Sae Miyazawa
Sae Miyazawa | |
---|---|
Native name | 宮澤 佐江 |
Born | 13 August 1990 |
Origin | Tokyo, Japan |
Genres | J-pop |
Occupation(s) |
|
Years active | 2006-present |
Labels | You, Be Cool! / King, avex |
Associated acts |
Sae Miyazawa (宮澤 佐江 Miyazawa Sae?, born August 13, 1990 in Tokyo) is a former Japanese idol, best known for her affiliations with AKB48 and its various sister- and subgroups.[1] Between 2006 and 2016, she was a part of the promoting line up of 33 AKB48 and 4 SKE48 single releases.
Contents
Music career
2006-2012: AKB48
After being rejected during the first audition for AKB48, Miyazawa auditioned again in February 2006 in an applicant pool of about twelve thousand aspiring idols. This time, she was selected as one of the 19 girls for AKB48's newly created Team K, which made its stage debut on April 1, 2006.[2] She stayed with Team K and AKB48 until August 2012.
During this period, Miyazawa participiated in the title tracks of 25 of the 27 AKB48 single releases, missing only the A-sides of "Chance no Junban" and "Ue kara Mariko", for which the featured members were determined by a rock-paper-scissors-tournament. In October 2011, she was named the AKB48 member with the most appearances in the popular music show Music Japan on NHK, with 34 performances.[3] Although this underlines her role as one of the promotional fixtures of the group at that time, she did not reach the popularity level of fellow members like Atsuko Maeda or Oshima Yuko. Within her time in the group, she became a member of two AKB48 side projects: Chocolove from AKB48 was established in 2007 as a trio with fellow AKB48 members Sayaka Akimoto and Rina Nakanishi. The group released two singles and an album, but disbanded in 2008 following Nakanishi's departure from AKB48. In 2011, AKB48 announced that she and Akimoto would be part of another spin-off called Diva, along with Ayaka Umeda and Yuka Masuda. Following the departure of Akimoto and Masuda, Diva was disbanded in late 2014, after releasing a farewell single and album.[4]
In January 2011, an exhibition of her self-portraits was held at the AKB48 Official Shop in Hong Kong,[5] She then visited Hong Kong on January 28, and attended a series of events, including an AKB48 Cosplay Event held in Dragon Centre in Kowloon.[6] In March 2012, during AKB48's trip to the National Cherry Blossom Festival, Miyazawa visited the Strong John Thomson Elementary School in Washington, D.C., to explain Japanese pop culture to the pupils.[7]
2012-2015: SNH48 and SKE48
In August 2012, it was announced that Miyazawa and fellow AKB48 member Mariya Suzuki would be transferred overseas to help lead Shanghai-based sister group SNH48.[8][9] This transfer was initially scheduled to last six to twelve months, while the affected members were still affiliated with AKB48, as "Team Abroad" (海外, kaigai).[10] Because she and Suzuki did not have working visas for China, they rarely appeared with SNH48; for instance, they only appeared as audience members for the group's first public performance.[9] During the opening ceremony of SNH48's theater in Shanghai in September 2013, group officials announced that Miyazawa would begin to perform with the group on October 11, 2013.[11][12] Indeed, both Miyazawa and Suzuki debuted with SNH48 on that date, triggering media coverage in both Japan[13][14] and China.[15] Her endeavors as a Japanese idol in a Chinese environment made the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology name Miyazawa a representative for the "Tobitate! Ryugaku Japan"-campaign ("Take off! Study abroad!").[16][17]
In January 2013, during the annual "Request Hour" concerts held by all Japanese AKB48 acts, the Miyazawa-led song "Kiseki wa Mani Awanai" ranked second in fan voting.[18] Following this, Miyazawa promoted AKB48's 30th single "So Long!" in TV broadcasts, even though she did not participate in the actual single recording.[19] In March 2013, Miyazawa started a Twitter account, but this was suspended when it gathered too many followers on the first day; her Twitter was reopened two days later.[20] Meanwhile, Miyazawa took part in AKB48's 31st single "Sayonara Crawl".[21]
