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Tomoko Yamaguchi On Why She Joined 'Gift' Despite Disliking Sports Dramas

Yamaguchi's public stance against 'win at all costs' sports dramas and her decision to join 'GIFT' frames the series as a thematic outlier in Japanese television sports storytelling.

Key Facts

  • Tomoko Yamaguchi plays art writer Hiroe Sakamoto in the TBS Sunday Theater drama 'GIFT.'
  • Yamaguchi said she dislikes sports dramas that push winning above all else.
  • She asked producers whether someone like her could participate in a wheelchair rugby drama.
  • Producers said the show aims to depict a drama of life, not a passionate sports drama.
  • Director Shunichi Hirano described seeing wheelchair rugby players as stars in the universe meeting and parting, which drew Yamaguchi to the project.

Reporting from 1 source: Cinema Today.

Tomoko Yamaguchi On Why She Joined 'Gift' Despite Disliking Sports Dramas

Tomoko Yamaguchi, who plays art writer Hiroe Sakamoto in TBS Sunday Theater 'GIFT,' said in an interview that she dislikes sports dramas focused on winning at all costs. She joined the wheelchair rugby drama because producers and director Shunichi Hirano emphasized it is a story about life and the universe, not competition.

Tomoko Yamaguchi, who plays art writer Hiroe Sakamoto in the TBS Sunday Theater drama 'GIFT,' said in an interview released ahead of the 9th episode that she dislikes sports dramas that push winning above all else. Yamaguchi told Cinema Today she asked producers whether someone like her could participate in a wheelchair rugby drama. They responded that the show aims to depict a drama of life, not a passionate sports drama. Director Shunichi Hirano described seeing wheelchair rugby players as stars in the universe meeting and parting, which drew Yamaguchi to the project. She said she falls asleep watching videos about the universe and hopes her character's pursuit of beauty brings a different perspective to the story.

Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.

Sources