is a Japanese actor, singer and television presenter best known for his career as General Tani in Takeshi's Castle and Commander Sugata in Hikari Sentai Maskman. He is affiliated to the Goodfellows agency and has a business partnership with Anemoi Entertainment, the agency representing singer and actor Gentaro Takahashi.
Biography
He was born in Kirishima, Kagoshima, Japan and raised in Sasebo, Nagasaki. Due to his father's wish of a military man and eldest of two siblings (one sister), in addition to financial reasons, his father, a military officer, believed that "If you grow up in an all-female household with three older sisters and one younger sister, you'll end up becoming effeminate". Tani's mother and his three older sisters lived in Sasebo (where his mother's family home was located), while Tani lived separately with his father and his younger sister. . During the fifth grade of elementary school, his father, who worked for the Defense Agency, was transferred, and the four of them, including his mother and young sister, moved from Sasebo to Nakano ward, Tokyo. He attended the Nakano Ward Eight Middle School and moved to the newly-established Kita-Nakano Middle School in his second year. Tani himself said to be "born in Kagoshima, Kyushu and grew up in Sasebo, Nagasaki Prefecture".
During a summer school vacation in his third year of middle school, Tani debuted in acting at the age of 15, when he played the role of Younger Taritari in the TV drama Shonen Kenya in 1961, (where he was credited under his real name Hajime Iwatani). In the spring of 1963, after passing the New Face exam at Nikkatsu, where Yujiro Ishihara, who Tani long admired, also worked. He dropped out of two years later and starred in a film for the company, but shortly left afterwards. Tani himself dismissed said stories as "nonsense", declaring "I didn't like studying, so I dropped out of high school because I was working in the nightlife industry. I ran a kissaten, worked as a cook apprentice in the Yoyogi Park and as a low-rank staff member at a hostess club in Shinjuku. While I was working in the nightlife business, someone from Nikkatsu approached me and I stayed there for a few months. They called me a new face, but I wasn't. I mostly worked part-time at Nikkatsu, so there was nothing at all." His contemporary was Yoko Yamamoto. Even after joining Toei, Tani was worried about whether he could make a living as an actor, thus he continued working in the nightlife business for a while, Later, with roles in dramas such as Key Hunter , he gained a large number of female fans and became very popular, but he says that he was even more popular during his time in the nightlife industry, when he was young and slept with five women in a night.
While he worked in snack bars in Yoyogi and Shibuya, Tani immediately thought that he could make money if he became an actor., and immediately acepted the offer. In 1966, he joined Toei. Some sources claim he was scouted by a Toei executive, immediately acepting the offer in 1966. However, Tani stated "I was working at a Shibuya kissaten run by the girlfriend of Yoshihiro Kawaguchi from Theatre de Poche, and I was scouted there by Kawaguchi and Shingo Kobayashi from Horipro." When Kawaguchi and Kobayashi asked "what his real name was", he answered "Iwatani". They asked "That sounds serious. Where were you born?", He replied "Near Hayato in Kagoshima.". They responeded "Hmm... I let's see if there is something like Hayato Iwatani... Oh! I don't need the "Iwa", Hayato Tani". He made up his stage name in 3 minutes. Tani himself said to be "born in Kagoshima, Kyushu and grew up in Sasebo, Nagasaki Prefecture". Under the Hayato Tani stage name, he made his debut in 1966 in Yasuo Furuhata's directorial debut film Delinquent Girl Yoko, starring Mako Midori alongside Tani, Reiko Ohara and Renji Ishibashi; Tani played the role of a timid high school student who was high on Hyminal sleeping pills in Shinjuku., and immediately acepted the offer. In 1966., and immediately acepted the offer. In 1966. Due to his physical appearance, he was billed as "the Japanese Alain Delon" and was chosen as spokesman for stylist Ted Lapidus in Japan. He first met his second wife Kikko Matsuoka, when she sent him to voice training with and shortly after joining Toei. Tani became one of Toei's action stars and appeared in the Abashiri Prison series, the Delinquent Boss series and the Yoru no Kayo series, he joined Toei. He appeared in the Delinquent Boss series of films because he liked Steve McQueen and he was good at riding motorcycles as well.