During the AKB48 Group Rinji Sokai concert in Nippon Budokan in April 2013, AKB48 announced her return to Team K and concurrent membership with SNH48.[22] In the 2013 AKB48 general election, she finished tenth overall. During the election results event, she declared her plans to focus on SNH48,[23] and after confirmation with AKB48 management, became the first AKB48 member to voluntarily drop concurrency.[24] As a result, she did not participate in the rock-paper-scissors tournament in 2013[25][26] and rarely appeared with the group until February 2014, when AKB48 announced Miyazawa's transfer to Nagoya-based SKE48 at the Grand Reformation Festival, while staying a concurrent member of SNH48.[27] She was appointed the 'leader' of SKE48's Team S. This time, she accepted the new position after learning of the transfer via a live phone call from that event.[28] However, she suffered a significant decrease in popularity in the process, as she lost over 21000 votes compared to 2013 in the 2014 AKB48 general election, but still managed to maintain the 12th position overall.[29] In SKE48, Miyazawa appeared frequently as one of the leading members in commercial campaigns, TV and stage performances, and had since then been selected to appear in AKB48's 38th single,[30] her first regular single appearance since Sayonara Crawl, and her 29th title track performance overall. In the general election for the 41st single in 2015, she recovered from the heavy loss in 2014, by adding 31,000 votes to her result and ranking in at the 8th position, her personal best. Before the event, she stated that she would not be participiating in future fan elections.[31][32][33] By the end of 2015, she had appeared in 32 single A-sides of AKB48, trailing only five other members. Kuchibiru ni Be My Baby, AKB48's 10th anniversary single, marked her return to the main selection of promoting members of AKB48 releases. It was her first appearance in a management selected conventional line up of 16 members since Give Me Five! in 2012, before her transfer to SNH48.
2016: Departure from 48 Group
During the nation-wide broadcast of the music show "FNS", Miyazawa announced her departure from SKE48 and SNH48 at an undefined date in 2016.[34] She is the second member to announce her so-called "graduation" from the group on national TV, after Oshima Yuko on Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 2014. Following this, the Miyazawa-centered song "Kiseki wa Mani Awanai" was voted into the first place in the 2016 edition of the Request Hour concert series. During this event, a two-day concert at Nippon Gaishi Hall dedicated to her farewell was announced.[35][36] She eventually left the group in March 2016, after farewell performances in the theaters of all three groups she was affiliated with (SNH48,[37] SKE48,[38] AKB48[39]).
Solo activities and acting career
Miyazawa, who is signed to media agency Flave entertainment[40] (formerly office48), has been promoted in many of AKB48's own shows, but also frequently appears in Japanese radio and TV. She has published two photobooks; one in 2009 titled "Kanojo" and one in 2015 titled "Namida no Yukue". Occasionally, she is cast as an actress for feature films, stage plays and Japanese TV dramas. In January 2014, Miyazawa was selected to play a major role in the stage play Wings of Kuzariana (クザリアーナの翼?), the 13th volume of the Gorgeous Earth series, which was performed in Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, and Fukuoka.[41][42] In July 2014, it was announced that she would play the male lead role in the stage adaption of the manga "AKB49: Ren'ai Kinshi Jōrei".[43] 2014 ended with her being cast in ntv's special primetime drama "Dr. Nurse Aid" (Dr.ナースエイド) in November.[44] In March 2015, she performed in the gala concert celebrating the 20th anniversary of the stage play series Gorgeous Earth, she appeared in 2013/2014.[45] Some months later, it was announced that Miyazawa would perform in the stage adaptation of the popular shōjo manga "Crest of the Royal Family" by Chieko Hosokawa, scheduled for 2016. She was cast for the role of the main protagonist, sharing the role with Seiko Niizuma.[46]
Reception
Miyazawa, who is often called "Sae-chan" (さえちゃん) by fans and media,[47] belonged to the most popular members of the 48 group family with consistent high finishes in audience polls. In the AKB48 general elections, in which the lineup (called "senbatsu") for a given single is decided by fan voting, she placed 14th (2009), 9th (2010), 11th (2011), 11th (2012), 10th (2013), 12th(2014), and 8th (2015), respectively, which gave her a spot on the related title tracks. She is one of five members to make it to the senbatsu ranks in the first seven elections. Miyazawa and Sayaka Akimoto were frequently referred to as the "Twin Towers" of Team K, because of their comparably tall height and their key roles in that team. Another nickname she bears is "Genking" (from Japanese "genki" = energetic, cheerful), as she is often portrayed as loud, impulsive and energetic.[48] She is also known as AKB48's "handsome idol" (Japanese: "ikemen idol") due to her tomboyish mannerisms and image.[48] Among members of the AKB48 groups, a disproportionately high fraction of her fan following is female.[49][50]
In the animated series AKB0048, the character Miyazawa Sae The 10th / Asamiya Youko is modeled after her, voiced by Mai Nakahara.
