Kano sisters
Kyoko Kano | |
---|---|
Born | Kyoko KANO October 7, 1962 Osaka Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Koko |
Known for | Bust: 96cm Waist: 58cm Hips: 91cm |
Height | 169 cm (5 ft 7 in) (5'6.5")[1] |
Website | The Kanō sisters' official website |
Mika Kano | |
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Born | Mika KANO September 23, 1967 Saijō, Ehime Japan |
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names | Tamagon, Mikaringu |
Known for | Bust: 96cm Waist: 57cm Hips: 91cm |
Height | 170cm (5 ft 7 in)[1] |
Website | The Kanō sisters' official website |
Kyoko Kano (叶 恭子, Kanō Kyōko, born 7 October 1962 in Osaka) and Mika Kano (叶 美香, Kanō Mika, born 23 September 1967 in Saijō, Ehime), known collectively as the Kano sisters (叶姉妹, Kanō shimai), are Japanese celebrities.
Early life and background
The Kano Sisters say they are half-sisters with different mothers.[2] There is also a 3rd "sister" who initially made appearances with the two. She eventually withdrew from the scene, according to industry sources, and now only intermittently appears with them.[3] The lack of resemblance between them as well as their refusal to answer any questions about their age (even their reported ages are speculation) or past fuels speculation the three are not sisters at all, but just another group of tarento with a carefully crafted gimmick.[2] Within Japan it is rumored that before becoming celebrities, they were high priced call girls for the jet set level.[4]
Career
In 1997, the oldest sister Kyoko debuted in 25ans, an upscale women's fashion magazine, as one of its "supaa dokusha" (super readers). Her success led to both sisters appearing regularly on Japanese TV. Their main claim to fame is their outrageous sense of style, involving highly revealing clothes, flashy jewelry, and jet-set travel. Often wearing see-through dresses with deep V-necks, the sisters generously show off their full breasts and long legs.[3]
Apart from frequent television appearances, they market a series of exercise videos, erotic calendars, collectible fashion cards[5] and coffee-table pictorials, featuring the two preening mostly naked before a soft-focus lens.[6] Japanese toy maker Takara Co. began to sell 30-centimeter-high dolls modeled after the Kano sisters, called Kano Sisters' Gorgeous Dolls, in March 2002. The dolls were priced at 19,800 yen a pair.[7]
They are frequently invited to movie premieres, film festivals, and award ceremonies. Self-described "Lifestyle Consultants," Japanese women pay pounds 150 for a Kano seminar to hear their advice on how to get more from a relationship and how to apply a flawless face.[8] Businessmen pay them as much as $30,000 to make appearances at parties.[9] The sisters are each a former Miss Nippon.[10]
In 3 April 2006, the Kano sisters published a collection of nude artistic photographs in a book entitled Sweet Goddess. Posing in a revealing style known in Japanese as "hea nuudo", or "hair nude," a term for nude photographs of women who display their pubic hair, the photographs were taken by Kyoko Kano with modeling by Mika Kano. Sweet Goddess was reported to be among the first path breaking collections that break this unwritten post-war publication rule.[11]Sweet Goddess was listed as a bestseller for several months.[12] The Kano sisters released a similar pictorial collection entitled Sweet Goddess 2 on 1 November 2006.