In 1968, Tani starred in the TV drama Key Hunter, alongside Tetsuro Tamba and Sonny Chiba. His charismatic character and acting skills made him a popular star. His popularity with female fans skyrocketed after he appeared as a men's clothing model at a department store in late 1968. He began making appearances in idol magazines like Weekly Myojo, with articles about his work in Delinquent Boss were published as well. He also made regular appearances as one of the main cast members in the series following Key Hunter, Eyeful Daisakusen (1974-1975) and Birdie Daisakusen. For seven years, Tani was a key figure of the TBS's Saturday 9pm TV drama slot alongside Tamba. In between these years, Tani, at the age of 27, played the role of a high school student in the film Cruel High School: Bad Boy, he joined Toei, which spawned two sequels until 1974, he joined Toei. The third film, Cruel High School: Bad Boy - Iron Bound Classmate, released on 30 March 1974, was a failure, he took responsibility and left Toei. Tani was approached to appear in "G-Men '75," the series that followed "Birdie Daisakusen," but after appearing in "Terauchi Kantaro Ikka 2," he became interested in family dramas and decided to move away from action acting, so he declined the offer. This marked a turning point that led to his transition from acting to being a TV personality. Since then, he has been active mainly in variety shows in addition various TV dramas. Between 1986 and 1989, Tani appeared regularly in Takeshi's Castle as the , | (known also as General Tani, General Lee in UK and Indian versions of Takeshi's Castle and "Captain Tenneal" in the U.S. version MXC), which became a hot topic. He also reprised his attacking team's captain role in the 2023 version of Takeshi's Castle.
Personal life
In 1971, when Tani's popularity among women increased thanks to his appearances in TV dramas such as Key Hunter, he married fashion model Michiko Oka (in 1967, Tani saw a flyer for Oka's model club "Central" and fell in love with her at first sight, leading Oka to introduce herself to him)., and immediately acepted the offer. In 1966 after a passionate romance. At the time, Tani was 24 years old and was not in a rush to get married. Since his partner was a fashion model and not a famous actress, both of Tani's parents and Toei strongly opposed the marriage, as the latter considered Tani as part of the next generation of stars to succeed Ken Takakura and other actors. Tani was affiliated to talent agency Group '71, not to Toei and the issue became more serious when Fuji Television coordinated his engagement announcement and wedding ceremony with the agency. Tani begged to the chairman of his agency, and the couple went to the home of Toei's managing director Shigeru Okada, who acted as matchmaker, to secure his consent. On 31 May 1971, Tani and Oka finally announced their engagement at the Tokyo Prince Hotel. On June of the same year, they held their wedding ceremony in a Swiss church, a place he had dreamed of since his elementary school days., and immediately acepted the offer. In 1966. However, Tani and Oka divorced in 1974, during the filming of Birdie Daisakusen. The reason was said that Tani's mother did not like Oka as a bride.
He first met his future second wife, Kikko Matsuoka, in high school and later co-starred with her in the TV dramas Key Hunter, Eyeful Daisakusen and Birdie Daisakusen. In 1981, they got married in 1981, and, as a couple, they appeared on several television shows. The couple has often appeared on TV Tokyo's travel and gourmet programs.
