User:Tinalui831/Akiko Nogi
Akiko Nogi | |
---|---|
Native name | 野木 亜紀子 (のぎ あきこ, Nogi Akiko) |
Born | 1974 (age 49–50) Tokyo, Japan |
Occupation | Screenwriter |
Nationality | Japan |
Alma mater | Japan Institute of the Moving Image |
Notable works | |
Notable awards | Japan Academy Film Prize Screenplay of the Year 2020 The Voice of Sin Minister of Education Award for Fine Arts 2019 Unnatural International Drama Festival in Tokyo Best Screenplay 2018 Unnatural 2016 Sleepeeer Hit! Kuniko Mukōda Award 2018 Weakest Beast Drama Academy Awards Best Teleplay 105th MIU404 96th Unnatural |
Website | |
Akiko Nogi at IMDb |
Akiko Nogi (野木 亜紀子, Nogi Akiko, born 1974) is a Japanese screenwriter. She is known for her adapted plays for Jūhan Shuttai!, The Full-Time Wife Escapist, Library War, as well as original teleplays Unnatural, MIU404, etc. In 2020, Nogi won the Japan Academy Film Prize for Screenplay of the Year with her adapted work for The Voice of Sin.
Career[edit]
Nogi dreamed to become an actress at a young age, who later aimed to be a film director during her study at the Japan Institute of the Moving Image. After graduation, she joined a documentary production house, working mainly on preproduction and interviews.
After 6 years of continuous enrolment, Nogi won the Grand Prize of 22nd Fuji Television Young Scenario Award in 2009 with her original work Sayonara, Robinson Kurûsô. The script was developed into a television film for Fuji TV the next year, marking her debut as a screenwriter at age 36.
After Sayonara, Nogi went on co-writing Lucky Seven and Omoni naitemasu for Fuji TV in 2012. In 2013, she wrote her first mini series script as a sole writer for TBS's The Flying Publicist, starring Yui Aragaki as the lead actress. Nogi later went on writing multiple critical acclaimed teleplays for TBS, including the multiple awarding-winning series We Married as a Job, also starring Yui Aragaki.
In 2018, Nogi wrote the forensic drama Unnatural, her first original work on primetime television. The drama was praised for its relatable storytelling on different social topics and meticulous deductions, awarding Nogi multiple awards, including the 69th Minister of Education Award for Fine Arts and her second Best Screenplay Award from International Drama Festival in Tokyo. Nogi was also named Women of the Year by Vogue Japan in 2018.
Filmography[edit]
Film[edit]
Year | Title | Original work | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | Library Wars | Fiction series by Hiro Arikawa | ||
2015 | Library Wars: The Last Mission | |||
My Love Story! | Manga series by Kazune Kawahara | |||
2016 | I Am a Hero | Manga series by Kengo Hanazawa | ||
2020 | The Voice of Sin | Novel by Takeshi Shiota | ||
2022 | Inu-Oh | Novel by Hideo Furukawa | Animated film | |
TBA | Let's Go Karaoke! | Manga series by Yama Wayama |
Television[edit]
Year | Title | Network | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | Sayonara, Robinson Kurûsô | Fuji | Television film | |
2012 | Lucky Seven | Fuji | 7 episodes | |
Omoni naitemasu | Fuji | 3 episodes | ||
2013 | The Flying Publicist | TBS | ||
2015 | The Library Wars: Book of Memories | TBS | Television film | |
The Memorandum of Kyoko Okitegami | NTV | |||
2016 | Sleepeeer Hit! | TBS | ||
We Married as a Job | TBS | |||
2018 | Unnatural | TBS | ||
Weakest Beast | NTV | |||
Fake News | NHK | Television film | ||
2020 | Kotaki Kyodai to Shikuhakku | TX | ||
MIU404 | TBS | |||
2023 | Fence | Wowow |