Kyoko Kano as author
On 1 January 2000, Kano released an autobiographical book, Millennium Muse with an introduction by non-fiction writer Yuko Kobayashi. The book included full color photographs of her posing with younger sister and discusses Kano’s background and philosophy on life, love, men, money and sex. Some in the media panned the writing as amateurish. The book became an Asahi Shimbun bestseller.[13] Six years later, Kano followed it up with Toriorizumu, a non-fiction work that elaborates on these themes. Writing in the Shukan Post, she describes all 30 chapters and 237 pages as a "personal record experiencing a 'type of love without taboos.'"[14]
Personal life
Kyoko claims she was the potential wife of an elderly American billionaire after "five Hollywood actresses failed to win his heart", but dumped him.[8]
Lawsuits
Defamation
In April 2000, author Shigeru Sato published an unauthorized biography of Kyoko Kano in which he depicted her lifestyle from the viewpoint of a pet cat. Kano sued the author for defamation, demanding 10 million yen in the suit. In September 2001, the Tokyo District Court ordered the author to pay Kano 5 million yen in damages, for infringing on Kano's privacy and dishonoring her reputation. In handing down the ruling, Presiding Judge Yoshihiro Katayama said that Sato used "blunt and excessive" expression in portraying Kano, who frequently appears on TV, "as a person who does not think of anything but sexual matters."[15]
In August 2005, Kyoko and Mika Kano sued Japanese actress Miri Okada for defamation based on Okada's televised June 2005 claim that the two sisters unsuccessfully tried to seduce Okada's husband, Norio Yaginuma.[16] The sisters were awarded 660,000 yen (approx. US$ 6,200) compensation by the Tokyo District Court in July 2006. Judge Shigehiro Ishikawa ruled, "[Okada's] claims were groundless and she neglected in her duty to ask that they not be broadcast."[17]
Teruo Incident
Teruo Kano, father of Kyoko Kano, allegedly accosted the Kano sisters with an umbrella in a Tokyo underground parking lot complex on December 25, 2007 after the sisters had allegedly refused to pay him back an undisclosed amount of money. The money was borrowed by Teruo to Kyoko more than 15 years ago. He was arrested for intimidation, accused of violating the Law concerning Punishment for Physical Violence.[18]
Following the incident, on 11 January 2008, Kyoko Kano filed a defamation lawsuit for 11 million yen (approx. US$ 103 thousand) in compensatory damages against weekly news magazine Shukan Shincho in the Tokyo District Court. According to the petition, the magazine's January 17 issue would run an article accusing the Kano sisters of duplicity. The magazine article alleged that "While Kyoko [Kano] had borrowed money from her father, she failed to repay the debt." The plaintiff insisted that it was the father who persistently asked for money, commenting that "such erroneous reporting could damage her reputation."[19] The editorial staff at Shukan Shincho would not comment on the lawsuit.[20]
Trivia
- Mika Kano gave 1 million yen (approximately $10,000 at the time) of her own money to the relief fund in the wake of the Hanshin Earthquake of 1995.[21]
- Both of the Kano Sisters appeared on the UK BBC Three television show Adam and Joe Go Tokyo . The Sisters were part of stunt in which presenters Adam Buxton and Joe Cornish tried to become famous in Japan by going on a pretend date with the famous sisters to try to get noticed by the media.
- Made a guest appearance in animated form in the 2008 revival of the Yattaman anime series.
- In 2000, the 20th Century Fox video entertainment unit anointed the Kano sisters Japan's most likely Bond girls.[22]
- Vanity Fair listed them in its "In & Out" column (Kano sisters "in," Hilton heiresses "out").
- The Japan Times listed them in its "Gongs and Goofs of 2002" column (Kabira Brothers "The In Crowd," Kano sisters "The Out Crowd").[23]
Bibliography
Kyoko Kano
- Millennium Muse (in Japanese). Tokyo: Gentosha. 2000. ISBN 4-87728-347-1.
- Kanō Kyōko. (2006). Toriorizumu (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakkan. ISBN 4-09-396471-8.
- Super Beauty: Love & Sex (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakkan. 2007. ISBN 978-4-09-379748-1.
Notes
- ^ a b Takeuchi Cullen, Lisa (8 October 2001). "Their Bodies, Themselves". Time Magazine. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ a b Shinohara, Tsunenori (15 November 2000). "Magic of the Mystery Sisters". Asahi News Service.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ a b Itakura, Kimie (6 October 2000). "Rumors, Ridicule Fuel Success of Kano Sisters". Asahi News Service.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ "How Kyoko Kano Accumulated Her Wealth". Shukan Post Watcher (in English (translated by Toshiya Fuji)). Japan Today. 29 March 2007. Retrieved 2008-01-16.
