词条 | Taichi Yamada |
释义 |
CareerBorn in Asakusa, Tokyo, Yamada attended Waseda University before entering the Shōchiku film studios, where he trained as an assistant director under Keisuke Kinoshita.[1] He left the company at age 30 to focus on writing scripts for television dramas, penning such successful series as Kishibe no arubamu and Fuzoroi no ringotachi.[1] He has also written scripts for film and the stage. As a novelist, his novel {{Nihongo|Ijintachi to no natsu|異人たちとの夏}}, published in 1987, won the Yamamoto Shūgorō Prize.[2] It was translated into English, in 2004, as Strangers. Another Yamada novel, In Search of a Distant Voice, was translated and published in 2006 from a novel originally published in Japan in 1989. A third Yamada novel, {{Nihongo|I Haven't Dreamed of Flying for a While|飛ぶ夢をしばらく見ない|Tobu yume o shibaraku minai}}, was translated into English and published in 2008. Selected worksTelevision
Film
Literature
References1. ^1 {{cite news|title=Kyakuhon, shōsetsuka Yamada Taiichi|url=http://www.chunichi.co.jp/article/shizuoka/ladies/list/CK2011090902000134.html|accessdate=30 October 2011|newspaper=Chūnichi shinbun|date=9 September 2011|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111115194352/http://www.chunichi.co.jp/article/shizuoka/ladies/list/CK2011090902000134.html|archivedate=15 November 2011|df=}} 2. ^{{cite web|title=Yamamoto Shūgorō shō: Kako no jushō sakuhin|url=http://www.shinchosha.co.jp/prizes/yamamotosho/archive.html|publisher=Shinchōsha|accessdate=30 October 2011}} External links
8 : 1934 births|Living people|Japanese screenwriters|20th-century Japanese novelists|21st-century Japanese novelists|People from Tokyo|Waseda University alumni|Japanese television writers |
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