Mao Inoue

Japanese actress and model (born 1987) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mao Inoue (井上 真央; born 9 January 1987) is a Japanese actress known for her roles as Akane Imai in the Kids War series, Tsukushi Makino in the Boys Over Flowers series,[1][2] and as Sugi Fumi (ja) in the 54th taiga drama Burning Flower. She has also appeared in several films, including I Give My First Love to You, Rebirth, and The Snow White Murder Case.

Born (1987-01-09) 9 January 1987 (age 39)
Yokohama, Japan
OccupationActress
Yearsactive1992–present
Quick facts Born, Education ...
Mao Inoue
井上 真央
Inoue at the 37th Tokyo International Film Festival in October 2024
Born (1987-01-09) 9 January 1987 (age 39)
Yokohama, Japan
EducationMeiji University
OccupationActress
Years active1992–present
AgentUN et NEUF
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Early life and education

Inoue was born on 9 January 1987 in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture.[3] At the age of four, her mother encouraged her to participate in acting, art, and music.[4] Although acting was not her initial priority, she decided to continue upon receiving her first fan letter.[citation needed]

In 2004, Inoue decided to suspend her acting career to prepare for her university entrance exams.[4] At age 18, she enrolled in Meiji University, majoring in theatre and literature, with Chinese as her elective. She graduated in March 2009.[5][4]

Career

Dramas and films

Inoue began her acting career at the age of five, appearing in the television series Kids War from 1999 to 2003.[6] In 2005, she was awarded the Best Actress Award from the Television Drama Academy for her portrayal of Tsukushi Makino in Boys Over Flowers.[7]

Inoue made her film debut in 2006 with Check It Out, Yo! [8]

Inoue took on further television roles, such as the television drama First Kiss, co-starring Yūta Hiraoka.[9] She played a maiko-turned-geisha in the drama special Hanaikusa. [10] She starred in Anmitsu Hime (2008) and Anmitsu Hime 2 (2009), where she portrayed a princess and also contributed to the 2009 theme song alongside Shoko Nakagawa.[citation needed]

Following Boys Over Flowers and its 2007 sequel,[11] Inoue starred in the film adaptation, Boys Over Flowers: Final (2008). The film was the highest-grossing live action film released in Japan that year.[12]

After university, Inoue returned to acting in Boku no Hatsukoi wo Kimi ni Sasagu (2009), in which she shared the lead with Masaki Okada.[citation needed] In April of the following year, My Darling is a Foreigner was released in theaters with Inoue starring alongside Jonathan Sherr.[citation needed]

She reunited with Boys Over Flowers co-star Shun Oguri for the drama Jūi Dolittle (獣医ドリトル, Veterinarian Dolittle), which began airing in October 2010.[13] She also starred in the 84th Asadora drama Ohisama (おひさま, The Sun), portraying a young woman who lived through World War II in Nagano prefecture.[14] She won "Best Actress" for her role in the 70th Television Drama Academy Awards.[citation needed]

In February 2011, Inoue co-starred with Yutaka Takenouch in Oba: The Last Samurai, a film about World War II holdout Captain Sakae Ōba.[citation needed] Inoue starred in the film Rebirth, which was released in April 2011.[15] Both films were successful at the box office.[citation needed] In Rebirth, her portrayal of a daughter with a difficult past earned her the "Best Starring Actress" award in the 35th Japan Film Academy Awards.[16]

Inoue was chosen to chair the red team in the New Year's Eve Singing Contest Kōhaku Uta Gassen in 2011.[citation needed] This team became the first female-led red team to win the Kōhaku Uta Gassen in seven years.[citation needed]

Due to her performance in Oba: Miracle in the Pacific, she was chosen to star as Chiaki Nishikawa in the comedy film Tug of War!, which was released in November 2012.[17][needs update]