Tani is currently writing a dining guide wherein he discusses maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
Anedoctes
- While working for Nikkatsu, one day during filming, there was a scene where Tani had to jump off a cliff into the sea, and everyone was trembling in fear, saying "If there is a rock sticking out, we'll get killed!", Tani was the first to jump in, bravely saying "Let me do it!" When he emerged from the sea, the other actors who were present harshly scolded him, saying, "What a horrible and despicable guy! Does he has to go to such lengths to make himself look good?". On the other hand, he was fed up with the unreasonable people who saw things in their perspective, despite his good faith, leading Tani to part his ways with Nikkatsu,
- When he was cast as a co-star with Ken Takakura, he complained about the few lines his character had, which was a bitter experience for him, forcing him to withdraw. Since Takakura wrote the role for Tani, the latter immediately apologised and said that it made his friendship with Takakura even more deeper. From then on, he became Takakura's protegé and admired him for a long time. Due to his friendship with Takakura, Tani was also liked by Masao Kubo, chairman of Tohnichi Trading Co., Ltd, and became acquaintedwith Dewi Sukarno and Shigeo Nagashima. He also met Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr.. Since Tani was devoted to Takakura, Tatsuo Umemiya told him "You are Takakura's protegé!", Tani said that he never hung out with Umemiya.
- When Takeshi's Castle began airing, Beat Takeshi highly recommended that "[The attacking team's captain] has to be Tani". At the time, Tani himself had little experience in his variety show appearances and had almost to none interaction with Takeshi. Although there was negative opinions on those around Tani, he was at a time when where he was eager to try something new, being also interested about the show where viewers could take part, taking the offer in a positive way, saying that he was "happy" about it.
Filmography
Film
- Delinquent Girl Yoko (éÂÂè¡Âå°Â女ã¨ã¼ã³) (1966)
- ' (網走çªå¤Âå° èÂÂéÂÂã®対決) (1966)
- ' (網走çªå¤Âå° Ã¥ÂÂå½ã®対決) (1966)
- Rampaging Dragon of the North (1966), Shinkichi
- ' (網走çªå¤Âå° æÂªã¸ã®æÂÂæÂ¦) (1967)
- ' (網走çªå¤Âå° å¹éªã®æÂÂäºÂ) (1967), Tani
- Zoku Soshiki BÃ
Âryoku (1967), Sugii
- Secret Turkish Bath (1968), Yutaka
- ' (ãÂÂãÂÂäºÂç§Âç·´) (1968), Katsumi Shoji
- ' (ä¸Âè¯çªé·) (1968)
- Delinquent Boss: Ocho, the She-Wolf (ä¸Âè¯çªé· çªã®鹿ãÂÂè¶) (1969)
