Taiheiki (TV series)
Appearance
This article consists almost entirely of a plot summary. (December 2020) |
Taiheiki | |
---|---|
Genre | Historical, jidaigeki |
Based on | Shihon Taiheiki (私本太平記) by Eiji Yoshikawa |
Written by | Shunsaku Ikehata Shigeo Nakakura |
Directed by | Mikio Satō and others |
Starring |
|
Narrated by | Motoyo Yamane |
Theme music composer | Shigeaki Saegusa |
Composer | Shigeaki Saegusa |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 49 |
Production | |
Producers | Yasuo Takahashi Kunihisa Ichiyanagi |
Production location | Japan |
Running time | 45 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | NHK |
Release | January 6 December 8, 1991 | –
Taiheiki (太平記) is a 1991 Japanese historical television series and the 29th NHK taiga drama. It is based on the 1958 novel Shihon Taiheiki by Eiji Yoshikawa.[1][2] It had an average viewership rating of 26.0%, peaking at 34.6%.
Plot
[edit]The drama is set at the end of the Kamakura period, going into the Nanboku-chō period during the early Muromachi.
Ashikaga Takauji cooperated with Emperor Go-Daigo and overthrew the Kamakura shogunate. The emperor began the Kenmu Restoration, but the samurai are more dissatisfied than before. As leader of the samurai, Takauji decides to turn against the Emperor and establish a new shogunate.
Cast
[edit]- Hiroyuki Sanada as Ashikaga Takauji
- Yasuko Sawaguchi as Akahashi Tōko (Tōshi), Takauji's wife
- Ken Ogata as Ashikaga Sadauji, Takauji's father
- Shiho Fujimura as Uesugi Kiyoko, Takauji's mother
- Masanobu Takashima as Ashikaga Tadayoshi, Takauji's younger brother
- Kataoka Takatarō as Ashikaga Yoshiakira, Takauji's heir
- Yūsuke Morita as Senjuō (young Yoshiakira)
- Michitaka Tsutsui as Ashikaga Tadafuyu, Takauji's illegitimate son
- Yūichirō Yamazaki as Izayamaru (young Tadafuyu)
- Yasuo Daichi as Isshiki Umanosuke
- Akira Emoto as Kō no Moronao
- Kazunaga Tsuji as Kō no Moroshige
- Sansei Shiomi as Kō no Moroyasu
- Toru Abe as Kō no Morouji
- Kohji Moritsugu as Hosokawa Akiuji
- Akira Yamanouchi as Kira Sadayoshi
- Don Kantarō as Imagawa Norikuni
- Tsurutaro Kataoka as Hōjō Takatoki, the 14th shikken
- Kiyoshi Kodama as Kanesawa (Hōjō) Sadaaki, the 15th shikken
- Hiroshi Katsuno as Akahashi (Hōjō) Moritoki, the last shikken and Takauji's brother-in-law.
