Suzuka Ohgo (Japanese: 大後 寿々花, Hepburn: Ōgo Suzuka, born 5 August 1993) is a Japanese actress.
Suzuka Ohgo | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 2000–present |
Biography
editOhgo was born in Zama, Kanagawa. She began acting in 2000 when she was seven, then joined Sunflower (Himawari), a theatrical company. She debuted with the company at the Meiji-za in Story of a National Thief.
In early 2005, Ohgo debuted in her first major film, Kita No Zeronen (北の零年, a.k.a. Year One in the North), directed by Isao Yukisada, with Ken Watanabe, where she played the role of Tae Komatsubara. In December 2005, she debuted in Hollywood with Memoirs of a Geisha, directed by Rob Marshall, where she played Sakamoto Chiyo, the child version of the main protagonist Nitta Sayuri (the adult version is played by Chinese actress Zhang Ziyi). During the same year, she also won the Japan Film Critics Award for Best Newcomer.
In 2006, Ohgo also starred in Baruto no Gakuen (バルトの楽園, a.k.a. Symphony of Joy), which was released in June 2006 and is set during World War I, where she plays a girl of mixed German-Japanese heritage trying to find her German father who may be held there.
In 2008, she began lending her voice to anime in Michiko to Hatchin as Hana (AKA: "Hatchin"). She also provided the voice of Katia Andersen in Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box.
She worked at CATARMAN until 2013.
Filmography
editFilm
edit- Ultraman Cosmos vs. Ultraman Justice: The Final Battle (ウルトラマンコスモスVSウルトラマンジャスティス THE FINAL BATTLE) (2003)
- Kita No Zeronen (北の零年, a.k.a. Year One in the North)
- Memoirs of a Geisha (2005)
- Baruto no Gakuen (2006)
- Tōku no Sora ni Kieta (遠くの空に消えた) (2007)
- Guu-Guu Datte Neko de Aru (グーグーだって猫である) (2008)
- Kamui Gaiden (2008)
- Oppai Volleyball (2009)[1]
- The Kirishima Thing (2012)
- The Mourner (2015)
- Oh Lucy! (2017)
- I Was a Secret Bitch (2019)
- Happy Island (2019)
- The Women in the Lakes (2024)[2]
- Ghosts Dream Selfish Dreams (2024)[3]
TV drama
edit- Gokusen (ごくせん) (2002, Nippon TV)
- Hito ni Yasashiku (人にやさしく) (2002, Fuji TV)
- Dr. Coto's Clinic (Dr.コトー診療所, Dr. Kotō Shinryōjo) (2003–04, Fuji TV)
- Ai no Ie ~Nakimushi Sato to Shichinin no Ko~ (愛の家~泣き虫サトと7人の子~) (2003, NHK)
- Dr. Kotō: Shinryojō 2004 (Dr. Coto's Clinic 2004, Dr.コトー診療所2004) (2004, Fuji TV)
- Aikurushī (あいくるしい) (2005, TBS)
- Shibō Suitei Jikoku (死亡推定時刻) (2006, Fuji TV)
- Dr. Kotō: Shinryojō 2006 (Dr.コトー診療所2006) (2006, Fuji TV)
- Sexy Voice and Robo (セクシーボイスアンドロボ) (2007, Nippon TV)
- Galileo (ガリレオ)(2007, Fuji TV)
- Churaumi Karano Nengajyou (美ら海からの年賀状)(2007, Fuji TV)
- Hitomi (TV drama) (瞳)(2008, NHK)
- Shibatora~Dōgaokeiji・Sibata Taketora~ (シバトラ~童顔刑事・柴田竹虎~)(2008, Fuji TV)
- Samurai High School (サムライ・ハイスクール) (2009, Nippon TV)
- Tokyo Alien Bros. (トーキョーエイリアンブラザーズ) (2018, Nippon TV)[4][5][6]
Anime
edit- Michiko to Hatchin (2008, Fuji TV)
Video games
edit- Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box (Katia Anderson)
Commercials
edit- SoftBank (SoftBank Mobile: Vodafone Japan)
- Iris Ohyama
References
edit- ^ "おっぱいバレー". eiga.com. Retrieved 31 August 2024.
- ^ "湖の女たち". eiga.com. Retrieved November 28, 2023.
- ^ "幽霊はわがままな夢を見る". eiga.com. Retrieved April 25, 2024.
- ^ "Live-Action Tokyo Alien Bros. TV Series Adds 15 More Cast Members". Anime News Network LLC. Retrieved February 5, 2023.
- ^ "キャスト&スタッフ|トーキョーエイリアンブラザーズ|日本テレビ". Nippon Television Network Corporation. Retrieved February 5, 2023.
- ^ "Tokyo Alien Bros. (TV Series 2018) - IMDb". IMDb.com. Retrieved January 19, 2023.