- Delinquent Boss: Detention Blues (ä¸Âè¯çªé· ç·´éÂÂãÂÂã«ã¼ã¹) (1969)
- Delinquent Boss: Escort Wolf (ä¸Âè¯çªé· éÂÂãÂÂç¼) (1969)
- Delinquent Boss: Rat Thief Strategy (ä¸Âè¯çªé· ã©ã¶鼠ä½ÂæÂ¦) (1969)
- Night Song Series: Nagasaki Blues (å¤Âã®æÂÂ謡ã·ãªã¼ãº 港çºãÂÂã«ã¼ã¹)(1969)
- Night Song Series: Minatomachi Blues (å¤Âã®æÂÂ謡ã·ãªã¼ãº é·å´ÂãÂÂã«ã¼ã¹)(1969)
- Night Song Series: Akudo Blues (å¤Âã®æÂÂ謡ã·ãªã¼ãº æÂªåÂ
ÂãÂÂã«ã¼ã¹) (1969)
- ' (æÂ°ç¶²èµ°çªå¤Âå° ãÂÂãÂÂã¯ã¦ã®æµÂãÂÂèÂÂ
) (1969)
- Delinquent Boss: Checkmate (ä¸Âè¯çªé· çÂÂæÂÂé£Âè»Â) (1970)
- Delinquent Boss: Instant Fortune (ä¸Âè¯çªé· ä¸ÂæÂ«åÂÂéÂÂ) (1970)
- Delinquent Boss: Wolves of the City, Take your Chance (ä¸Âè¯çªé· åºãÂÂã¨ãÂÂÃ¥ÂÂè² ) (1970)
- Delinquent Boss: Hooligans on Buggies (ä¸Âè¯çªé· æÂ´èµ°ãÂÂã®ã¼å£) (1970)
- ' (æÂ¥æÂ‹ÂÂã¼ãÂÂ㼠åÂÂè² ) (1970)
- ' (æÂ°ç¶²èµ°çªå¤Âå° å¹éªã®ã¯ãÂÂãÂÂç¼) (1970)
- ' (ãÂÂã¹åÂ
Âªé· 夢ã¯å¤Âã²ãÂÂãÂÂ) (1970), Tony
- ' (çµÂé¨Â) (1970), Toshio Sakurai
- Delinquent Girl Boss: Ballad of Yokohama Hoods (ãÂÂã¹åÂ
Âªé· ã¯ã¾ãÂÂãÂÂæÂ°ãÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ) (1971)
- ' (æÂ°ç¶²èµ°çªå¤Âå° åµÂå¼ã¶çÂ¥åºÂ岬) (1971)
- ' (æÂ°ç¶²èµ°çªå¤Âå° å¹éªã®大è±走) (1971)
- Delinquent Street (ä¸Âè¯è¡Â) (1972)
- Night Song Series: Love Lost in Tears (å¤Âã®æÂÂ謡ã·ãªã¼ãº ãªã¿ã æÂÂ) (1973)
- ' (éÂÂæÂÂ
å¦åÂÂã¯ã«) (1973)
- Cruel High School: Teacher Hunt (éÂÂæÂÂ
å¦åÂÂã¯ã« æÂÂ師ç©ãÂÂ)(1973)
- School of the Holy Beast (1974), Kenta Aoki
- Cruel High School: Bad Boy - Iron Bound Classmate (éÂÂæÂÂ
å¦åÂÂã¯ã« ãÂÂãªã«ã³åÂÂæÂÂçÂÂ) (1974)
- Minato no Yoko Yokohama Yokosuka (港ã®ã¨ã¼ã³ãÂȋ¨ã³ãÂÂãÂÂãÂȋ¨ã³ã¹) (1975)
- Rugby Yaro (ã©ã°ãÂÂã¼éÂÂéÂÂ) (1976)
- ' (ç·絠å°Âå¹´åÂÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂÂ) (1976)
- ' (çÂÂå±±è£Âå¤) (1976)
- ' (ãÂÂã¼ãÂÂã³80) (1979)
- ' (女å¸Â) (1983)
- ' (çµÂå©Âæ¡ÂÃ¥ÂÂ
ãÂÂã¹ãÂÂãªã¼), (1985), Goro Kinoshita
- Hikari Sentai Maskman: The Movie (1987), Commander Sanjuro Sugata
Television
TV dramas
- Shonen Kenya (1961, NET), Younger Taritari (credited as "Hajime Iwatani")
- Tokubetsu Kidou Sosaitai (1961, NET):
- Ronin Student Sakamoto (Episode 210, 1965)
- Shinichi (Episode 291, 1967)
- Yasuo (Episode 329, 1968)
- Aru Yuki no Kiroku (1967, NET) - Episode 29
- Key Hunter (1968âÂÂ73, TBS), Tatsuhiko Shima
- Judo Icchokusen (1969, TBS) - Episode 1 "Kakkoiizo Jigokusha"
- Eyeful Daisakusen (1973, TBS) - Yuji Ibuki
- Birdie Daisakusen (1974, TBS) - Yuji Ibuki
- Terauchi Kantaro Ikka 2 (1974, TBS) - Daisuke Terauchi
- Moeru Sosamo (1975, TBS) - Ryu Saku