Discography
AKB48
Main singles
Year | No. | Title | Role[51] | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | 1 | "Aitakatta" | A-side | Debut with Team K. |
2007 | 2 | "Seifuku ga Jama o Suru" | A-side | |
3 | "Keibetsu Shiteita Aijō" | A-side | ||
4 | "Bingo!" | A-side | ||
5 | "Boku no Taiyō" | A-side | ||
6 | "Yūhi o Miteiru ka?" | A-side | ||
2008 | 7 | "Romance, Irane" | A-side | |
8 | "Sakura no Hanabiratachi 2008" | A-side | ||
9 | "Baby! Baby! Baby!" | A-side | ||
10 | "Ōgoe Diamond" | A-side | ||
2009 | 11 | "10nen Sakura" | A-side | Also featured in "Sakurairo no Sora no Shita de"[citation needed] |
12 | "Namida Surprise!" | A-side | ||
13 | "Iiwake Maybe" | A-side | Ranked 14th in 2009 General Election | |
14 | "River" | A-side | ||
2010 | 15 | "Sakura no Shiori" | A-side, Team PB | Also appeared in "Enkyori Poster" as Team PB. |
16 | "Ponytail to Shushu" | A-side | Also featured in "Majijo Teppen Blues" | |
17 | "Heavy Rotation" | A-side | Ranked 9th in 2010 General Election. Also featured in "Yasai Sisters" and "Lucky Seven". | |
18 | "Beginner" | A-side | ||
19 | "Chance no Junban" | B-side | Was not featured in the title track; lineup was determined by rock-paper-scissors tournament.[52] Sang on "Yoyakushita Christmas", and "Alive" (as Team K). | |
2011 | 20 | "Sakura no Ki ni Narō" | A-side | |
21 | "Everyday, Katyusha" | A-side | Also appeared in "Korekara Wonderland" and "Yankee Soul". | |
22 | "Flying Get" | A-side | Ranked 11th in 2011 General Election. Also featured in "Seishun to Kizukanai Mama" and "Yasai Uranai"[citation needed] | |
23 | "Kaze wa Fuiteiru" | A-side | ||
24 | "Ue kara Mariko" | B-side | Was not featured in the title track; lineup was determined by rock-paper-scissors tournament;[53] She was featured in "Noël no Yoru"; and on "Zero Sum Taiyou" as Team K. | |
2012 | 25 | "Give Me Five!" | A-side (Baby Blossom), Special Girls B | Appeared in the chorus with Baby Blossom; featured in "Hitsujikai no Tabi" as part of Special Girls B. |
26 | "Manatsu no Sounds Good!" | A-side | She also was featured in "Kimi no Tame ni Boku wa". | |
27 | "Gingham Check" | A-side | Ranked 11th in 2012 General Election. | |
29 | "Eien Pressure" | B-side | Did not appear in the title track; lineup was determined by rock-paper-scissors tournament. Featured in "Watashitachi no Reason". First single after her transfer to SNH48. | |
2013 | 31 | "Sayonara Crawl" | A-side | She is credited as SNH48 / AKB48 Team K for this single. |
32 | "Koi Suru Fortune Cookie" | A-side | Ranked 10th in 2013 General Election.[54] She is credited as SNH48 on this single. Also appeared in "Namida no Sei Janai" and "Saigo no Door". | |
2014 | 37 | "Kokoro no Placard" | A-side | Ranked 12th in 2014 General Election.[29] |
38 | "Kibōteki Refrain" | A-side | Senbatsu – Group B | |
2015 | 39 | "Green Flash" | B-side | Featured in 'Sekai ga Naiteru Nara' instead. |
40 | "Bokutachi wa Tatakawanai" | A-side | Also featured in 'Summer Side'. | |
41 | "Halloween Night" | A-side | Ranked 8th in 2015 General Election. | |
42 | "Kuchibiru ni Be My Baby" | A-side | Also featured in "Senaka Kotoba". | |
2016 | 43 | "Kimi wa Melody" | A-side | Marked as the 10th Anniversary Single. Last single to participate. Also featured in "Gonna Jump". |
Albums
Song participiations aside from single title track recordings:
- Koko ni Ita Koto (2011), 4 songs
- 1830m (2012), 2 songs
- Tsugi no Ashiato (2014), 4 songs
- Koko ga Rhodes da, Koko de Tobe! (2015), 2 songs
Team Surprise
She participated in the first two incarnations of Team Surprise, a subunit formed for a Pachinko machine campaign, but was not selected for the third:
- Suteki na Sankaku Kankei (素敵な三角関係?)
