Haruhiko Yamanouchi

Haruhiko Yamanouchi (山内 春彦, Yamanouchi Haruhiko, born April 20, 1946), also known as Hal Yamanouchi (ハル・ヤマノウチ, Haru Yamanouchi), is a Japanese-Italian actor, voice actor, dancer, stuntman, choreographer and former mime.[1][2][3]

Haruhiko Yamanouchi
Born (1946-04-20) April 20, 1946
Other namesHal Yamanouchi
Al Huang
Alma materTokyo University of Foreign Studies
OccupationActor, voice actor, dancer, stuntman, choreographer, mime
Years active1976-present
ChildrenTaiyo Yamanouchi

Beginning his career as a mime, he has performed in and choreographed for numerous stage productions. Since 1976, he has acted in over 100 films and television series, including several 1980s genre films directed by the likes of Sergio Martino, Ruggero Deodato, and Enzo G. Castellari. He is best known to international audiences for his villainous supporting roles in Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou and The Wolverine. He has also translated and dubbed Japanese-language films into Italian.

Early life and education

Yamanouchi was born in Tokyo. His grandfather, Akio Yamauchi, was a children's book writer. He grew up in Niigata Prefecture and graduated from Niigata High School, and went on to study liberal arts at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. After graduation in 1971, he moved to London where he attended drama and dancing lessons. He was among the disciples of mime artist Lindsay Kemp.

Career

Theatre

While in London, he joined Stomu Yamashta's Red Buddha Theatre company, performing at the Roundhouse and the Piccadilly Theatre. He moved to Italy in 1975 and he began his career as an actor in experimental stage productions, appearing at pantomime festivals like the Festival Internazionale di mimo e pantomima in Florence and Settembre al Borgo in Campania.[3][2] He was a regular guest on RAI programming, where he would demonstrate his various acts. He first gained recognition for his stage acting in a production of William Shakespeare's The Tempest where he played the role of Ariel in over 300 stagings and earned him a Premio Internazionale Guido d'Arezzo.[4]

As a choreographer, Yamanouchi specializes in opera, collaborating with directors like Mauro Bolognini, Andrea Camilleri, Giancarlo Cobelli, Glauco Mauri, Mario Missiroli, Giuliano Montaldo, and Luca Ronconi. He choreographed a production of Turandot held at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium.

Film and television

Yamanouchi is made his screen acting debut with an uncredited role in the 1977 exploitation film Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals, directed by Joe D'Amato. He appeared in numerous erotic comedies and B-movies throughout the 1980s, including Crime at the Chinese Restaurant (1981), 2020 Texas Gladiators (1982), The Sword of the Barbarians (1982), 2019, After the Fall of New York (1983), Endgame (1983), Warriors of the Year 2072 (1984), Under the Chinese Restaurant (1987), Phantom of Death (1988).[2] He was occasionally credited under the pseudonym Al Huang.

More high-profile roles taken by Yamanouchi include starring in Adriano Celentano's musical Joan Lui (1985) and in Gabriele Salvatores's science-fiction film Nirvana (1997).[2] He also appeared in several American productions, such as Stuart Gordon's Robot Jox (1990), Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004), Paul McGuigan's Push (2009) and Peter Weir's The Way Back (2010).[2] He most notably portrayed the older Ichirō Yashida / Silver Samurai in The Wolverine (2013) (sharing the main antagonist's role with Ken Yamamura), starring opposite Hugh Jackman, Tao Okamoto and Hiroyuki Sanada, and also dubbed over his own dialogue in the Italian-language version of the film.[2][3]

Yamanouchi has translated and dubbed numerous Japanese-language films and television series into Italian and occasionally vice versa. He is the Italian voice actor of Ken Watanabe,[2][3] also voiced Floyd Eaglesan in the Italian dubbed version of Despicable Me 2 (2013).[5]

Teaching

Yamanouchi co-founded MDA Produzioni Danza, a dance and performing arts school in the Castelnuovo di Porto neighbourhood of Rome. He has also taught at the Silvio D'Amico National Academy of Dramatic Arts, Teatro dell'Opera di Roma, and the Teatro Carlo Felice. He has also conducted numerous internships for mimes, dancers and actors for various associations, foundations and theater schools, on the themes of improvisation, spontaneous movements and acting with the kinesthetic approach.

Personal life

From his relationship with TG3 journalist Teresa Piazza, he has a son, Taiyo Yamanouchi, who is an actor and hip-hop artist who performs under the stage name 'Hyst'. He has also served as a secondary father figure to Jesto, Taiyo's half-brother from Piazza's relationship with Stefano Rosso.

Yamanouchi has resided in Rome since emigrating to Italy in 1975. He became a naturalized citizen in 1992. He is fluent in Japanese, Italian, and English, and has performed in all three languages. He has penned a number of essays on Italian and Japanese culture for Italian literary magazines, and has contributed to UNESCO's International Theatre Institute.[6][7]

Filmography

Film

Television

Dubbing roles

Animation

Live action

gollark: It's been around since... I think the MC 1.5ish days?
gollark: Nope.
gollark: It's basically a networking... device.
gollark: Basically, CC *used* to have rednet as the native base thing with unspoofable IDs. But then they added modem peripherals, and rednet was reimplemented on top of those and now wildly insecure.
gollark: Dan200!

References

  1. "Haruhiko Yamanouchi's dubbing contributions". Antoniogenna.net. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  2. Lancia, Enrico; Melelli, Fabio (2006). Dizionario del cinema italiano. Attori stranieri del nostro cinema (in Italian). Rome: Gramese Editore. p. 213.
  3. Papaleo, Marco Lucio (1 August 2013). "Intervista Wolverine: Hal Yamanouchi" (in Italian). everyeye.it. Retrieved 27 September 2016.
  4. FREEmenti, Luca Bordonaro (2010-09-22). "Teatro del Banchero". www.teatrodelbanchero.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-08-04.
  5. "Le 10 cose di "Cattivissimo me 2" che ancora non sapevate" (in Italian). fanpage.it. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  6. "Theatre Yearbook 2018 ― Theatre in Japan". Issuu. Retrieved 2019-08-04.
  7. "COMPAGNIA SIMONA BUCCI / HAL YAMANOUCHI". Fabbrica Europa. 2018-05-11. Retrieved 2019-08-04.
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