- Dai Hijosen (1976, TBS) - Tetsuo Takayama
- Versailles no Truck Nee-chan (1976, NET) - Episode 18 "Tokyo no Koi ni Hadaka wa Nureru"
- Akai Shogeki (1976, TBS/Daiei TV) - Jiro Yano
- Owarinaki Fusai (1977, )
- Mu (1977, TBS) - Juzo
- Taiyo ni Hoero!:
- Episode 237 (1977) - Noboru Mizusawa
- Episode 507 (1982) - Kohei Yuki
- Ashita no Keiji (1977) - Detective Ota
- Yokomizo Seishi Series I/Yoru Aruku (1978, MBS) - Torata Yashiro
- Mu Ichizoku (1978, TBS) - Masao Tani
- Necchu Jidai (1978, NTV) - Shinpachiro Komiya
- Necchu Jidai - Keiji-hen (1979, NTV) - Takamori Senba
- Asahigaoka no Daitoryo (1979, NTV/)
- Naze ka Hatsukoi - Minamikaze (1980, TBS) - (credited as Takahiro Iwatani)
- Kumokiri Nizaemon (1979, KTV)
- Drama Ningen Moyo (1980, NHK) - "Sono Hashi Made" (credited as "Takahiro Iwatani")
- ', (ABC)
- Episode 28 (1981) - Inspector Kanetani (credited as <nowiki></nowiki>)
- ' - Episode 23 (1986) - Kenichi Shimada (Johnny Shimada)
- Morishige Hisaya no Oyaji wa Juku-nen (1981, TV Asahi) - Episode 18 "Furoban ga Shacho-desu", Kenichi (credited as Takahiro Iwatani)
- Ginga Drama Shosetsu - (NHK)
- Meguri Aite (1982) - Shinya
- Meiwaku Kakete Arigato (1984) - Tasaki
- G-Men '75 (TBS) -
- Episode 355 (1982) - Joji Tamiya
- ' - Episode 17 (1983)- Kazuma Ryumon
- Ã
Âoka Echizen Series 6 (1982, TBS) - Episode 15 - Iyoshi
- Jidaigeki Special (19, CX) - "Himeshiro Nagaretabi'"- Hyoma Odagiri
- Ã
Âoku (1983, KTV) - Shichinosuke Ohara (episodes 35-36)
- Matsumoto-seicho no Renkan (1983, Asahi TV) - Minoru Wakuda
- Tokugawa Ieyasu (1983, NHK Taiga drama), Ã
Âno Harunaga
- Mado no Naka no Satsujin Rikon shita Jo Kirai na Zenfu ga Watashi okasu... (1983, TV Asahi) - Yoichi
- Keiji Monogatari '85 (1985, TV Asahi) - Episode 2 "Terebi Star Satsujin Jiken" - Akihiko Matsumoto
- Hana Yomei Jo wa Dare ga Kiru (1986, Fuji TV) - Shoji Todo
- Fuun Edo-jo Doto no Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu (1987 , TX, Toei) - Yagyu Toshikane
- Hikari Sentai Maskman (1987âÂÂ1988, TV Asahi), Commander Sanjuro Sugata*
- Otoko ga Nakanai Yoru wa Nai (1987, Fuji TV) - Tadao Sakakura
- Otoko-tachi no Undo-kai (1989, NHK)
- Tennis Shojo Yume Densetsu! Ai to Kyoko (1990, Fuji TV) - Kenjiro Fujiyama
- Kaseifu wa Mita! - "Ginza - KyÃ
Âto kyoshoku to yokubÃ
 ni moeru utsukushë oyako no adeyakana himitsu" (1990, TV Asahi/TV Daiei) - Matsuo Hotta
- ' (1992, NTV) - Akira Kenmochi
- ' (2006, NHK) - (Lamp no Obaa-chan) - Curio dealer
- '/Daijoyu Satsujin Jiken (2007, NTV) - Satoru Toba
