Masako Togawa

Masako Togawa (戸川昌子 Togawa Masako) is a Japanese Chanson singer/songwriter, actress, feminist, novelist, LGBTQQIAP community icon, former night club owner, metropolitan city planning panelist, music educator, born in Tokyo, 1933.[1]

Personal life

Masako Togawa grew up in "restricted circumstances" following the death of her father.[2] She worked as a typist for five years after leaving high school,[3] then, aged 23, she made her singing debut, at the well-known nightclub 'Gin-Pari'.[4] Ms Togawa has had several children, the last of whom was born when she was 48 years old. Not too much about her children is shared to the public.[5] Masako's appearance is often marked by a multi-coloured 'Afro' hairstyle. She has educated countless musicians to learn how to sing and compose.[6]

Chanson/club career

In 1967 Ms Togawa turned her sister’s coffee shop into a nightclub known as “Blue Room”, Aoi Heya. Aoi Heya was known to be a celebrity hang out, lesbian night club, a chansonnier and in recent years, a live music club for excellent artists and composers.[7][8]

In 1975 she brought out a first record, “Lost Love”, which was followed by “The Moral of The Story.”[9]

In December 2011 Masako Togawa had to close the Blue Room, after 43 years, because of pressing financial difficulties, despite the endeavours of a "Blue Room Relief Fund".[10] In May 2012, Masako Togawa expressed a desire for "the [B]lue [R]oom [re]...born" [11] and now, there is a "Monday Blue Room", hosted by the "Tokyo Salavas".[12]

In February 2012, Togawa also began a "[B]lue [R]oom Grand Cabaret", delivered through a web TV channel, "Scatch.TV"[13] and Chanson classes, on the first and third Wednesdays of every month.[14] It would appear that her only concern was then that the venue might be "overflowing".[15]

Film and TV career

Masako Togawa was a leading character in the TV show, “Playgirl”, 1969 - 1974. Like her novels, this too had a self-referential element, the plot centred on Masako, a mystery writer who creates an all-female company of detectives who uncover white collar crimes.[16] She also played in a 1964 film, “The Hunter’s Diary”, adapted from stories she co-wrote, and in the television show Oinaru genei, based on her first novel.[17]

Writing Career and Critical Reception

Masako Towaga began writing in 1961, backstage, between her stage appearances, and her first work The Master Key was published a year later, in 1962, for which she was awarded the prestigious Edogawa Rampo Award.[18] The story is set in the same apartment she grew up in with her mother.[19] Her second novel, The Lady Killer, followed in 1963, becoming a bestseller. It was adapted for both TV and film, and nominated for the Naoki Prize.[20]'

She has to date written more than thirty novels, and continues to be one of the most popular mystery writers in Japan, with many of her stories based on her own life experience.[21]

Critical Reception The Times Literary Supplement called her "the P. D. James of Japan", but an anonymous Kirkus reviewer of Slow Fuse found that work, "sluggishly paced and indifferently written.... [an] hysterically overplotted soaper." [22]

Literary Works

Please note: this list is as yet incomplete.

Novels
Short story

External links

References

  1. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2
  2. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2 {Note: this date is disputed - the page at Virtual Japan gives March 23rd, 1931.}
  3. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2 {NOTE: the VJ page states she that she "dropped out" of high school.}
  4. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2
  5. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  6. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  7. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  8. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako [NOTE: the VJ Blue Room page differs here]
  9. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  10. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  11. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  12. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  13. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  14. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  15. http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?hl=en&langpair=ja%7Cen&u=http://gendai.net/articles/view/geino/136522&ei=HIX1UObtAcTH0QXwlID4CA
  16. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  17. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  18. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2
  19. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  20. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2
  21. http://www.virtualjapan.com/wiki/Togawa_Masako
  22. https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/masako-togawa/slow-fuse/
  23. Masako Togawa (1985). The Lady Killer. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-009269-2
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