She appeared alongside V6's members, Junichi Okada and Haruma Miura, in the war film The Eternal Zero in 2013.[18] The film topped the Japan Box Office for eight consecutive weeks and broke box office records.[citation needed] The film also won the Audience Award at the Far East Film Festival.[citation needed]

Inoue reunited with some of her co-stars and the director of Tug of War!, Nobuo Mizuta, in the comedy film King of Apology, which was released in September 2013.[19]

In March 2014, Inoue appeared in a leading role in the mystery thriller film The Snow White Murder Case, directed by Yoshihiro Nakamura.[20]

In June 2014,[needs update] it was announced that Inoue would play the lead role of Sugi Fumi in the 2015 NHK taiga drama Burning Flower. After the series experienced historically low ratings during its run, Inoue publicly took responsibility for the viewership, stating, "I am the starring actress, so it has to be from my lack of ability."[21][22]

Following this, Inoue took a year and a half hiatus from acting and later returned to television in the Fuji TV drama School Counselor, which aired in the fall.[23][clarification needed]

In 2019, Inoue starred in the comedic period film Talking the Pictures and in the special 5-episode NHK drama Boy Torajiro.[citation needed] The following year, on January 8, 2020, her film Angry Rice Wives, set during the 1918 Rice Riots, was released in cinemas across Japan.[citation needed]

In May 2020, it was confirmed that Inoue would appear in the NTV drama Pay To Ace, alongside Yuya Yagira and Shigeaki Kato.[citation needed] The series was originally scheduled to air in July 2020 but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[clarification needed]

Mao Inoue recently returned to major film work with the release of Sunset Sunrise (2025), in which she played the role of Momoka Sekino. The film, directed by Yoshiyuki Kishi with a screenplay by Kankurō Kudō and adapted from a novel by Nire Shūhei, has been described as a socially reflective drama exploring contemporary community life.[24] Despite renewed visibility brought by the film, Inoue has remained relatively low-profile in the broader media landscape, with reports noting fewer public and television appearances in recent years.[25] A 2023 profile described her as thoughtful and selective in choosing roles, emphasizing a reflective and intentional period in her career development.[26]

Voice acting

In 2014, Inoue debuted as a voice actress, providing the voice of Apple Boy in the film Anpanman: Apple Boy and Everyone's Hope.[27] The anime film was released in July 2014.[28]

Her next voice project was the 3DCG animated film Rudolf the Black Cat. It was announced on July 31, 2015.[citation needed] The film was released on August 6, 2016.[29]

Stage

Inoue was cast in the 2013 stage play MIWA,[30] and later starred in the 2016 play Anger, which ran from January to April of that year.[citation needed]

