
Ikiru
生きる

Kumeko Urabe (Japanese: 浦辺粂子), born Kimura Kume ((木村 くめ)), (October 5, 1902 – October 26, 1989) was a Japanese movie actress, one of the first in the country. She worked on stage and in film and television. Urabe was born in a rural part of the Shizuoka Prefecture. She lived in several homes while growing up, as she relocated with her father, a Buddhist priest, among the temples to which he was assigned. Urabe completed her education in Numazu, and left school in 1919 to join a theatre company, touring under various stage names as an actor and dancer. In 1923, Urabe auditioned at the film studio Nikkatsu, and adopted the name Kumeko Urabe, by which she was known for the rest of her life. She appeared in her first film the following year, and continued to act until 1987. She worked with such directors as Kenji Mizoguchi and Mikio Naruse, and performed in over 320 films, including Ikiru, Older Brother, Younger Sister, Portrait of Madame Yuki, She Was Like a Wild Chrysanthemum, and Street of Shame. She also starred in television dramas, including thirteen episodes of Toshiba Sunday Theatre between 1958 and 1980. In the following decade, she carved a niche as a Grandma idol, until her death in 1989.
Born: 1902-10-05 in Shizuoka, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan

生きる

怪談 鬼火の沼

金色夜叉

Aijo no keifu

ハチ公物語

足にさわった女

わが愛

いとしい恋人たち

獅子の座

われらサラリーマン

春の山脈
唐人お吉

十七才の成人式

銀座カンカン娘

ひばりの子守唄

日日の背信

乱れる

次男坊判官

死の街を脱れて

あこがれの練習船