Hideo Nagata
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2015) |
Hideo Nagata (長田 秀雄, Nagata Hideo) (13 May 1885 – 5 May 1949) was a poet and playwright in Shōwa period Japan. He also was a scriptwriter.
Born in Tokyo, Nagata was the son of a Shinto priest at the Kikuchi Jinja. Interested in literature and poetry from an early age, he developed his own style of modern poetry and was ranked alongside Kitahara Hakushu and Kinoshita Mokutaro by the literary magazine Myōjō ("Bright Star"). He later turned his creative talents to the modern theater, and then to the relatively new medium of cinema.[1]
He died in 1949, and his grave is at the Somei Cemetery in Sugamo, Tokyo.
References
- ^ HIdeo Nagata Archived 5 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine. DBcult.com. Accessed 20 October 2012.
External links
- e-texts of works at Aozora Bunko (in Japanese)
Categories:
- Webarchive template wayback links
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Use dmy dates from March 2017
- Articles needing additional references from December 2015
- All articles needing additional references
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles with Japanese-language sources (ja)
- Articles with ISNI identifiers
- Articles with VIAF identifiers
- Articles with GND identifiers
- Articles with NDL identifiers
- Articles with NTA identifiers
- Articles with CINII identifiers
- Articles with SUDOC identifiers
- 1885 births
- 1949 deaths
- Writers from Tokyo
- 20th-century Japanese poets
- 20th-century Japanese screenwriters
- All stub articles
- Japanese writer stubs