Shūji Terayama

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Shūji Terayama (December 10, 1935 – May 4, 1983) was an avant-garde Japanese poet, dramatist, writer, film director, and photographer. According to many critics and supporters, he was one of the most productive and provocative creative artists to come out of Japan. He was born December 10, 1935, the only son of Hachiro and Hatsu Terayama in Hirosaki city in the northern Japanese prefecture of Aomori. His father died at the end of Pacific War in Indonesia in September 1945. At the age of nine, his mother moved to Kyūshū to work at an American military base while he himself went to live with relatives in the city of Misawa, also in Aomori. At this same time, Terayama lived through the Aomori air raids that killed more than 30,000 people. Terayama entered Aomori Prefectural Aomori High School in 1951, and in 1954 went to prestigious Waseda University's Faculty of Education to study Japanese language and literature. However, he soon dropped out because he fell ill with nephrotic syndrome. He received his education through working in bars in Shinjuku. His oeuvre includes a number of essays claiming that more can be learned about life through boxing and horse racing than by attending school and studying hard. Accordingly, he was one of the central figures of the "runaway" movement in Japan in the late 1960s, as depicted in his book, play, and film "Throw Away Your Books, Run into the Streets! In 1967, Terayama formed the Tenjō Sajiki theater troupe, whose name comes from the Japanese translation of the 1945 Marcel Carné film "Les Enfants du Paradis", so can be translated as "children of heaven", however its correct translation is "Ceiling Gallery" and has a meaning similar to the English expression "Peanut Gallery". The troupe was dedicated to the avant-garde and staged a number of controversial plays tackling social issues from an iconoclastic perspective. Some major plays include "Bluebeard", "Yes", and "The Crime of Fatso Oyama", among others. Also involved with the theater were artists Aquirax Uno and Tadanori Yokoo, who designed many of the advertisement posters for the group. Musically, he worked closely with experimental composer J.A. Seazer and folk musician Kan Mikami. He was also involved in poetry and at 18 was the second winner of the Tanka Studies Award. Terayama experimented with ‘city plays’, a fantastical satire of civic life. Also in 1967, Terayama started an experimental cinema and gallery called 'Universal Gravitation,' which is in fact still in existence at Misawa as a resource center. The Terayama Shūji Memorial Hall, which has a large collection of his plays, novels, poetry, photography and a great number of his personal effects and relics from his theatre productions, can also be found in Misawa. In 1976, he was a member of the jury at the 26th Berlin International Film Festival. Terayama published almost 200 literary works, and over 20 short and full-length films. He was married to Tenjō Sajiki co-founder Kyōko Kujō, but they later divorced, although they continued to work together until Terayama's death on May 4, 1983 from cirrhosis of the liver. Description above from the Wikipedia article Shūji Terayama, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Crew

Emperor Tomato Ketchup
Editor, Writer, Music, Director
The Experimental Image World of Shuji Terayama
Director, Writer
Private Collections
Director, Screenplay
Fruits of Passion
Director, Writer
Grass Labyrinth
Director, Screenplay
海王星
Creator
Pastoral: To Die in the Country
Producer, Writer, Director
Labyrinth Tale
Director, Script
Farewell to the Ark
Director, Screenplay
Nanami: The Inferno of First Love
Writer
The War of Jan-Ken-Pon
Director, Writer
Throw Away Your Books, Rally in the Streets
Writer, Producer, Director
Killers on Parade
Writer
Les chants de Maldoror
Director, Writer
Butterfly
Writer, Director
The Reading Machine
Screenplay, Director
Laura
Director
An Attempt to Describe the Measure of a Man
Director, Screenplay
The Eraser
Screenplay, Director
The Woman with Two Heads
Director, Screenplay
Young Person's Guide to Cinema
Screenplay, Director
Smallpox Tale
Director, Screenplay
Father
Director
The Cage
Director, Screenplay
The Trial
Director, Screenplay
Shintokumaru
Director, Writer
The Lemmings
Director, Writer
Directions to Servants
Director, Writer
100 Years of Solitude
Director
Boxer
Director, Screenplay
The Scandalous Adventures of Buraikan
Writer
Lemming
Writer
La Marie-vison
Writer
The Hunchback of Aomori
Writer
A Tale of Africa
Writer
Third Base
Writer
Video Letter
Editor, Cinematography, Writer, Director
Our Age Comes Riding on a Circus Elephant
Writer
Mothers
Poem
Catology
Director
Epitaph to My Love
Screenplay
On the Far Side of Twilight
Original Story
Get 'em All
Screenplay
JRA CM
Director
Youth in Fury
Screenplay
A Flame at the Pier
Screenplay
Wilderness: Part 2
Novel
Wilderness: Part 1
Novel