Some actors are great because they disappear into their roles. Others are unforgettable because their own strange, magnetic presence always shines through. For me, Naoto Takenaka belongs firmly to the second group.
In this year’s NHK historical drama Toyotomi Brothers, there was an unforgettable scene last week featuring Naoto Takenaka as Hisahide Matsunaga.
Standing in a room engulfed in flames, Matsunaga declares to the brothers, “Whether something is real or fake — such things do not matter.” Then, with a truly explosive intensity, he dies in the blaze.
Earlier in the episode, another line also stayed with me: “If I told you that ___, would you believe me?”
I have been a fan of Naoto Takenaka ever since his famous comedy routine in which he “gets angry while laughing.” He has entertained me for decades.
The shape of his head, those bulging eyes, and above all, that beautiful voice.
That voice — precisely because of that voice — makes his bizarre performances shine.
To me, he is a one-of-a-kind kaiyu.
The word kaiyu is difficult to translate. It literally means something like “strange actor” or “eccentric actor,” but that does not quite capture it. A kaiyu is not merely a good actor. He is someone whose presence is odd, magnetic, funny, unsettling, and unforgettable all at once.
When I think of actors like that, the first names that come to mind are Danny DeVito as the Penguin in Batman Returns, Jim Carrey in The Mask, and Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean.
Some people might also call Jack Nicholson or Willem Dafoe kaiyu-type actors, but that is not quite my image of the word.
In Japan, when people talk about kaiyu, names such as Rentaro Mikuni, Teruyuki Kagawa, or Akira Emoto often come up. They are all great actors, of course. But to me, they feel slightly different.
If an actor fits too naturally into serious drama, I hesitate to call him a kaiyu.
Other than Naoto Takenaka, the only Japanese actor who comes to mind for me is Takeshi Kitano, internationally known as Beat Takeshi. His performance as Sergeant Hara in Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence was magnificent.
But in the end, this is just a matter of personal taste, so perhaps it does not really matter.
For me, a kaiyu is an actor who is obviously talented, but also someone whose debut or breakthrough role left such a strong impression that the image follows him forever — and instead of trying to erase that image, he embraces it and turns it into part of his own character.
Of course, we can never know exactly where the actor ends and the performance begins. But because those two things are mixed together so completely, watching him is always a pleasure.
In that sense, Naoto Takenaka remains the best of the best.
I hope he continues to thrive. He is apparently still only around seventy, so I expect he will keep surprising us in all sorts of roles for another twenty years or so.
Some actors play strange characters. Naoto Takenaka makes strangeness itself feel like an art form.
・・・
Vocabulary for Learners
- one-of-a-kind — 唯一無二の
- eccentric — 風変わりな、奇妙な魅力のある
- engulfed in flames — 炎に包まれた
- explosive intensity — 爆発的な迫力
- bulging eyes — ギョロ目
- bizarre performance — 怪演、奇妙で強烈な演技
- magnetic presence — 人を引きつける存在感
- unsettling — 不安にさせる、不気味な
- breakthrough role — 出世作となった役
- embrace — 受け入れる、自分のものにする
- where the actor ends and the performance begins — どこまでが本人で、どこからが演技なのか
- thrive — 活躍する、成功し続ける
- art form — 芸術形式、芸の域















