Shingo Katori

Shingo Katori
Native name 香取 慎吾
Born (1977-01-31) January 31, 1977
Yokohama, Japan
Occupation Singer, actor, television host
Years active 1987–present
Website www.johnnys-net.jp

Musical career

Genres J-pop
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1988-present
Labels Victor Entertainment
Associated acts SMAP

Shingo Katori (香取 慎吾 Katori Shingo, born 31 January 1977) is a Japanese actor, singer, television host, radio personality, and the youngest member of SMAP, the best-selling boy band in Asia.[1]

Early life

Katori was born in Yokohama, Kanagawa and moved to Tokyo to pursue his career. He has one younger brother.

Career

Music

Main article: SMAP

In 1987, at age 10, Katori auditioned to enter Johnny & Associates, a Japanese talent agency that recruits and trains young boys, preteens to teens, to become singers and members of boy bands. After five of the other band members auditioning individually from 1986 through 1987, in autumn 1987, twenty boys, from ages ten to seventeen, were put together into a group called The Skate Boys, which was initially created as backup dancers for a famous boy band, Hikaru Genji.[2] In April 1988, producer Johnny Kitagawa chose six out of the twenty boys to create a new boy band and named them "SMAP".[3]

Acting

In 1988, he made his acting debut in a television series, Abunai Shonen III, along with his band members. After several supporting roles, in 1996, he landed his first major role in a drama television series, Tomei Ningen, which became a massive success. He has also starred in many high-rated television series, such as Hito ni Yasashiku (2002), Saiyuki (2006), and Bara no nai Hanaya (2008). In 2004, he starred in NHK's Taiga drama, Shinsengumi!. He is also a member of the Mitani Crew, a core group of actors that Japanese playwright Kōki Mitani tends to use in his work.

Shingo Mama

From October 1998, Nakai and Katori launched their own variety program, SataSma, which was created and aimed towards younger viewers and families. Katori starred in a segment titled, "Shingo Mama's Secret Breakfast", where Katori would cross-dress into a character called, "Shingo Mama", and visit houses to cook breakfast for children instead of their mother, allowing her to sleep in and rest in the morning. Katori started to used the phrase, "Ohha", a pun for "Ohayo", meaning "good morning" during the segment as his trademark phrase, which soon became a popular word used among children. Shingo Mama, the lovable character Katori played, and the phrase "Ohha", became a social phenomenon. As a result, SMAP incidentally brought in kindergartners and preteens to their fan base.

On August 16, 2000, Katori released a single, "Shingo Mama's Oha Rock", as Shingo Mama, which reached number one on the charts with over 1,200,000 physical copies sold and became a social phenomenon. In December 2000, the trademark phrase "Ohha", used by Katori, won the Ryukougo Taisho, an annual traditional event of announcing words that describes that year. From 2000-2001, Shingo Mama promoted the use of Ohha as part of a Ministry of Education campaign to encourage family communication.[4]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1994 Shoot! Toshihiko Tanaka Main role
1997 Touch & Maggie Ryoichi Shibata
2000 Juvenile Soichiro
2001 Minna no Ie Priest Cameo appearance
2004 NinxNin Ninjya Hattori-kun Kanzo Hattori Main role
2005 Shark Tale Oscar (voice) Japanese dubbed version
2006 The Uchōten Hotel Kenji Tadano
2007 Saiyuki Songoku Main role
Sukiyaki Western Django Rich Cameo appearance
Friends: Mononoke Shima no Naki Naki (voice)
Strings Ghrak (voice) Japanese dubbed version
2008 The Magic Hour Kenji Tadano Cameo appearance
2010 Zatoichi: The Last Zatoichi Main role
2011 Kochi Kame The Movie Kankichi Ryoutsu Main role
2012 Love Masao-kun ga Iku Hideki Matsumoto Main role
Odoru Daisosasen The Final Tomonori Kuse
2013 Human Trust M
2015 Galaxy Turnpike Noa Main role

Television (as actor)

