Yôko Umemura (; October 21, 1903 â March 8, 1944), born Suzuki Hanako, was a Japanese film actress who appeared in over a hundred films from 1922 to 1944. She is especially associated with the work of directors Yasujiro Shimazu and Kenji Mizoguchi.
Umemura was born in Nihonbashi, Tokyo. She began her stage career as a child.
Umemura was a film star in Japan, compared to Norma Talmadge in the 1920s. She made the transition to sound pictures and co-starred as a geisha in Kenji Mizoguchi's drama Sisters of the Gion (1936), and in Mizoguchi's The Story of the Last Chrysanthemums (1939). Other directors she worked with included Tomotaka Tasaka, Mansaku Itami, Minoru Murata, Daisuke Ito, Yutaka Abe, and Yasujiro Shimazu. In 1931 she was said to be Japan's highest salaried film actress.
Umemura appeared in over a hundred films between 1922 and 1944.
Umemura died in 1944, at the age of 40, when her appendix burst at a film location in Tanba Province.