Filmography

Television dramas

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1992 Gakkō ga Abunai! Mami Asakura
Itsumitemo Haran Banjō Midori Satsuki
Tsubusareta Kao! Zankoku na Shashin
1993 Kokoro no Tabi Series
1994 Kagishi
Mayonaka no Jōkyaku
Ninja Sentai Kakuranger Tsuruhime/Ninja White as a young child
1995 Tōryanse
Kura
1996 Genki o Ageru Maiko Nitani
Asahi ni Wakare no Seppun o
1997 Abarenbō Shōgun VII Sayo Episode 17
Mito Kōmon 25th Series Episode 14
Terakoya Yume Shinan
Kin no Tamago Episode 3
Shin Hanshichi Torimonochō
Gourmet Mystery Onna Shutchō Ryōrinin ga Iku!
1998 Tōyama no Kinsan vs Onna Nezumi Tonbo Episode 8
Hi no Ryōsen
1999 Kai Ayako Tomita
1999–2003 Kids War Akane Imai Lead role; 5 seasons [31]
2000 Otōsan Yū Ōmura
2003 Kids War: The Final Akane Imai Lead role; television film [32]
2004 Home Drama Shōko Nagamine
2005 Emergency Room 24 Hours Sae Kokubo Season 3; episodes 1 to 4
Boys Over Flowers Makino Tsukushi Lead role
Grave of the Fireflies Natsu Sawano TV movie
2007 Boys Over Flowers 2 Makino Tsukushi Lead role
Ōsama no Shinzō Sakura Kariya
First Kiss Mio Fukunaga Lead role
Hanaikusa Mineko Iwasaki Lead role
2008 Anmitsu Hime Anmitsu Hime/Tokoroten Lead role
2009 Anmitsu Hime 2 Anmitsu Hime/Tokoroten Lead role
Karei naru Spy Ami Yoshizawa Episode 1
Emergency Room 24 Hours Sae Kokubo Season 4; episode 4 [33]
Tengoku de Kimi ni Aetara Natsuko Nonogami Television film
Yonimo Kimyō na Monogatari: Aki no Tokubetsuhen Kanako Okazaki Lead role
2010 Mominoki wa Nokotta Uno
Veterinarian Dolittle Asuka Tashima
2011 Sunshine Yōko Sudō Lead role; Asadora [34]
2012 Gooko's Life Suzumiya Miki Lead role
2013 Paji Momo Special appearance
2015 Burning Flower Sugi Fumi Lead role; Taiga drama [35]
2017 School Counselor Hinata Aizawa Lead role [36]
2019 Shōnen Torajirō Mitsuko Kuruma Lead role; miniseries [37]
2021 Pay to Ace Mai Sakura [38]
2023 Why Didn't I Tell You a Million Times? Yui Sōma Lead role [39]
2026 Silent Truth Makiko Iwamoto [40]
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Films

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes Ref.
2006 Check It Out, Yo! Yui Haebaru [41]
2007 Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro Mika Miura [42]
Kaidan [43]
2008 Hana Yori Dango Final Makino Tsukushi Lead role [44]
2009 I Give My First Love to You Mayu Taneda Lead role [45]
2010 My Darling Is a Foreigner Saori Lead role [44]
Surely Someday Shōko Gotō [46]
2011 Oba: The Last Samurai Chieko Aono [47]
Rebirth Erina Lead role [48]
2012 Tug of War! Nishikawa Chiaki Lead role [49]
2013 The Eternal Zero Miyabe Matsuno [50]
King of Apology Noriko Kuramochi [51]
2014 The Snow White Murder Case Miki Shirono Lead role [52]
Anpanman: Apple Boy and Everyone's Hope Apple Boy (voice) [53]
2016 Rudolf the Black Cat Rudolf (voice) Lead role [54]
2018 Yakiniku Dragon Rika [55]
When a Tree Falls Mitsue Kayama Lead role [56]
2019 Talking the Pictures Kotoe Tachibana [57]
2020 I Never Shot Anyone Karuta Fukuhara [58]
2021 Angry Rice Wives Ito Matsuura Lead role [59]
2022 Remember to Breathe Yūko Lead role [60]
2025 Sunset Sunrise Momoka Sekino [61]
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Other television

Awards and nominations

More information Year, Organization ...
Year Organization Award Work(s) Result Ref.
2007 10th Nikkan Sports Drama Grand Prix Best Actress Boys Over Flowers 2 Won [63]
16th Hashida Awards Best Newcomer Won [2]
MTV Student Voice Awards Best Actress Won [64]
2008 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Best Actress Won
2011 3rd Tama Film Awards Best Emerging Actress Miracle in the Pacific Won
35th Fumiko Yamaji Award Film Awards Newcomer Actress Rebirth Won
26th Nikkan Sports Film Award Best Newcomer Rebirth, Miracle in the Pacific Won [65]
2012 36th Elan d'or Awards Newcomer of the Year Herself Won [66]
35th Japan Academy Film Prize Best Actress Rebirth Won [67]
2015 38th Japan Academy Film Prize Best Actress The Snow White Murder Case Nominated [68]
2019 61st Blue Ribbon Awards Best Supporting Actress Yakiniku Dragon Nominated [69]
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References

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