Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edo_o_Kiru> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 65 of
65
with 100 triples per page.
- Edo_o_Kiru abstract "Edo o Kiru (江戸を斬る) or Slashing Edo was a popular jidaigeki on Japan's Tokyo Broadcasting System. During the decades from its September 24, 1973 premiere until the July 25, 1994 finale, 214 episodes aired. It lasted through eight series, with several casts and settings. It ran on Monday evenings in the 8:00 – 8:54 prime time slot, sponsored by National, and remains popular in reruns.The first series featured popular actor Takewaki Muga, a co-star in the network's program Ōoka Echizen, which alternated with Edo o Kiru in the same time slot. He played Hoshina Masayuki, half-brother of shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu, masquerading as Azusa Ukon in a good-over-evil drama set in Edo. Also on the cast was Matsuzaka Keiko, who continued in the next several versions of the show.Versions two through six starred the popular actor/singer Saigo Teruhiko in the role of Toyama Kagemoto, or Tōyama no Kin-san, a samurai who lived among the commoners, to the point of having a huge sakura tattoo drawn on his shoulder, but later became chief administrator of Edo. In this version of the Kin-san story (which has been the subject of several other series), Kinshiro lived in the house of the woman who had been his nursemaid (played by Masumi Harukawa, later O-Sai of Abarenbo Shogun), the proprietor of a fish-dealer. O-Yuki (Keiko Matsuzaka), pretending to be her daughter, is actually a daughter of Tokugawa Nariaki, daimyo of the Mito domain, and eventually marries Kin-san. Wearing a purple cloth over her head and face, and wielding a sword in the Yagyū Shinkage-ryū manner, she works outside the law to bring justice to the wicked. At her right hand is an employee at the shop, Jirokichi (kabuki actor Matsuyama Eitaro, 1942–1991). The former Robin Hood-style thief Nezumi Kozō, he became an undercover agent for the Kin-san/O-Yuki team. Morishige Hisaya (1913– ) played Nariaki in special guest appearances.Actress Judy Ongg assumed a supporting role as the female constable O-kyō in the fourth series.A major cast change brought veteran jidaigeki actor Kōtarō Satomi to the lead role, again as Kin-san, for the seventh and eighth series.".
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageExternalLink edo.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageExternalLink edowokiru-index.htm.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageID "3440312".
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageLength "2877".
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageRevisionID "544231352".
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Abarenbō_Shōgun.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:1970s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:1972_Japanese_television_series_debuts.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:1980s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:1990s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:1994_Japanese_television_series_endings.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jidaigeki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tokyo_Broadcasting_System_shows.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Cherry_blossom.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Daimyo.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Edo.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Han_system.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Hisaya_Morishige.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Hoshina_Masayuki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Jidaigeki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Judy_Ongg.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Kabuki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Katana.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Keiko_Matsuzaka.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Kōtarō_Satomi.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Masumi_Harukawa.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Matsuyama_Eitaro.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Mito,_Ibaraki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink National_(brand).
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Nezumi_Kozō.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Prime_time.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Robin_Hood.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Samurai.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Shogun.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Takewaki_Muga.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tattoo.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Teruhiko_Saigō.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_Iemitsu.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_Nariaki.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tokyo_Broadcasting_System.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tōyama_Kagemoto.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Tōyama_no_Kin-san.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLink Yagyū_Shinkage-ryū.
- Edo_o_Kiru wikiPageWikiLinkText "Edo o Kiru".
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:1970s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:1972_Japanese_television_series_debuts.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:1980s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:1990s_Japanese_television_series.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:1994_Japanese_television_series_endings.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:Jidaigeki.
- Edo_o_Kiru subject Category:Tokyo_Broadcasting_System_shows.
- Edo_o_Kiru hypernym Jidaigeki.
- Edo_o_Kiru type Film.
- Edo_o_Kiru type Redirect.
- Edo_o_Kiru comment "Edo o Kiru (江戸を斬る) or Slashing Edo was a popular jidaigeki on Japan's Tokyo Broadcasting System. During the decades from its September 24, 1973 premiere until the July 25, 1994 finale, 214 episodes aired. It lasted through eight series, with several casts and settings.".
- Edo_o_Kiru label "Edo o Kiru".
- Edo_o_Kiru sameAs Q5340148.
- Edo_o_Kiru sameAs 江戸を斬る_(西郷輝彦).
- Edo_o_Kiru sameAs m.09cj93.
- Edo_o_Kiru sameAs Q5340148.
- Edo_o_Kiru wasDerivedFrom Edo_o_Kiru?oldid=544231352.
- Edo_o_Kiru isPrimaryTopicOf Edo_o_Kiru.