/Tokugawa's innkeeper and one of Ieyasu's important vassals from youth
- Kunio Hayashi as Sakai Tadatsugu
- Yoshimichi Nagamune as Ishikawa Ienari
- Shinya Ono as Hiraiwa Chikayoshi
- Gō Takashina as Honda Shigetsugu
- Yūsuke Takita as Torii Tadayoshi, an elder of the Matsudaira/Tokugawa's vassals
- Shinsuke Ashida as Saitō Dōsan, Lord of Mino Province and Nobunaga's father-in-law
- Shun Hirooka as Saitō Yoshitatsu, Dōsan's son
- Hiroyuki Watari as Saitō Tatsuoki, Yoshikatsu's son
- Hiroshi Yamamoto as Shiba Yoshimune
- Kōji Yamamoto as Shiba Yoshikane, Yoshimune's eldest son
- Terutake Tsuji as Oda Nobutomo, head of the Oda Yamato-no-kami family, the overlord ruler of Owari Province
- Mizuho Suzuki as Sakai Daizen
- Teruhiko Shibata as Imagawa Yoshimoto, Lord of Suruga Province and young Ieyasu's superior
- Hajime Tawara as Asahina Yasuyoshi, a senior vassal of the Imagawa clan
- Minori Terada as Azai Hisamasa, Nagamasa's father
- Takurō Tatsumi as Azai Nagamasa, Lord of northern Ōmi Province, Oichi's first husband, and Nobunaga's brother-in-law
- Kanako Tahara as Chacha, Oichi's eldest daughter with Nagamasa
- Rina Tsugawa as Gō/Oeyo, Oichi's second daughter with Nagamasa
- Jirō Okazaki as Azai Masazumi, a vassal of the Azai clan
- Keiichi Andō as Azai Inori, Nagamasa's vassal
- Takashi Sawa as Atsuji Sadayuki, a vassal for the Azai and Oda clans
- Kōki Kataoka as Isono Kazumasa
- Rokurō Abe as Ōnogi Hidetoshi, Azai clan's retainer
- Sōichirō Kitamura as Asakura Yoshikage, Lord of Echizen Province
- Motoyoshi Tashima as Asakura Kageaki
- Shunichi Toda as Asakura Kagetake
- Masakazu Itō as Asakura Kagetsune
- Yasuo Miyata as Ashikaga Yoshiteru, 13th Ashikaga shōgun
- Juraku Hanayagi III as Ashikaga Yoshiaki, 15th and last Ashikaga shōgun
- Yasuhiro Arai as Wada Koremasa, served the shōgun and Nobunaga
- Kanji Watanabe as Mitsubuchi Fujihide
- Katsuhiko Yokomitsu as Ueno Kiyonobu
- Takaya Kuroda as Takeda Katsuyori, Takeda Shingen's son
- Hitoshi Kitatani as young Katsuyori
- Kenji Kohashi as Takeda Nobukatsu, Katsuyori's heir
- Susumu Kurobe as Takeda Nobukado, a retainer of the Takeda clan
- Tomoko Abe as Hōjō-fujin, Katsuyori's wife and daughter of Hōjō Ujiyasu
- Shigeru Araki as Baba Nobuharu
- Takehiro Koyama as Yamagata Masakage
- Shinshō Nakamaru as Miyoshi Nagayoshi
- Sei Hiraizumi as Rokkaku Yoshikata
- Kōji Yamaguchi as Rokkaku Yoshisuke
- Franck Neel as Luís Fróis, the narrator of the story
- Adam Robbins as child Luís Fróis
- Junji Inagawa as Ryōsai Lorenzo, a Japanese convert to the Christian faith
- Terry O'Brien as Francis Xavier and Gaspar Vilela
- Gabriel Melak as Luis de Almeida
- Carlos Molina as Cosme de Torres
- Almeida Joffre as Juan Fernández
- Brian Burke-Gaffney as Alessandro Valignano
- Franco Maurilli as Gnecchi-Soldo Organtino
- Giovanni Pucci as Francisco Cabral
- Hiun Ryū as Anjirō
- Ried Jackson as Yasuke
- Naoki Kimura as Itō Mancio
- Kōji Shigetomi as younger Mancio
- Masazumi Nagazaki as Miguel Chijiwa
- Hirotada Saitō as younger Miguel
- Ryōsuke Ukamatsu as Martinão Hara
- Souten Shida as younger Martinão