- Frankie Sakai as Nagasaki Enki
- Tokuma Nishioka as Nagasaki Takasuke
- Tamaki Sawa as Kakukai-ni
- Akane Oda as Akiko
- Junkichi Orimoto as Shioya Muneharu
- Chikao Ohtsuka as Doisado no Zenshi
- Kunio Kaga as Adachi Moriyasu
The Imperial Court
[edit]- Kataoka Takao as Emperor Go-Daigo
- Daijirō Tsusumi as Prince Moriyoshi
- Mieko Harada as Ano Renshi
- Terutake Tsuji as Emperor Kōgon
- Masaomi Kondō as Kitabatake Chikafusa
- Kumiko Goto as Kitabatake Akiie
- Takaaki Enoki as Hino Toshimoto
- Masahiro Motoki as Chigusa Tadaaki
- Hōsei Komatsu as Nawa Nagatoshi
- Hatsunori Hasegawa as Saionji Kinmune
- Takashi Fujiki as Bōmon Kiyotada
- Norihiro Inoue as Shijō Takasuke
- Mitsuru Miyamoto as Nijō Michihira
- Akaji Maro as Monkan
- Baku Ōwada as Madenokōji Fujifusa
- Kenichi Hagiwara (episodes 1-7)[3] → Jinpachi Nezu as Nitta Yoshisada
- Masumi Miyazaki as Kōtō no Naishi
- Yoshizumi Ishihara as Wakiya Yoshisuke
- Tetsuya Takeda as Kusunoki Masashige
- Mariko Fuji as Hisako
- Hidekazu Akai as Kusunoki Masasue
- Shigeyuki Nakamura as Kusunoki Masatsura
- Seidai Katō as young Masatsura
Hanayasha Theatre Group
[edit]- Kanako Higuchi as Hanayasha/Utsugi, Kusunoki Masashige's younger sister
- Toshirō Yanagiba as Ishi
- Ryō Takayama as young Ishi
- Rie Miyazawa as Fujiyasha, Izayamaru's mother
- Chikako Oba as young Fujiyasha
- Hideki Nishioka as Kanze Kiyotsugu
Others
[edit]- Takanori Jinnai as Sasaki Dōyō
- Tetsu Watanabe as Akamatsu Enshin
- Etsushi Takahashi as Momonoi Tadatsune
- Etsushi Toyokawa
- Takako Tokiwa
- Strong Kobayashi as Big Man
Production credit
[edit]- Sword fight arranger - Kunishirō Hayashi
TV schedule
[edit]Episode | Original airdate | Title | Directed by | Rating |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | January 6, 1991 | "Chichi to Ko" (父と子) | Mikio Satō | 34.6% |
2 | January 13, 1991 | "Mebae" (芽生え) | 34.3% | |
3 | January 20, 1991 | "Fūunji" (風雲児) | 33.0% | |
4 | January 27, 1991 | "Mikado Gomuhon" (帝 ご謀反) | Kenji Tanaka | 31.0% |
5 | February 3, 1991 | "Ayaushi Ashikaga-ke" (危うし足利家) | 28.9% | |
6 | February 10, 1991 | "Kusunoki Tōjō" (楠木登場) | Mikio Satō | 30.2% |
7 | February 17, 1991 | "Hiren" (悲恋) | Takayasu Enokido / Mikio Satō | 33.1% |
8 | February 24, 1991 | "Yōrei-boshi" (妖霊星) | Mikio Satō | 32.5% |
9 | March 3, 1991 | "Shukumei no Ko" (宿命の子) | Kenji Tanaka | 32.1% |
10 | March 10, 1991 | "Mikado no Kyohei" (帝の挙兵) | 30.5% | |
11 | March 17, 1991 | "Kusunoki Tatsu" (楠木立つ) | Takayasu Enokido | 30.2% |
12 | March 24, 1991 | "Kasagi Rakujō" (笠置落城) | Sōsei Mineshima | 31.6% |
13 | March 31, 1991 | "Kōbō Akasaka-jō" (攻防赤坂城) | Takayasu Enokido | 25.5% |
14 | April 7, 1991 | "Akigiri" (秋霧) | Mikio Satō | 19.9% |
15 | April 14, 1991 | "Takauji to Masashige" (高氏と正成) | 25.0% | |
