Koyuki

Koyuki

TV Shows6
1likely renewed1on the bubble4ended

A recent run of shows that didn't make it.

Koyuki Katō (born December 18, 1976), better known as Koyuki, is a Japanese model and actress. Koyuki was born in Zama, Kanagawa-ken. She started her modeling career in 1995 and has since starred in various Japanese dramas, TV and magazine ad campaigns and films. She frequently appears in Japanese print and television campaigns for the electronics company Panasonic. She rose to fame in the drama Kimi wa petto (2003) with Jun Matsumoto and gained huge popularity. Her first international film was The Last Samurai (2003) where she played Taka, wife of a Samurai slain by the character Nathan Algren, portrayed by Tom Cruise, Koyuki was well-known in Japan for years before that. She first caught the attention of the public in 1997 by winning an exclusive modelling contract with the magazine Non-no, but quickly grew beyond modelling and has earned acclaim as an actress through her many roles on Japanese television and in several Japanese films. Description above from the Wikipedia article Koyuki, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia. ​Read full biography

TV Shows

6 Tracked Shows

Other Credits

We Are Worse at Love Than Pandas (2026), Sky Castle (2024), つたえたい〜僕たちは感染症時代を生きている〜 (2024), Today's Nekomura (2020), Bones of Steel (2020), Top League (2019), Trace ~ Men of the science school ~ (2019), Flat Broke Mom (2017), Fragile (2016), The Long Goodbye (2014), Onna Nobunaga (2013), Detective Lovesick (2010), Wasted Land (2009), MR.BRAIN (2009), The Battle of Mr. and Mrs. Sasaki (2008), Engine (2005), The Way We Live (2004), You're My Pet (2003), The Eldest Boy and His Three Elder Sisters (2003), Searchin' for My Polestar (2002), Psycho Doctor (2002), Don't Let Your Money Down (2001), Antique: Western Antique Cake Shop (2001), I Wanna Fall in Love (2001), My Husband (2001), Ikebukuro West Gate Park (2000), Love Complex (2000), Beautiful Life (2000), Legendary Teacher (2000), 恋愛結婚の法則 (1999), The Rules of Marrying for Love (1999), Shomuni (1998), Can't Hurry for Love (1998), Tabloid (1998)