Hitonari Tsuji

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Hitonari Tsuji
辻仁成
Hitonari living in Paris, 2016
Hitonari living in Paris, 2016
Born (1959-10-04) October 4, 1959 (age 64)
Tokyo, Japan
OccupationNovelist, film director, composer, professor, painter, editor
NationalityJapanese
GenreLiterature, Historical fiction, romance
Notable works
  • Pianissimo (1990)
  • Light on the Strait (1997)
  • The White Buddha (1997)
  • Calmi Cuori Appassionati Blu (1999)
  • Good Bye See You Someday (2001)
Spouse
(m. 1995; div. 2000)
(m. 2002; div. 2014)
Website
www.j-tsuji-h.com

Hitonari Tsuji (辻 仁成, Tsuji Hitonari, born 1959)[1] is a Tokyo-born Japanese writer, composer, musician, painter and film director. In his film and singing work he uses the name Jinsei Tsuji, an alternative reading of the Japanese writing of his given name. His novels and essays have been bestsellers in Japan as well as overseas, with his work being translated into 20 languages and selling over ten million copies.[citation needed]

He has directed six films including Hotoke (ほとけ) (2001) and Filament (フィラメント) (2001) were officially presented at the 51st Berlinale and the 37th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival where he won a special mention in the Ecumenical Jury Award category.[citation needed]

He launched the web magazine Design Stories and became its chief editor in October 2016.[2]

Personal life[edit]

Tsuji was born in Tokyo in 1959.[citation needed] He debuted as a vocalist of the rock band ECHOS in 1985 and the original song "ZOO" reached over a million sales.[citation needed]

He was a professor at Kyoto University of Art and Design from 2007 to 2016.[citation needed]

Tsuji was married to actress Kaho Minami from 1995 to 2000. He married singer and actress Miho Nakayama in 2002 and they moved to Paris, France, before she gave birth to their son a year later.[3] They divorced in 2014, with Tsuji retaining custody of their son.[3]

Career[edit]

As a novelist[edit]

In 1989, his first novel, Pianissimo, won the 13th Subaru Prize for Literature (Subaru Bungaku Sho).[citation needed]

In 1997, he was awarded the 116th Akutagawa Prize for Kaikyo no Hikari (The Light from the Straits).

In 1999, he was awarded the Prix Femina Award, a prestigious French literary prize, in the foreign novel category, for the French translation of Le Boudda blanc (The White Buddha, or Hakubutsu, published by Mercure de France).[citation needed] He is the first Japanese writer to ever win the Prix Femina Award.

In 2003, his seven short stories were published in the French literary magazine Je Bouquine.[citation needed]

In 2005, he was selected by French literary magazine LIRE as one of the world’s 50 prospective novelists.[citation needed]

In 2005, his serial novel was featured in the South Korean newspaper The Hankyoreh.[citation needed] Tsuji is the first Japanese native novelist to have his work published in The Hankyoreh.

In 2011, Tsuji wrote a children’s book called In Rapet’s World dedicated to children who were struck by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake.

As a film director[edit]

In the 1980s, Tsuji started producing independent films through his college’s movie club.[citation needed]

In 1999, his directorial debut, Sennen-Tabito (for which he did the direction, screenwriting, and music) was presented as an official invitation film for the 56th International Critic week of the Venice Film Festival.

In 2001, his movie Hotoke (director, writer, and music) was presented as an official selection in the 51st Berlin International Film Festival, in the Panorama section. In the same year, Hotoke was presented to the Deauville Asian Film Festival, in the Competition section, and won best image award.[citation needed] The film was featured in the 27th Seattle International Film Festival.[citation needed]

In 2002, his movie Filament (director, screenwriter, music) was submitted to the 37th Czech Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Official Selection Competition section and awarded the International Ecumenical Jury of the Christian Churches.[citation needed]

Tsuji also wrote and directed a TV movie titled Mokka no Koibito in 2002.[citation needed]

In summer 2008, his other movie Acacia was produced; it was presented at the 22nd Tokyo International Film Festival in the Competition section in 2009.

In 2010, his movie Paris Tokyo Paysage was produced and submitted to the 7th Festival du cinéma japonais contemporain Kinotayo (2012-2013)[4] and awarded the Prix de la meilleure image (best cinematography).

