Ayako Fujitani
Ayako Fujitani | |
---|---|
Fujitani (center) with Pepe Serna and Dave Boyle | |
Born |
Ayako Faith Fujitani December 7, 1979 Osaka, Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Ayako Seagal |
Occupation | Actress, Writer |
Height | 1.63 m (5 ft 4 in) |
Parent(s) |
Steven Seagal (father) Miyako Fujitani (mother) |
Relatives |
ja:剣太郎セガール (Kentaro Seagal, (elder brother) Nephew and niece (from Kentaro) Javier Gullón (husband) |
Ayako Fujitani (藤谷 文子 Fujitani Ayako, born December 7, 1979) is a writer and actress.[1] She is fluent in English and Japanese.
Early life
Ayako Fujitani was born in Osaka, Japan. She is the daughter of Steven Seagal from his first wife, aikido master Miyako Fujitani. As a teenager, she also resided in Los Angeles, California, United States. Through her father, Fujitani is of Russian-Jewish, Mongolian and Irish ancestry.[2]
Career
Acting
An avid fan of film, she made her screen debut and appeared in the sequels of the Heisei era daikaiju eiga Gamera (1995–1999) series, after a chance meeting at a film festival with director Shusuke Kaneko. She worked again with him on an episode he directed of Ultraman Max.
Other film roles include parts in the French film Sansa (2003) and in Michel Gondry's "Interior Design" segment of Tokyo! (2008).
She also stars in Dave Boyle's 2014 film, Man from Reno as the protagonist, a Japanese crime novelist named Aki. She also appeared in Dave Boyle's film, Daylight Savings as Erika, a love interest of the protagonist, Goh Nakamura.
Writing
After spending a few teenage years in Los Angeles studying acting and English, Ayako began to write for the Japanese magazine Roadshow. Her literary skills became more evident with the publication of her coupled novellas Touhimu (Flee-Dream) and Yakeinu (Burnt Dog). The former is often incorrectly referred to as semi-biographical, though it is a completely fictional story of a young suicidal girl trying to make sense of life, death, family, and love. The latter is the story of the relationship between a man and the girl he has raised in his cellar.
Along with writer and director Hideaki Anno, Ayako co-adapted her novella Touhimu (Flee-Dream) into the film Shiki-Jitsu in 2000. It was the first non-animated feature released by Studio Ghibli under the Studio Kajino label. She also stars in the title role. Shiki-Jitsu won the Artistic Award at the 30th Tokyo International Film Festival and showed at the Hong Kong International Film Festival.
Ayako has established herself as a writer in Japan of both fiction and non-fiction, contributing essays and short stories to various national publications.[3]
In 2014, Fujitani co-wrote a Ermenegildo Zegna-commissioned short film with Park Chan-wook, Chung Chung-hoon and Michael Werwie that Park also directed, and that Clint Mansell scored entitled A Rose Reborn starring Jack Huston and Daniel Wu.[4]
Other pursuits
In 2006, she directed a short drama for TV Tokyo's Drama Factory program.
Ayako has also displayed musical talent, being a member of the band Father's Girls.
Personal life
She has been married to Javier Gullón since 2016.
Filmography
- Gamera: Guardian of the Universe (1995)
- Musashi (1996)
- Gamera 2: Attack of Legion (1996)
- The Patriot (1998)
- Gamera 3: The Revenge of Iris (1999)
- Shiki-Jitsu (2000)
- Maguro no Shippo (A Tuna Fin) (2000)
- Sansa (2003)
- Ikusa (2005)
- Private Detective No.5 (2006)
- Captain Tokyo (2007)
- Shaolin Sakka (Shaolin Writer) (2008)
- Death of Domomata (2008)
- Tokyo! (2008)
- Daylight Savings (2012)
- Man from Reno (2014)
- Kaze ni Tatsu Lion (2015)
Theatrical works
- The Black Cat (December 2008)
- Kung Fu John (2007)
- ROPE (2006)
- Hiking For Human Life (2005)
Literary works
- Touhimu (Flee-Dream) (novella, coupled with Yakeinu ("Burnt Dog"))
- Hollywood Report column in Roadshow entertainment magazine
- Expressionist Walking column in Pee Wee fashion magazine
- Ayako Fujitani's Silver Screen Stuff column in Eiga Hihou entertainment magazine
- Memos on Life short story column in Re:S arts magazine
- Guest contributor to Giant Robot (Asian American art and culture magazine)
References
- ↑ Ordona, Michael (19 March 2009). "Ayako Fujitani". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
- ↑ "Steven Seagal and the mob". Retrieved 2008-11-06.
- ↑ Matthew Hernon, Tokyo Weekender, Renaissance Woman: Getting to know Ayako Fujitani, http://www.tokyoweekender.com/2013/11/renaissance-woman-getting-to-know-ayako-fujitani/
- ↑ Zainab Akande, Watch: Park Chan-wook's Fashionista Thriller Starring Jack Huston and Jason Wu, indieWire, http://www.indiewire.com/article/watch-park-chan-wooks-fashionista-thriller-starring-jack-huston-and-jason-wu-20141023
External links
- Official website
- Ayako Fujitani at the Internet Movie Database
- Profile at JMDb (Japanese)
- Ken's Force review of Shikijitsu
- KFC Cinema review of Gamera