Mie Nakao
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Mie Nakao (Japanese: 中尾 ミエ ; born 6 June 1946 in Kokura) is a Japanese actress and singer. With Yukari Ito and Mari Sono she co-starred in the hit 1963 teen movie Hai, Hai Sannin Musume ("Yes, Yes, The Three Girls"). The three actress became the latest incarnation of the long-running series of "Three Girls" acts during the 1950s, 60s and 70s, under their manager Watanabe as the Watanabe-Pro Sannin musume (渡辺プロ三人娘).[1] Nakao has continued to appear on television and produce music.
Nakao debuted as a singer at the age of 16. In May 1962, her debut single was "Kawaii Baby" (可愛いベイビー), a cover of the song "Pretty Little Baby" by Connie Francis (from the 1962 album Connie Francis Sings "Second Hand Love"), was released.[2] The song sold over a million copies.[3]
Filmography
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- Hissatsu Hitchū Shigotoya Kagyō (1975)
- Hissatsu Shiwazanin (1976)
- Shin Hissatsu Shiokinin (1977)
- A Stitch of Life (2015)[4]
- Encanto (2021) – Abuela Alma Madrigal (Japanese voice)[5]
- The Grimm Variations (2024)
References
[edit]- ^ Mark Schilling The Encyclopedia of Japanese pop culture 0834803801 1997 p.199, "Among the most popular were a trio of teenage girls — Mie Nakao, Yukari Ito, and Mari Sono — under contract to Watanabe. Following their appearance in the hit 1963 teen movie Hai, Hai Sannin Musume (Yes, Yes, The Three Girls), the agency billed them as — what else? — the Sannin Musume..."
- ^ "中尾ミエの曲をダウンロード". オリコンミュージックストア (in Japanese). Retrieved 19 April 2024.
- ^ "中尾ミエオフィシャルサイト".
- ^ "繕い裁つ人". eiga.com. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
- ^ "新作ディズニー・ミュージカル! 新ヒロインは魔法だらけの不思議な家に住む少女・ミラベル". Disney Japan. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
External links
[edit]- 1946 births
- Actresses from Kitakyushu
- Japanese film actresses
- Japanese musical theatre actresses
- Japanese television actresses
- Japanese women pop singers
- Living people
- Actors from Fukuoka Prefecture
- Singers from Kitakyushu
- 20th-century Japanese actresses
- 20th-century Japanese women singers
- 20th-century Japanese singers
- 21st-century Japanese actresses
- 21st-century Japanese women singers
- 21st-century Japanese singers