Works[edit]

Novels (Japanese editions)[edit]

  • Pianissimo (1990)
  • Cloudy (1990)
  • Kai no Omochyabako (1991)
  • Tabibito no Ki (1992)
  • Fragile (1992)
  • Glasswool no Shiro (1993)
  • Hahanaru Nagi to Chichinaru Zika (1994)
  • Open house (1994)
  • Ai ha Pride yori tsuyoku (1995)
  • Passagio (1995)
  • Sabita Sekai no Guidebook (1995)
  • Newton no Ringo (1996)
  • Antinoise (1996)
  • Kyō no Kimochi (1996)
  • Kaikyō no Hikari (1997)
  • Ai no Kumen (1997)
  • Hakufutsu (1997)
  • Wild Flower (1998)
  • Sennenn Tabibito (1999)
  • Reisei to Zyonetu no Aida Blue (1999)
  • Shitto no Kaori (2000)
  • Ai wo kudasai (2000)
  • Sayonara Itsuka (2001)
  • Koisuru tame ni umareta (2001)
  • Taiyō Machi (2001)
  • Mokka no Koibito (2002)
  • Ai to Eien no Aoisora (2002)
  • Kanojo wa Uchyūfuku wo kitenemuru (2002)
  • O'keeffe no Koibito Ozwald no Tsuioku (2003)
  • 99sai made ikita Akanbō (2003)
  • Ima Kono Syunkan Aishiterutoiukoto (2003)
  • Katana (2004)
  • Daihitsy Ya (2004)
  • Koufuku na Ketsumatsu (2005)
  • Acacia Ashita no Yakusoku (2005)
  • Yada to Iiyo (2005)
  • Ai no atoni Kurumono (2006)
  • Pianissimo Pianissimo (2007)
  • Hito ha Omoide ni nomi shittosuru (2007)
  • Ugan (2008)
  • Madam to Okusama (2009)
  • Mokka no Koibito (2009)
  • Dahlia (2009)
  • Acacia no Hana no sakidasukoro Acacia (2009)
  • Kuroe to Enzō (2010)
  • Get Far Away from Me (2011)
  • Eiensha (2012)
  • Mistake (2012)
  • Two People in the Future (2013) *Original novel of the movie “Two People in the Future”
  • The Unfading Dream We Have (2014) *Original novel of the movie “The Unfading Dream We Have”
  • The Date Line (1st and 2nd volume) (2015)

Novels (English edition)[edit]

  • Pianissimo by Hitonari Tsuji, translated by Rebecca Clare Lindsay, Shueisha Inc. 1992 ISBN 978-4-08-749812-7

Films (Japanese edition)[edit]

  • Sennen-Tabito (1999)
  • Hotoke (2001)
  • Filament (2002)
  • Acacia (2008)
  • Tokyo Paris Paysage (2010)
  • Tokyo Decibels (2015)

Awards[edit]

Novels[edit]

  • 1989 — Subaru Literary Prize (Shueisha), Pianissimo
  • 1996 — Akutagawa Prize, The Light from the Strait (Kaikyō no hikari)
  • 1999 — Femina Prize (Prix Femina Étranger), Le Bouddha blanc (The White Buddha, 白仏)

Films[edit]

  • 2001 - Hotoke, won best image award in the Competition section at the Deauville Asian Film Festival
  • 2002 - Filament (Director, Screenwriter, Music), awarded the International Ecumenical Jury of the Christian Churches in the Official Selection Competition section at the 37th Czech Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
  • 2008 - Acacia, presented to the 22nd Tokyo international Film Festival
  • 2013 - Paris Tokyo Paysage, awarded the Prix de la meilleure image (best cinematography) at the 7th Festival du cinéma japonais contemporain Kinotayo (2012-2013)

References[edit]

  1. ^ 『DJ名鑑 1987』 (in Japanese). 三才ブックス. 1987-02-15. p. 106.
  2. ^ Design Stories
  3. ^ a b "Miho Nakayama reportedly to get divorce after 12 years". Japan Today. 29 March 2014. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Kinotayo: Festival du Film Japonais Contemporain 2012 à Paris" (in French). 21 November 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2013.

Sources[edit]

  • Writer information page in his short story collection Mokka no koibito (目下の恋人). Tokyo: Kōbunsha, 2002. ISBN 9784334923532.

External links[edit]