- Namida ni Shizumu Taiyou (涙に沈む太陽?)
- Kimi ga Omotteru yori (キミが思ってるより?)
- Megami wa Doko de Hohoemu? (女神はどこで微笑む??)
Other singles participation
- "Dareka no Tame Ni (誰かのために?) - What can I do for someone?" (2011)
- "Koi no Onawa (恋のお縄?)" (2011)
- "Tenohira ga Kataru Koto ( 掌が語ること?)" (2013)
- "Enjoy your life!" (2013), on Tomomi Kasai's second single release, "Mine"
- "Datte, Ame Janai? (だって、雨じゃない ?)", on Love Crescendo first single release "Koppu no Naka no Komorebi (コップの中の木漏れ日?)"
SKE48
Main singles
Year | No. | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | 15 | "Bukiyō Taiyō" | A-side | Also appeared in "Houkago Race" with Team S |
2015 | 16 | "12 Gatsu no Kangaroo" | A-side | Also appeared in "Kesenai Honoo" with Team S |
2015 | 17 | "Coquettish Jūtai Chū" | A-side | Also appeared in "DIRTY" with Team S |
2015 | 18 | "Maenomeri" | A-side | Also appeared in "Sutekina Zaiakukan" with Team S |
2016 | 19 | "Chicken Line" | Graduation song | Featured in "Tabi ni Tochū". |
Chocolove from AKB48
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Diva
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Theater work
AKB48
Miyazawa participated in the following stage programs for AKB48:[55]
- 2006: Team K 1st Stage "Party ga Hajimaruyo" (PARTYが始まるよ?)
- 2006: Team K 2nd Stage "Seishun Girls" (青春ガールズ?)
- small group songs: "Blue Rose" and "Fushidara na Natsu" (ふしだらな夏?)
- 2006–2007: Team K 3rd Stage "Nōnai Paradise" (脳内パラダイス?)
- small group songs: "Kimi wa Pegasus" (君はペガサス?)
- 2007: Himawari Gumi 1st Stage "Boku no Taiyō" (僕の太陽?)
- small group songs: "Itoshisa no defence" (愛しさのdefence?)
- 2007–2008: Himawari Gumi 2nd Stage "Yume wo Shinaseru Wakeni Ikanai" (夢を死なせるわけにいかない?)
- small group songs: "Hajimete no jerry beans" (初めてのジェリービーンズ?)
- 2008–2009: Team K 4th Stage "Saishū Bell ga Naru" (最終ベルが鳴る?)
- small group songs: "Gomen ne Jewel" (ごめんねジュエル?)
- 2009–2010: Team K 5th Stage "Sakaagari" (逆上がり?)
- small group songs: "Ai no Iro" (愛の色?)
- 2010–2012: Team K 6th Stage "Reset"
- small group songs: "Kiseki wa Maniawanai" (奇跡は間に合わない?)
SNH48
After moving to SNH48, Miyazawa performed in the following stage programs:[55]
- 2013: SNH48 Kenkyusei 1st stage "Give Me Power"
SKE48
- 2014: Team S 3rd Stage "Seifuku no Me" (Revival)
Filmography
Movies
Year | Title | Role | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
2007 | Densen Uta (伝染歌?) | C-chan (Cちゃん?) | [56] |
2009 | Three-day Boys (スリーデイボーイズ?) | Younger sister of leading actor | [57] |
2011 | Kōkō Debut (高校デビュー?) | Mami Takahashi | [58] |
2012 | Ultraman Saga (ウルトラマンサーガ?) | Sawa | [59] |
TV dramas
Year | Title | Role | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
2008 | Tadashii Ouji no Tsukuri Kata ( 正しい王子のつくり方?) | Koharu Kido (城戸小春?) | [60] |
2008 | Koizora ( 恋空?) | Manami (マナミ?) | [61] |
2008 | Tetsudō Musume (episode 5 & 6) (鉄道むすめ 第5・6話?) | Mīna Ōtsuki (大月みーな?) | [62] |
2008–2009 | Ai no Gekijō Love Letter (愛の劇場 ラブレター?) | Chie Nonomura(in high-school age) (野々村知恵(中高生時代)?) | [63] |
2010 | Majisuka Gakuen ( マジすか学園?) | Gakuran (学ラン?) | |
2010 | Arienai (episode 5) (あり得ない?) | Aya Takano (高野アヤ?) | [64] |
2011 | Sakura kara no tegami (桜からの手紙 〜AKB48 それぞれの卒業物語〜?) | Sae Miyazawa (宮澤佐江?) | [65] |
2011 | Majisuka Gakuen 2 ( マジすか学園2?) | Yōran(Gakuran) (洋ラン(学ラン)?) | [66] |
2012 | Counter no Futari season 2(episode 11) (カウンターのふたり シーズン2?) | Young mother | [67] |
2013 | Detarame Hero (episode 6) (でたらめヒーロー?) | Moe Hoshino | [68] |
2014 | Dr. Nurse Aid (Dr.ナースエイド?) | Nurse | [69] |
Television (Excerpts)
Aside of numerous appearances in most of the group's house shows (most notably AKBingo!, AKB48 Nemousu TV (AKB48ネ申テレビ?), Shukan AKB48 (週刊AKB?), AKB to ××!, SKE48 Ebisho!, or SKE48 EbiCalcio), Miyazawa is also frequently appearing in Japanese variety shows. The following non-exhaustive list includes shows she recurrently appeared in and otherwise notable shows, both as a Tarento or representing the group.