16 | April 21, 1991 | "Oki Hairu" (隠岐配流) | Kenji Tanaka | 24.3% |
17 | April 28, 1991 | "Ketsudan no Toki" (決断の時) | Takayasu Enokido | 22.0% |
18 | May 5, 1991 | "Mikado no Dasshutsu" (帝の脱出) | 21.7% | |
19 | May 12, 1991 | "Hitojichi" (人質) | Mikio Satō | 29.2% |
20 | May 19, 1991 | "Ashikaga Kekki" (足利決起) | 27.7% | |
21 | May 26, 1991 | "Kyoto Kōryaku" (京都攻略) | Takayasu Enokido | 27.5% |
22 | June 2, 1991 | "Kamakura Enjō" (鎌倉炎上) | Mikio Satō | 27.5% |
23 | June 9, 1991 | "Gaisen" (凱旋) | Sōsei Mineshima | 24.6% |
24 | June 16, 1991 | "Shinsei" (新政) | Takayasu Enokido | 22.9% |
25 | June 23, 1991 | "Ashikaga Takauji" (足利尊氏) | Jun Takebayashi | 22.3% |
26 | June 30, 1991 | "Onshō no Hamon" (恩賞の波紋) | Mikio Satō | 24.8% |
27 | July 7, 1991 | "Kuge ka Buke ka" (公家か武家か) | Takayasu Enokido | 24.6% |
28 | July 14, 1991 | "Kaisen Zen'ya" (開戦前夜) | Mikio Satō | 22.9% |
29 | July 21, 1991 | "Ōtō-no-miya Taiho" (大塔宮逮捕) | Sōsei Mineshima | 22.2% |
30 | July 28, 1991 | "Higeki no Ōji" (悲劇の皇子) | Kenji Tanaka | 22.4% |
31 | August 4, 1991 | "Takauji Somuku" (尊氏叛く) | Masami Kadowaki | 21.8% |
32 | August 11, 1991 | "Fujiyasha Shisu" (藤夜叉死す) | Takayasu Enokido | 22.0% |
33 | August 18, 1991 | "Senjuō to Izayamaru" (千寿王と不知哉丸) | Mikio Satō | 21.5% |
34 | August 25, 1991 | "Takauji Tsuitō" (尊氏追討) | Masami Kadowaki | 24.7% |
35 | September 1, 1991 | "Daigyakuten" (大逆転) | Takayasu Enokido | 23.4% |
36 | September 8, 1991 | "Minatogawa no Kessen" (湊川の決戦) | Kenji Tanaka | 27.6% |
37 | September 15, 1991 | "Masashige Jijin" (正成自刃) | Mikio Satō | 24.6% |
38 | September 22, 1991 | "Itten Ryōtei" (一天両帝) | Masami Kadowaki | 25.7% |
39 | September 29, 1991 | "Akiie Chiru" (顕家散る) | Mitsunobu Ozaki | 26.2% |
40 | October 6, 1991 | "Yoshisada no Saigo" (義貞の最期) | Kenji Tanaka | 22.9% |
41 | October 13, 1991 | "Mikado Hōgyo" (帝崩御) | 19.9% | |
42 | October 20, 1991 | "Haha no Yuigon" (母の遺言) | Mitsunobu Ozaki | 20.8% |
43 | October 27, 1991 | "Ashikaga-ke no Naifun" (足利家の内紛) | Takayasu Enokido | 25.3% |
44 | November 3, 1991 | "Gekokujō" (下剋上) | Mikio Satō | 22.0% |
45 | November 10, 1991 | "Seihen" (政変) | Kenji Tanaka | 24.2% |
46 | November 17, 1991 | "Kyōdai no Kizuna" (兄弟の絆) | Takayasu Enokido | 22.8% |
47 | November 24, 1991 | "Shōgun no Haiboku" (将軍の敗北) | Jun Takebayashi | 26.0% |
48 | December 1, 1991 | "Hateshinaki Tatakai" (果てしなき戦い) | Kenji Tanaka | 23.0% |
49 | December 8, 1991 | "Takauji no Shi" (尊氏の死) | Mikio Satō | 24.6% |
Average rating 26.0% - Rating is based on Japanese Video Research (Kantō region). |
References
[edit]- ^ "第29作「太平記」". NHK. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
- ^ "太平記". CiNii. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
- ^ Hagiwara dropped out due to his health reasons.
External links
[edit]- NHK Official (in Japanese)
- Taiheiki at IMDb