- Napoleon no Mura (2015, TBS) - Yokichi Tayama
Variety shows
- Star TanjÃ
Â! (1980, Fuji TV) - Presenter (alongside Tamori)
- Takeshi's Castle (1986–1990, TBS), Captain Tani/General Tani / Lee
- Takeshi's Castle (2023, Amazon Prime Video), Captain Tani/General Tani
- Tunnels no Minna-san no Okage desu (ã¨ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã®ã¿ãªãÂÂãÂÂã®ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂã§ãÂÂ) (1990, Fuji TV) - starred as "Phelbs" in the "Spy Daisakusen '90" sketch
- Sanji no Ai Love! Bakusho Click (1993, Kansai TV)
- All-Star Thanksgiving (2005, TBS)
- Gekitoku! Tani-Taicho no Oneuchi Yado-tettei Guide (æ¿Âå¾Â!è°·éÂÂé·ã®ãÂÂ夿ÂÂã¡温æ³Â宿徹åºÂ㋤ãÂÂ) (2008, )
- Geki e! Jimoto no Hito ga Oshieru! Ni-paku San-nichi no Tabi (æ¿Âå¾Â!å°åÂ
Âã®人ãÂÂæÂÂãÂÂãÂÂ!2æ³Â3æÂ¥ã®æÂÂ
) (2008)
- Taya-chan Guide (æÂÂ
ã¡ãÂÂãÂÂ㋤ãÂÂ) (2008)
- Kami-sama~a ãÂÂzu (ç¥ÂãÂÂã¾ãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂ) (2008, TBS)
- Shiru Shiru Mishiru (2008, TV Asahi) - appeared in place of Eiji Bando
- Nanikore Chinhyakkei (TV Asahi):
- Appeared in the audience alongside Kikko Matsuoka (2009)
- Made an interview alongside Kiko Matsuoka about a store in Namie (Futaba District, Fukushima Prefecture) where the customers self-declared the prices at the checkout. (2010)
- Tsuchiyo Special Hanameguri no Tabi (2010, TV Tokyo)
- Watashi no Nan ga Ike nai no? (TBS TV) - semi-regular (with Kikko Matsuoka as a couple)
- Ohiru no Kaiketsu TV (2018-2019, Chiba TV)
Puppet shows
Radio
- TsÃ
«han! Nari Yuki Bangumi TaichÃ
 @ Tani Hayato no FÃ
«un Radio Shopping (2019, NBC Radio and others)
Commercials
Discography
Singles
- Bara to Kawajan (èÂÂèÂÂã¨é©ã¸ã£ã³) - 1969
- Yoake no Kuchibue (å¤ÂæÂÂãÂÂã®å£ç¬Â') - 1970
- Otoko no Nagare Uta (ç·ã®æµÂãÂÂæÂÂ) - 1970
- Toku e Ikitai (é ãÂÂã¸è¡ÂãÂÂãÂÂãÂÂ) - 1971
- Ã
Âkami wa ni-do hoeru (ç¼ã¯äºÂ度å ãÂÂãÂÂ) - 1974
- Ashita naki Otoko no Barado (æÂÂæÂ¥ãªãÂÂç·ã®ãÂÂã©ã¼ãÂÂ) - 1974
Albums
- Utau Star Daishugo (æÂÂãÂÂã¹ã¿ã¼大éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ) - 1991 - Compilation album
- Kisetsuhazure no Akai Bara (å£ç¯Âã¯ãÂÂãÂÂã®赤ãÂÂãÂÂã©) - 1974 - Theme song of the Toei film ' (éÂÂæÂÂ
å¦åÂÂã¯ã« ãÂÂãªã«ã³åÂÂæÂÂçÂÂ, Hijo gakuen waru - nerikan dokise)
- Ã
Âkami wa ni-do hoeru (ç¼ã¯äºÂ度å ãÂÂãÂÂ) - 1974 - Insert song of the Toei film Cruel High School Bad Boy
- Ashita naki Otoko no Barado (æÂÂæÂ¥ãªãÂÂç·ã®ãÂÂã©ã¼ãÂÂ) - 1974 - Insert song of TBS TV drama ' (ãÂÂã¼ãÂÂã£ã¼大ä½ÂæÂ¦) character Yuji Ibuki
References
External links