- Tōru Mitsuyuki as Julian Nakaura
- Fabio Bussoti as Diogo de Mesquita
- Antonio Cantellini as Pope Gregory XIII
Others
edit- Kei Satō as Imai Sōkyū
- Takao Itō as Sen no Rikyū
- Minoru Uchida as Tsuda Sōgyū
- Takashi Kawai as Yamanoue Sōji
- Hidenobu Nojima as Shimai Sōshitsu
- Junji Shimada as Hibiya Ryōkei
- Shū Itō as Konishi Yukinaga
- Fumiya Itō as Ken'nyo
- Yukata Hara as Kyō'nyo, Ken'nyo's eldest son
- Katsumasa Uchida as Asayama Nichijō
- Noboru Matsuhashi as Asukai Masaharu
- Masami Horiuchi as Kajūji Harutoyo
- Shun Satō as Hino Terusuke
Fictional characters
edit- Mikijirō Hira as Kano Zuiten, secondary main character and the Oda clan's diviner
- Kazuma Matsubara as Kihachi, Hideyoshi's close pal
- Ikuko Yamamoto as Matsu, Rui's maid and Zuiten's mistress
- Yasuo Kawaguchi as Anjō Nagaie
- Chikako Ōyama as Yone/An/Yasu, Nagaie's concubine who became Nobuhide's concubine
- Mai Okamoto as Ryū, Nobunaga's sister who became Saitō Yoshikatsu's wife
- Masuyo Iwamoto as Kanae, Lady Tsukiyama's maid
- Arihiro Hase as Yoshikichi
- Kōichi Asuka as Munekichi
- Morooka Moro as Diogo
- Tetsuo Morishita as Shōemon
- Ōsamu Katō as Sano Gen'uemon
- Hiroshi Makita as Nagara Shinkurō
Production staff
edit- Original work/screenplay: Seiken Tamukai
- Music: Kurōdo Mōri
- Narration: Rancieux Christophe, Sachiko Kagami (summary avant title), Katsumi Izutsuya (main broadcast avant title)
- Performance: Tokyo Concert
- Theme Music Performance: NHK Symphony Orchestra
- Theme Music Condoctor: Tadaaki Otaka
- Theme Music Lyrics: Seiken Tamukai
- Theme Music Chorus: The Philharmonic Chorus of Tokyo
- Theme Music Vocalist Solo: Shō Hisaoka
- Supervision: Kiichi Masuda
- Title Stylist: Hirohide Watanabe
- Historical Research: Masato Okada
- Architectural Research: Akira Naitō
- Costume Research: Kiyoko Koizumi
- Choreography Coach: Kiyokata Saruwaka II
- Tea Ceremony Instructor: Sōtaku Suzuki
- Horsemanship Instructor: Shigemitsu Tanaka, Mitsuhiro Mamiya
- Sword fighting arranger/Martial arts Instructor: Kunishirō Hayashi
- Gunmanship Instructor: Yumio Nawa
- Taiko drum instructor: Mikio Yamamoto
- Materials provider: Taeko Uta
- Nagoya dialect Coach: Atsuko Serizawa
- Portuguese Instructor: Silvia Abei
- Imperial Court Speech Instructor: Kiriyo Tomonaga
- Noh Instructor: Tatsuyuki Sakurama
- Prayer Instructor: Zōtsune Satō
- Traditional Japanese music: Masakuni Kineya
- Collaboration: Gifu Prefecture, Gifu, Kakamigahara, Ōno, Fukui, Yamanashi Prefecture, Kobuchisawa, Yamanashi, Ena, Gifu, Iwamura, Gifu, Takane, Yamanashi, Shiga Prefecture, Azuchi, Shiga
- Produced by: Masatsugu Yagi, Ikuo Katō
- Art: Sensuke Tajima, Kiyokazu Aoki
- Technology: Nobuyoshi Ōnuma, Kunihiko Takahashi
- Photography: Kunio Miura, Toshinori Satō
- Lighting: Kiyoshi Noshita, Shizuo Nakayama
- Audio: Naomitsu Kondō, Kiyoto Suzuki
- Sound effects: Kiyoshi Hiratsuka, Kinnosuke Nishinomiya, Hidenori Kanno
- Video technology: Takeo Terada, Kazuo Yokoyama
- Recording/editing: Itaru Abe, Miyuki Ishihara
- Production work: NHK
- Co-production: NHK ENTERPRISES, INC.
