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  1. Heinosuke Gosho (五所平之助, Gosho Heinosuke, 24 January 1902 – 1 May 1981) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter who directed Japan's first successful sound film, The Neighbor's Wife and Mine, in 1931.

  2. Heinosuke Gosho was a Japanese director, writer and editor who made the first sound film in Japan. He is known for his adaptations of classic literature and his social commentary.

  3. Gosho Heinosuke was a Japanese motion-picture director and writer famous for films concerning the everyday lives of middle-class people. He is also noted for adapting Japanese literary works to the screen and for his creative use of silence in sound pictures, subtle pictorial symbols, and rapid.

  4. Heinosuke Gosho (1964-1980), Chairman of the Directors Guild of Japan. Awards. Mainichi Film Competition Director's Award (22) "Now and then". Berlin International Film Festival International Peace Prize (28) “A Place with a View of Chimneys”.

  5. www.encyclopedia.com › film-and-television-biographies › heinosuke-goshoHeinosuke Gosho | Encyclopedia.com

    21 Mei 2018 · Heinosuke Gosho was a Japanese film director who worked for various studios from 1925 to 1968. He is known for his adaptations of literary classics, his social dramas, and his use of haiku in his films.

  6. Heinosuke GOSHO (actual name: Heiemon, January 24, 1902 – May 1, 1981) was a movie director during the Showa Period. He is famous for being the director of the first domestic talking picture in Japan "Madamu to Nyobo (Madam and Wife)."

  7. Heinosuke Gosho - Director. Nationality: Japanese. Born: Tokyo, 1 February 1902. Education: Keio Commerce School, graduated 1921. Family: Married three times.