{{cite news}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ "Televiews; An Xmas ode on the joys of television". The Daily Yomiuri (Tokyo). 19 December 2002. p. 10.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Takeuchi Cullen, Lisa (8 October 2001). "From Tokyo, with Love". Time. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ "Takara to Sell Kano Sisters Dolls in March". Jiji Press Ticker Service. 28 January 2002.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ a b Drinkwater, Jane (24 February 2002). "Big in Japan (in Several Ways): Life Stories". Independent on Sunday (London). p. 3.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Haskell, Robert (1 October 2002). "Made in Japan: Kyoko and Mika Kano, the so-called Japanese Hilton sisters, are bringing their curious act to New York". W (magazine). 31 (10). Fairchild Publications, Inc.: 116. ISSN 0162-9115.
- ^ Sasaki, Nobuaki (15 December 2001). "Siblings Give Australian Wine a Glamorous, if Woody, Aroma". Sydney Morning Herald (Australia). p. 21.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Connell, Ryann (5 April 2006). "Sexy Kano sisters flash the flesh but men denied a peek". Mainichi Daily News. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) [dead link] - ^ "Besutosera (Bestsellers)". Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 27 May 2006.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ "Besutosera (Bestsellers)". Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). 18 December 2006.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|year=
/|date=
mismatch (help); More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Kano, Kyoko (13 January 2006). "Watashi-no Toriorizumu Sekkusu (My threesome)". Shukan Post (in Japanese). 38 (1842).
- ^ Japan Economic Newswire (19 September 2001). "Celebrity Kyoko Kano wins suit over privacy violation". Kyodo News Service.
{{cite news}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Shukan Shincho, October 27, 2005, as reported in Connell, Ryann (October 21, 2005). "Saucy sisters steaming over seduction story". Mainichi Shimbun. Retrieved 2007-04-29.
- ^ "Kano Sisters win court case over 'husband seduction' claim". Mainichi Daily News. July 29, 2006.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ "Father of celebrity Kyoko Kano arrested for intimidating her". Mainichi Daily News. December 28, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-12-31. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Original Japanese: 訴状によると、週刊新潮1月17日号は「『実父逮捕』でバレちゃった『叶姉妹』のヒミツ」と題する記事を掲載。恭子が父親から金を借りていながら返済していないなどと報じた。原告側は「あくまで親が一方的に金を無心したにすぎない」と主張し、恭子本人も「誤った報道で名誉を傷つけられることは遺憾」とコメントした。"叶恭子が新潮社を訴える…1100万円の損害賠償を求める (Kyoko Kano sues Shukan Shincho, asking for 11 million yen in damages)". Sankei Sports (in Japanese). 12 January 2008.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ 週刊新潮編集部は「コメントはしない」としている。"叶恭子が父親との金銭トラブル記事で新潮社を提訴 (Kyoko Kano sues Shukan Shincho over article alleging money troubles with father)". Hochi Shimbun (in Japanese). 12 January 2008.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Betros, Chris; Nibayashi, Maki (15 October 2001). "Sizzling Kano sisters step onto the world stage". Japan Today. Retrieved 2008-01-18.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Strom, Stephanie (20 February 2001). "Confident and Racy, Mysterious 'Sisters' Hypnotize Japan". The New York Times. p. 2. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
{{cite news}}
: More than one of|work=
and|newspaper=
specified (help) - ^ Brasor, Philip (5 January 2003). "You saw it! The gongs and goofs of 2002". The Japan Times Online. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
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specified (help)
Further reading
- Dillon, Thomas (18 August 2002). "What a pair they are: When East Marries West". The Japan Times Online. Retrieved 2007-01-17.
- "Nature-loving Kyoko chooses flap happy butterfly over bald beaver". Mainichi Shimbun. 9 July 2004. Retrieved 2007-04-29.
- "Mika swings to 'Wobbly Tits, Tiny Waist and Bouncy Hips, Let's Share Them All Around'". Mainichi Shimbun. 19 November 2004. Retrieved 2007-04-29.
- Betros, Chris (3 April 2005). "Japan's wacky world of celebrities". Japan Today. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
- Connell, Ryann (21 October 2005). "Saucy sisters steaming over seduction story". Mainichi Shimbun. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
- Betros, Chris (21 October 2005). "Sister act". Metropolis Magazine. Archived from the original on 2007-01-15. Retrieved 2007-01-16.
See also
External links
- Template:Ja icon Official website
- Mika Kano at IMDb
- Kano Sisters on YouTube
- Kanō sisters at Japan Zone.