- Production supervisor: Hirofumi Watanabe
- Production collaboration: NHK ART,Inc., NHK Media Technology, Inc.
- Directors: Akihiko Shigemitsu, Takashi Komatsu, Ryūichi Komatsu, Takeshi Shibata, Tōru Kagata, Ken Okada, Kunio Yoshikawa
TV schedule
editEpisode | Original airdate | Title | Directed by |
---|---|---|---|
1 | January 5, 1992 | "Zipang" (ジパング, Zipangu) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
2 | January 12, 1992 | "Father's Death" (親父の死, Oyaji no shi) | |
3 | January 19, 1992 | "The Dispute Starts" (抗争のはじまり, Kōsō no hajimari) | |
4 | January 26, 1992 | "Ritual Suicide" (切腹, Seppuku) | |
5 | February 2, 1992 | "Dōsan the Viper" (まむしの道三, Mamushi no Dōsan) | |
6 | February 9, 1992 | "First Step to Becoming a Daimyō" (大名への第一歩, Daimyō e no daīppo) | Ryūichi Komatsu |
7 | February 16, 1992 | "An Eye for an Eye" (目には目を, Me ni wa me o) | |
8 | February 23, 1992 | "The Dwelling of an Oni" (鬼の栖, Oni no Su) | Takeshi Shibata |
9 | March 1, 1992 | "Dōsan's Defeat and Death" (道三敗死, Dōsan haishi) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
10 | March 8, 1992 | "Family Dispute" (骨肉の争い, Kotsuniku no arasoi) | Takashi Komatsu |
11 | March 15, 1992 | "Younger Brother" (弟よ, Otōtoyo) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
12 | March 22, 1992 | "Unification of Owari" (尾張統一, Owari Tōitsu) | Ryūichi Komatsu |
13 | March 29, 1992 | "Battle of Okehazama (Part One)" (桶狭間の戦い (前), Okehazama no Tatakai (mae)) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
14 | April 5, 1992 | "Battle of Okehazama (Part Two)" (桶狭間の戦い (後), Okehazama no Tatakai (go)) | |
15 | April 12, 1992 | "Family Issues" (家庭の問題, Katei no mondai) | Takeshi Shibata |
16 | April 19, 1992 | "Warrior Spirit" (神の戦士たち, Kami no Senshitachi) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
17 | April 26, 1992 | "Yōkai of Christmas" (妖怪のクリスマス, Yōkai no Kurisumasu) | Ryūichi Komatsu |
18 | May 3, 1992 | "Peace Treaty" (和平同盟, Wahei Dōmei) | |
19 | May 10, 1992 | "Nobunaga Goes North" (信長北上, Nobunaga hokujō) | Yoshiki Nishimura |
20 | May 17, 1992 | "Portuguese Jesuit Fróis" (伴天連フロイス, Bateren Furoisu) | Ryūichi Komatsu |
21 | May 24, 1992 | "Shōgun Assassination" (将軍暗殺, Shōgun Ansatsu) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
22 | May 31, 1992 | "Mino Strategy" (美濃攻略, Mino Kōryaku) | Tōru Kagata |
23 | June 7, 1992 | "March to Kyoto" (京への道, Kyō e no michi) | Takashi Komatsu |
24 | June 14, 1992 | "Tenka Fubu" (天下布武, Tenka Fubu) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
25 | June 21, 1992 | "Ambition" (野望, Yabō) | Ken Okada |
26 | June 28, 1992 | "I Saw Nobunaga" (信長を見た, Nobunaga o mita) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
27 | July 5, 1992 | "Confrontation" (対決, Taiketsu) | |
28 | July 12, 1992 | "Grudges of the People" (人の恨み, Hito no Urami) | Takashi Komatsu |
29 | July 19, 1992 | "Battle of Anegawa" (姉川の合戦, Anegawa no Kassen) | Shigemitsu Yukihiko |
30 | August 2, 1992 | "Shinigami" (死神, Shinigami) | Takashi Komatsu |
31 | August 9, 1992 | "Setting Mt. Hiei Ablaze" (比叡山焼き打ち, Hieizan Yakiuchi) | Takeshi Shibata |
