Yoshiko Okada | |
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Yoshiko Okada circa 1935
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Born |
Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan |
April 21, 1902
Died | February 10, 1992 | (aged 89)
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | Film actress |
Yoshiko Okada (岡田嘉子 Okada Yoshiko?, 21 April 1902 – 10 February 1992) was a Japanese film and stage actress who was most famous for her defection to the Soviet Union.
Yoshiko Okada was born in Hiroshima Prefecture in 1902. She made her film debut in 1923 at Nikkatsu in Eizō Tanaka's Dokuro no mai.
On 3 January 1938, Okada defected to the Soviet Union with her lover Ryōkichi Sugimoto, seeking freedom from Japanese fascism and hoping to study theater with other Japanese in the USSR. Sugimoto, however, was arrested and executed as a spy and Okada spent the next ten years in a prison camp.
At the end of her confinement, Okada began to work for Radio Moscow and eventually got to study at the Lunacharsky State Institute for Theatre Arts. She helped stage a play and was selected to co-direct the film Ten Thousand Boys with Boris Buneyev , a work that has been called "the first Russian film about Japan not intended to be a depiction of the 'vicious Japanese enemy.'"