
Pinko Izumi (泉ピン子, Izumi Pinko, born September 11, 1947 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese actress[1] and singer. Her legal name is Sayo Takemoto (武本 小夜, Takemoto Sayo, née Eguchi (江口)), and she originally performed under the name Mariko Mikado (三門 マリ子, Mikado Mariko).
Filmography
Television
- Onna Taikoki (NHK, 1981) as Asahi no kata
 - Oshin as Fuji (NHK, 1983)
 - Sanga Moyu (NHK, 1984)
 - Inochi (NHK, 1986)
 - Wataru Seken wa Oni Bakari as Kojima Satsuki (TBS, 1990–present)
 - Onna wa Dokyo (NHK, 1992)
 - Hito no Fuko wa Mitsu no Aji (TBS, 1994)
 - Kamisan no Waruguchi (TBS, 1995)
 - Papa Survival (TBS, 1995)
 - Tatakau Oyome-sama (NTV, 1995)
 - Dareka ga Dareka ni Koishiteru (TBS, 1996)
 - Bancha mo Debana (TBS, 1997)
 - Subarashiki Kazoku Ryokou (TBS, 1998)
 - Haru no Wakusei (TBS, 1999)
 - Romance (NTV, 1999)
 - Onna to Ai to Mystery (TV Tokyo, 2001–present)
 - Akarui Hou e Akarui Hou e as Takahashi Utako (TBS, 2001)
 - Blackjack ni Yoroshiku as Kaneko Akiko (TBS, 2003, episodes 1–2)
 - Hatsu Tsubomi (TBS, 2003)
 - Chotto Matte Kami-sama (NHK, 2004)
 - Akai Tsuki as Hara Yoko (TV Tokyo, 2004)
 - Misora Hibari Tanjo Monogatari as Kato Kimie (TBS, 2005)
 - Haru to Natsu as Nakahara Misa (NHK, 2005)
 - Yato (TBS, 2005)
 - Onna no Ichidaiki: Setouchi Jakucho as Omata Kin (Fuji TV, 2005)
 - Satomi Hakkenden as Kamezasa (Fuji TV, 2006)
 - Waraeru Koi wa Shitakunai as Ooyama Kazuyo (TBS, 2006)
 - Shinjuku no Haha Monogatari as Kurihara Sumiko (Fuji TV, 2006)
 - Saga no Gabai-baachan (Fuji TV, 2007)
 - Ai no Rukeichi (NTV, 2007)
 - Kazoku e no Love Letter (Fuji TV, 2007)
 - Joshi Deka! as Sakura Hanako (TBS, 2007)
 - Asakusa Fukumaru Ryokan as Himeda Natsuko (TBS, 2007, episode 10)
 - Egao wo Kureta Kimi e (Fuji TV, 2008)
 - Kurobe no Taiyo as Kuramatsu Tsuru (Fuji TV, 2009)
 - Tonari no Shibafu as Takahira Shino (TBS, 2009)
 - Chichi yo, Anata wa Erakatta (TBS, 2009)
 - Doctor-X: Surgeon Michiko Daimon Season 4 (TV Asahi, 2016) as Dr. Toko Kubo
 - Segodon (NHK, 2018) as Honju-in
 
Films
Honours
References
- ↑ Clements, Jonathan; Tamamuro, Motoko (November 1, 2003). The Dorama Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese TV Drama Since 1953. Stone Bridge Press, Inc. pp. 206–. ISBN 9781611725216. Retrieved August 29, 2012.
 - ↑ "オールドカー てんとう虫のプロポーズ". eiga.com. Retrieved August 6, 2023.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.