Background
Yukio was born in Nihonbashi ward of Tokyo City in 1932. His father was an entrepreneur who had been running a bento catering business.
青島 幸男
Actor director governor novelist
Yukio was born in Nihonbashi ward of Tokyo City in 1932. His father was an entrepreneur who had been running a bento catering business.
Waseda University.
He is also well known as a television actor, novelist, film director, screenwriter and songwriter. He began writing manzai comedy while enrolled as a student at Waseda University and made his debut as a comedy writer in Japan"s fledgling television industry. He rose to fame as the star of programs such as Shabondama Holiday (シャボン玉ホリデー, "Soap Bubble Holiday") and Iji-waru Baasan (いじわるばあさん, "Mean Granny").
He produced, directed and starred in the film Kane (鐘, "The Bell"), which was a contestant in the 1966 Cannes Film Festival.
Aoshima wrote for popular comedian Hitoshi Ueki and was largely responsible for creating Ueki"s image. According to Ueki, Aoshima once told him: "Don"t tell anyone you don"t drink, otherwise you"ll put me out of a job." Aoshima wrote the hit 1961 song Sudara Bushi (スーダラ節), performed by Hajime Hana and the Crazy Cats, of which Ueki was a member.
We know something is amiss, but we are so caught up in it that we cannot give it up."
House of Councillors
He refused to give outdoor speeches in the style of other Japanese politicians, but nonetheless remained in the Diet until 1995, when he resigned to run for Governor of Tokyo. Governor of Tokyo
Aoshima ran for Governor of Tokyo in 1995, without major party support and again without campaigning beyond state-sponsored posters and television spots.
Knock Yokoyama, also a comedian, was elected as governor of Osaka Prefecture in the same election cycle.
As governor, Aoshima cancelled a costly "World City" exposition that Governor Shun"ichi Suzuki planned to have held in Odaiba in 1996, calling it a "legacy of the bubble economy era". In the wake of this act, which had formed the bulk of the basis for Aoshima"s gubernatorial campaign, his administration was viewed as largely ineffective. He resigned after four years in office, by which time he was known as "Mr.
Broken Manifesto".
He died of myelodysplastic syndrome in December 2006 at the age of 74.
Aoshima characterized the song as "the saga of a happy-go-lucky salaryman who is unable to avoid the temptations of drink and gambling" with the resonant lyric "I know it"s wrong, but I can"t give it up." He linked the song to his political views later on, writing that "we have spent several decades creating a society and economy oriented towards mass production, mass distribution, mass consumption, and mass waste. He was part of the Dainiin Club, a minor political party composed of independent candidates in the House of Councillors.