Year | Title | Station |
---|---|---|
2010 | G.I. Goro (G.I.ゴロー?) | TBS |
2010 | Quiz! Hexagon II | Fuji TV |
2010 | DERO! | Nippon TV |
2011, 2015 | Mecha-Mecha Iketeru! | Fuji TV |
2011 | SMAPxSMAP | Fuji TV |
2011-2012 | Waratte Iitomo! | Fuji TV |
2011-2012 | Bakushō! Dai-Nippon Akan Keisatsu (爆笑!大日本アカン警察?) | Fuji TV |
2012 | Namauma | Fuji TV |
2012 | Tosochu - Run for money! | Fuji TV |
2013 | NEP league | Fuji TV |
2013 | Sekai no Mura de Hakken! Konna Tokoro ni Nihonjin | TV Asahi |
2013 - 2014 | Umazuki! (まズキッ?) | Fuji TV |
2014 | Shumi no engei ya sai no jikan | NHK Educational TV |
2015 | Wagamama! Kimama! Tabi kibun | Fuji TV |
2013, 2016 | Shibuya Deep A! | NHK |
Radio
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
2007- | ON8 "Hashira Night! with AKB48! (ON8「柱NIGHT! with AKB48」?) | Self |
2007- | AKB48 Asu made mou chotto. (AKB48 明日までもうちょっと。?) | Self |
2010- | AKB48 no Allnight Nippon | Self |
2010–2013 | Listen (Live 4 Life) | Self (Solo MC in June & November 2010, double MC in April 2013) |
2010– | AKB48 Akimoto Sayaka·Miyazawa Sae no Ukkari Channel | Self (co-hostess) |
2011 | AKB48 no "Watashi tachi no Monogatari" | Self |
2012–2013 | ViVADiVA | Self (co-hostess) |
Other stage performances
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
2009 | AKB48 Kagekidan "Infinity" (AKB歌劇団「∞・Infinity」?) | Ruka Murasame (村雨ルカ?) (Leading actress, double cast with Sayaka Akimoto) |
2010 | Space Wars Replay (スペース・ウォーズ再演?) | |
2011 | Double Heroine (スーパーLIVEショー「ダブルヒロイン」?) | Asuka Mizutani |
2013 | Wings of Kuzariana (クザリアーナの翼?) | Koruri |
2014 | AKB49 Ren'ai kinshi jōrei (AKB49〜恋愛禁止条例?) | Minoru Urayama (Leading male role) |
Bibliography
Magazines
- Samurai ELO, Inforest (January 2011-December 2013)[70]
Photobooks
- Kanojo (Kodansha, 21 August 2009) ISBN 9784062156967[71]
- Namida no Yukue (Wani Books, 16 February 2015) ISBN 9784847046889[72]
References
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- ↑ 48.0 48.1 The Official Senbatsu Sousenkyo Guidebook 2011 - 「AKB総選挙公式ガイドブック2011」(講談社)
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External links
- Flave Entertainment Profile (Japanese)
- Official blog (Japanese)
- Official Twitter Account on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). (Japanese)
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- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from September 2013
- Articles with Japanese-language external links
- Official blog different in Wikidata and Wikipedia
- 1990 births
- Living people
- People from Tokyo
- Japanese idols
- AKB48 members
- SNH48 members
- Japanese female pop singers
- Japanese actresses