Year Title Role Notes
1988-1989 Abunai Shonen III Himself Main role
1989 Jikan desuyo Heisei Gannen
1990 Madonna wa Harukaze ni Notte
1992 Ude ni Oboeari Rinnosuke Hiranuma
1993 Onegai Demon Shuhei Takahashi
1994-1995 Akazukin Chacha Riya (voice)
1994 Samurai Spirits Haomaru (voice)
1995 For You Sora Sawaki
Sasho Taeko Saigo no Jiken Koji Taniguchi
Miseinen Jin Murooka
1996 Tomei Ningen Hanzo Hasegawa Main role
Ajiichimonme Guest appearance
Doku Doku Main role
1997 Ichiban Taisetsu na Hito Kohei Osawa Main role
Boku ga Boku de Arutame ni Satoshi Ozu Main role
1998 Yonimo Kimyou na Monogatari Sakamoto Main role
Koi wa Aserazu Ryo Hasebe
1999 Furuhata Ninzaburo vs SMAP Himself Main role
Yomigaeru Kinro Tetsuya Asakura Main role
2000 Aikotoba wa Yuki Tadashi Oyama
Kochi Kame Shingo Mama (voice) Guest appearance
2001 Ohha wa Sekai wo Sukuu Himself Main role
Yonimo Kimyou na Monogatari Ichiro Tadano Main role
Love Story Kyoji Nabetomo
Star no Koi Iori Koda Guest appearance; episode 11
2002 Hito ni Yasashiku Zen Maeda Main role
Ao ni Koishite Hidehito Imada Main role
2002-2003 HR Shingo Todoroki Main role
2003 Astro Boy Robot (voice) Guest appearance
2004 Shinsengumi Isami Kondo Main role
X'smap Otto Main role
2006 Saiyuuki Songoku Main role
2007 Galileo Shoichi Tagami Guest appearance; episode 4
Chibi Maruko-chan Shingo / Kengo (voice) Guest appearance
2008 Bara no nai Hanaya Eiji Shiomi Main role
2009 Kurobe no Taiyo Hitoshi Kuramatsu Main role
Mr. Brain Man in airplane Guest appearance; episode 8
Kochira Katsushika-ku Kameari Koen-mae Hashutsujo Kankichi Ryoutsu Main role
2010 Dokutomato Satsujin Jiken Himself Main role
2011 Shiawase ni Narouyo Jyunpei Takakura Main role
Ikemen desu ne Himself Cameo appearance; episode 6
2012 Monsters Heihachi Hirazuka Main role
2013 Kasukana Kanojyo Akatsuki Kamiyama Main role
Yonimo Kimyou na Monogatari Naoya Yunomoto Main role
Furuhata vs SMAP The Aftermath Himself Main role
2014 Smoking Gun Enishi Nagareta Main role
Oretachi ni Asu wa Aru Himself Main role
Sazae-san Himself (voice) Guest appearance; episode 7148
2015 Issencho-yen no Minoshirokin Naoto Hiraoka Main role
2016 Kazoku no Katachi Daisuke Nagasato Main role
Stranger Akira Misugi Main role

Television (as personality)

Year Title Role Notes
1994-2014 Waratte Iitomo Himself
1994-1995 Yo Taisho Mikke Himself
1996-1997 Katori Shingo’s Asia no Mikata Himself (host)
1996–present SMAPxSMAP Himself (host, chef, performer)
1997-2008 Katori Shingo’s Tensei Shingo Himself (host)
1998-2001 Sata Sma Himself (host)
1999 Shonen Zuno Katori 1999 Himself (host)
1999-2001 Heisei Nihon no Yofuke Himself
2001-present SmaSTATION!! Himself (host)
Ura Sma Himself (host)
2002 Deli Sma Himself (host)
2002-present Kaso Taisho Himself (host) TV special; 15 episodes
2003 Smao Himself (host)
2005 24 Hour Television Himself (host) Telethon
2007 27 Hour Television Himself Guest appearance
2007-present Baby Smap Himself (host)
2010 Sports Crisis Himself (host) TV special; 1 episode
2012-present OjyaMAP Himself (host)
2012-present MaroMaro Ishoukenmei Himself TV special; 3 episodes
2014-present SmaShip Himself (host) TV special; 2 episodes
2015-2016 NHK Nodojiman Himself (host) TV special; 6 episodes

Radio

Year Title Role Notes
1992-present Ohayo SMAP Himself
1995–present SMAP Power Splash Himself

Theatre

Year Title Role Notes
1991 Saint Seiya Andoromeda Shun Lead role
1992 Dragon Quest Lead role
1993 Another Lead role
1994 Kaidan Nise Sarayashiki
2009 Talk Like Singing Lead role
2014 Ocean's Eleven Danny Ocean Lead role
2015 burst! Lead role

Discography

Main article: SMAP discography

As "Shingo Mama"

Release date Title Charts Certification
JPN
August 18, 2000 "Shingo Mama's Oha Rock" 1
  • JPN: Diamond

Awards and nominations

Year Organization Award Work Result
1995 33rd Galaxy Awards Best Supporting Actor Sasho Taeko Won
1995 7th The Television Academy Award Best Supporting Actor Miseinen Won
1996 11th The Television Academy Award Best Actor Doku Won
2000 17th Shingo Ryukogo Taisho Word Of The Year Ohha Won
2000 8th Hashida Sugako Award Hashida Award Shingo Katori and Shingo Mama Won
2000 26th The Television Academy Award Best Supporting Actor Aikotoba wa Yuki Won
2001 29th The Television Academy Award Best Supporting Actor Love Story Won
2002 32nd The Television Academy Award Best Actor Hito ni Yasashiku Won
2005 43rd The Television Academy Award Best Actor Shinsengumi Won

Publications

References

  1. "SMAP". Japan-Zone. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
  2. "SMAP". Japan-Zone. Retrieved 2009-12-13.
  3. "SMAPの前身「スケートボーイズ」に所属していた豪華メンバーたち". Excite News. Nikkan Taishu. Retrieved Aug 26, 2015.
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