
Chieko Takehisa
Acting
Born 1912-03-06 · Nakakawaguchi, Akita, Japan · Died 2006-09-14
Chieko Takehisa (March 6, 1912 – September 14, 2006) was a Japanese actress from Akita Prefecture. At 15, she dropped out of high school to join the movie industry. She then starred in many films and plays from the 1930s to the 1940s, becoming popular as an actress in "moga" (modern girl) roles. In 1935, Takehisa met American journalist Clarke Kawakami at a Christmas party. They soon fell in love, but America's Japanese exclusion laws created great difficulty in securing a visa for Takehisa. In 1941, she finally arrived in the United States on a student visa, marrying Kawakami in August of that year. After the Pearl Harbor attack, Takehisa returned to Japan, resuming her film career, and the two lost contact. In 1945, Kawakami learned that Takehisa had survived the war. Hoping to find her, he returned to Japan and joined General Douglas MacArthur's staff in charge of the U.S. occupation. There, he was reunited with Takehisa, who was astonished to see him. The couple would have three children in the following years, and Takehisa effectively retired from the film industry by the late 1940s. Takehisa moved to Hawaii in 1950 with her family, where she lived for the rest of her life.
Acting

The Bride from Japan
Taro's mother

Kaze no ko

Those Who Make Tomorrow
Kin Okamoto, Mother

Uta e! Taiyō

To Love and Swear
Shiraishi's wife
Harbor of Life

Kantaro of Ina

Horse
Saku Onoda, Ine's mother

The Monkey King
Witch
Wife of a Lily

Hikari to kage (Zenpen)

Hikari to kage (Kōhen)
Enoken's Mori no Ishimatsu

Blizzard Ronin
Family Diary Part II
Family Diary Part I

Subterranean Heat
Okayo

Learn from Experience, Part Two
Yurie

Learn from Experience, Part One
Yurie
Nangoku taiheiki
Fujiharu

Japanese Women's Textbook
(Volume 1)

Yoru no hato
Okiyo

The Responsibility of Kissing

Brother and Sister
Botchan
Kosuzu, the geisha

Tadano Bonji: Jinsei Benkyô