Dancing Girl (1951 film)
Dancing Girl | |
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Directed by | Mikio Naruse |
Produced by | Hideo Koi |
Written by |
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Starring | |
Music by | Ichirō Saitō |
Cinematography | Asakazu Nakai |
Production
company |
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Distributed by | Toho |
Release dates
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Running time
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85 minutes[2] |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Dancing Girl (舞姫 Maihime?, lit. "Dancing princess") is a 1951 Japanese drama film directed by Mikio Naruse. The screenplay by Kaneto Shindō is based on the novel Maihime by Yasunari Kawabata.[1][2][3] It was Mariko Okada's debut film.[2]
Contents
Plot
University professor Yagi and his wife Namiko, a former ballet dancer who now runs a ballet school, live in an unhappy marriage in their house in Kamakura together with their children Shinako and Takao. Namiko projects her unfulfilled dreams of a career as a dancer onto her daughter Shinako, who is a member of a ballet ensemble. Takehara, a long-time friend of Namiko who has been in love with her all these years, tries to talk her into leaving Yagi. When Namiko learns from Takao that Yagi has secretly been putting money on the side during their years of financial hardship, she considers giving up her marriage for Takehara.
Together with her friend and ensemble colleague Nozu, Shinako visits her former ballet teacher Kayama at his sickbed. Before he dies, Kayama urges Shinako to "dance as long as you've got legs". Determined not to give up her dream of becoming a ballerina like her mother did, Shinako later rejects Nozu's proposal. Namiko, after seeing her daughter perform in a staging of Swan Lake, decides against Takehara's offer to accompany him to a trip to Kansai and returns to Yagi.
Cast
- Sō Yamamura as Yagi
- Mieko Takamine as Namiko
- Mariko Okada as daughter Shinako
- Akihiko Katayama as son Takao
- Hiroshi Nihon'yanagi as Takehara
- Bontarō Miake as Numata
- Isao Kimura as Nozu
- Reiko Otani as Tomoko
- Heihachirō Ōkawa as Kayama
- Sadako Sawamura as Mitsue
- Momoko Tani with her ballet company
Reception
In her book on Mikio Naruse, film historian Catherine Russell rated Dancing Girl, although a lesser film than the director's Ginza Cosmetics and Repast (both too made in 1951), an "important transitional film" which deployed some of the "flamboyant melodramatic devices" of his 1930s films in a post-war narrative.[4]
References
External links
- Articles with short description
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- 1951 films
- Japanese-language films
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- 1951 drama films
- Japanese drama films
- Japanese black-and-white films
- Films based on Japanese novels
- Films based on works by Yasunari Kawabata
- Films directed by Mikio Naruse
- Films with screenplays by Kaneto Shindo
- Toho films
- 1950s Japanese films
- Films set in Kamakura