Noda, Kōgo, 1893-1968

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Noda, Kōgo, 1893-1968
Other forms of name
野田高悟, 1893-1968
野田高梧, 1893-1968
Date of birth
1893-11-19
Date of death
1968-09-23
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 64206976
Wikidata: Q2004317
Library of congress: n 96084401
HAI10: 000211295
Sources of Information
  • Floating weeds [MP] :credits (screenplay by Kogo Noda & Yasujiro Ozu)
  • C̤hosakuken daichō, 1988(Noda Kōgo; b. 11/19/Meiji 26 [1893]; d. 9/23/Shōwa 43 [1968])
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Wikipedia description:

Kogo Noda (野田 高梧, Noda Kōgo, November 19, 1893 – September 23, 1968) was a Japanese screenwriter most famous for collaborating with Yasujirō Ozu on many of the director's films. Born in Hakodate, Noda was the son of the head of the local tax bureau and younger brother to Kyūho, a Nihonga painter. He moved to Nagoya after completing elementary school and later went to Waseda University. After graduating, he worked for the city of Tokyo while also serving as a reporter for Katsudō kurabu, one of the major film magazines, using the pen name Harunosuke Midorikawa. On the recommendation of a scriptwriter friend from junior high, Takashi Oda, he joined the script department at Shōchiku after the Great Kantō earthquake. He soon became one of the studio's central screenwriters, penning for instance Aizen katsura (1938), one of its biggest pre-war hits. He is most known for his collaborations with Ozu, which began with Noda supplying the script for the director's first feature Sword of Penitence (1927), and led to such postwar works as Tokyo Story (1953), regarded by many critics as one of the greatest films of all time. He co-wrote thirteen of Ozu's fifteen post-war films. When the Writers Association of Japan was formed in 1950, Noda served as its first chair.

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