32 | August 16, 1992 | "Zuiten" (随天, Zuiten) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
33 | August 23, 1992 | "Nobunaga Siege Network" (信長包囲作戦, Nobunaga Hōi Sakusen) | Kunio Yoshikawa |
34 | August 30, 1992 | "Surrounded by Enemies on All Sides" (四面楚歌, Shimensoka) | Takashi Komatsu |
35 | September 6, 1992 | "Ashikaga Shogunate's Downfall" (足利幕府滅亡, Ashikaga Bakufu Metsubō) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
36 | September 13, 1992 | "Azai-Asakura Attack" (浅井朝倉攻め, Azai Asakura Seme) | Ken Okada |
37 | September 20, 1992 | "Take Over the World" (天下を取る, Tenka o toru) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
38 | September 27, 1992 | "Battle of Nagashino" (長篠の戦い, Nagashino no Tatakai) | |
39 | October 4, 1992 | "Transfer of Family Headship" (家督譲与, Katoku Jōyo) | Takashi Komatsu |
40 | October 11, 1992 | "Dream Castle" (夢の城, Yume no Shiro) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
41 | October 18, 1992 | "Portuguese Christians Prepared for Life-or-Death" (伴天連決死行, Bateren Kesshikō) | |
42 | October 25, 1992 | "Bad Rumours" (悪い噂, Warui Uwasa) | Takashi Komatsu |
43 | November 1, 1992 | "Ieyasu's Tragedy" (家康の悲劇, Ieyasu no Higeki) | |
44 | November 8, 1992 | "I Am God" (余は神である, Yo wa Kami de aru) | Akihiko Shigemitsu |
45 | November 15, 1992 | "The Earth is Round" (地球は丸い, Chikyū wa marui) | |
46 | November 22, 1992 | "A Seminary at Mt. Azuchi" (安土山神学校, Azuchiyama Shingakkō) | |
47 | November 29, 1992 | "Country-wide Subjugation Campaign" (全国平定作戦, Zenkoku Heitei Sakusen) | |
48 | December 6, 1992 | "King of Zipang" (キングオブジパング, Kingu obu Zipangu) | |
49 | December 13, 1992 | "Honnō-ji Incident" (本能寺の変, Honnōji no Hen) | |
Average rating 24.6% - Rating is based on Japanese Video Research (Kantō region).[7] |
References
edit- ^ a b c "大河ドラマ 信長 KING OF ZIPANGU". NHK (in Japanese).
- ^ Eye-ai: A Magazine on Japanese Culture and Entertainment · Issues 179-201. the University of California: Riverfield Incorporated. 1992. pp. 39, 45.
- ^ Daigaku, Jōchi (1992). Milward, Peter (ed.). The Mutual Encounter of East and West, 1492-1992. the University of Michigan: Renaissance Institute. p. 3.
- ^ a b Clements, Jonathon; Tamamuro, Motoko (2003). The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953. Stone Bridge Press.
- ^ Matsumura, Kunihiro (9 December 2022). 松村邦洋今度は「どうする家康」を語る (in Japanese). President Inc.
- ^ a b NHK大河ドラマ・ストーリー「信長」 [NHK Taiga Drama Story: Nobunaga] (in Japanese). Japan Broadcasting Corporation Publishing. 1992.
- ^ a b "過去の視聴率データ NHK大河ドラマ". Video Research (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 29 December 2001.
External links
edit- NHK Official (in Japanese)
- NHK On Demand Official (in Japanese)
- Nobunaga: King of Zipangu (1992) at IMDb
- in-depth (not just passing mentions about the subject)
- reliable
- secondary
- independent of the subject
Make sure you add references that meet these criteria before resubmitting. Learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue. If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Wikipedia.