Takeshi Kaneshiro

Actor

Birthday October 11, 1973

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Taipei, Taiwan

Age 50 years old

Nationality Taiwan

Height 1.8 m

#17147 Most Popular

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Takeshi Kaneshiro (金城 武) is a Japanese actor and singer based in Taiwan.

Beginning his career as a pop idol, he has since moved his focus from music to film.

Kaneshiro has worked with renowned directors throughout East Asia, including Wong Kar-wai (Chungking Express and FalleN Angels), Peter Chan (Perhaps Love, The Warlords, and Wuxia), Zhang Yimou (House of Flying Daggers) and John Woo (Red Cliff and The Crossing I and II), resulting in collaborations that have achieved both commercial success and critical acclaim.

Kaneshiro is also well known in the gaming industry for being the model and voice for the samurai character, Samanosuke Akechi, in Capcom’s Onimusha video game series.

Kaneshiro was born in Taipei, Taiwan.

His mother is from Taiwan and his father is from Okinawa.

He was born and raised in Taipei, but holds Japanese citizenship.

The son of a Japanese businessman and a Taiwanese homemaker, Kaneshiro has two elder half-brothers: one who is seven years his senior, and another who is just one year older.

After graduating from Taipei Japanese Junior High School, he enrolled at an English-medium international school, Taipei American School, where he learned English.

During his time at secondary school, Kaneshiro began working in television commercials, and he decided to leave school to pursue a full-time career in music and acting.

Kaneshiro is multilingual, fluent in Mandarin, Hokkien, Japanese, and to lesser degrees in Cantonese and English.

Taiwanese Hokkien was the first language he spoke while growing up in Taiwan.

Kaneshiro is a common Okinawan surname, albeit with an unusual pronunciation, as the usual reading is Kinjō, while the traditional Okinawan pronunciation is Kanagusuku or Kanegusuku.

His given name is.

He appears as in Japanese media.

Since personal names are commonly written in Chinese characters in both Chinese and Japanese naming conventions, following the Eastern name order, and in this particular case the name, in its written form, appears native in both Japanese and Chinese, giving Kaneshiro the freedom to associate himself as a Japanese or Chinese when working in China by preserving or removing the space between his surname and given name.

1992

In 1992, Kaneshiro made his singing debut, entering the business with the nickname "Aniki", meaning 'older brother' in Japanese.

His debut album was Heartbreaking Night (1992).

Contracted to EMI, he wrote many of his own Mandarin and Cantonese songs.

The following year, his popularity propelled him into acting.

1993

Kaneshiro made his film debut in Executioners (1993) and this was followed by Wong Kar-wai's Chungking Express (1994), FalleN Angels (1995) and a string of other Hong Kong films, such as Lost and Found (1996), and Anna Magdalena (1998).

It was through his collaboration with the auteur director Wong Kar Wai in Chungking Express that Kaneshiro first developed what would become his onscreen signature, namely quirky, character-driven performances that often played against type and ran counter to his idol image.

1998

Later, Kaneshiro starred in the Japanese Drama God, Please Give Me More Time (1998), allowing him to branch into Japanese films such as Returner (2002), as well as "K-20: Legend of the Mask" (2009) and Accuracy of Death (also titled “Sweet Rain”), (2010).

Kaneshiro’s work, however, is more heavily concentrated in China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan.

2003

In 2003, Kaneshiro was featured in Time magazine and was dubbed the Johnny Depp of the East Asian film industry.

2005

He no longer produces any commercial music, although certain notable roles, such as those in Peter Chan’s Perhaps Love (2005) and See You Tomorrow (2016) have required him to sing onscreen.

In 2005, he sang his way through Perhaps Love, the first modern musical to be produced in China.

It was the first of many collaborations with Hong Kong-based director Peter Chan.

2006

Moreover, Kaneshiro was interviewed by journalist Hugh Riminton for CNN in the network’s TalkAsia segment in 2006.

2007

In a June 2007 article on the film site Ain't It Cool News, it was revealed that Kaneshiro was going to be in the Onimusha film, reprising his role as Samanosuke and for a 2011 release, but that project was derailed.

The producer Samuel Hadida had to delay the filming of Onimusha, which has resulted in the film's Japanese cast working on other film projects during the delay, and being unavailable to start filming.

These factors were enough that French director Christophe Gans will now direct an adaptation of Leo Perutz's novel The Swedish Cavalier first, taking over the reins from Gilles Mimouni.

Satomi Ishihara and Tsuyoshi Ihara remain attached to the project.

2008

In 2008 and 2009 he starred in Red Cliff, a high budget film by Hong Kong director John Woo.

He has also played the romantic lead in Zhang Yimou's House of Flying Daggers, and starred alongside Jet Li and Andy Lau in The Warlords.

He expressed excitement when he received the news that he would have an opportunity to work with Director Zhang Yimou.

Kaneshiro has also become well known in the video game industry portraying the samurai warrior Samanosuke in Capcom's Onimusha.

2011

In 2011, Kaneshiro appeared in the historical martial arts thriller Dragon, directed by Peter Chan.

The film premiered at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival in the Midnight Screenings category.

2017

In 2017, Kaneshiro was the winner of the Best Leading Actor award at the second annual Golden Screen Awards.