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    Yasujiro Shimazu

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  1. Yasujirō Shimazu (島津 保次郎, Shimazu Yasujirō, 3 June 1897 – 18 September 1945) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter, and a pioneer of the shōshimin-eiga (common people drama) genre at the Shōchiku studios in pre-World War II Japan.

  2. Yasujirō Shimazu is known as an Director, Writer, Screenplay, Supervisor of Production Resources, and Story. Some of his work includes Our Neighbor, Miss Yae, The Lights of Asakusa, A Brother and His Younger Sister, Vermilion and Green, ABC Lifeline, Okoto and Sasuke, So Goes My Love, and The Trio's Engagements.

  3. Yasujirō Shimazu (島津 保次郎, Shimazu Yasujirō, June 3, 1897 – September 18, 1945) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter, who was one of the major creators of the shōshimingeki genre (films depicting the lower middle classes) at the Shōchiku studios in pre-World War II Japan.

  4. Our Neighbor, Miss Yae (隣の八重ちゃん, Tonari no Yae-chan) is a 1934 Japanese comedy-drama film written and directed by Yasujirō Shimazu. It is regarded as one of Shimazu's major films, and a representative work of the shōshimin-eiga ("lower middle class film") genre.

  5. Yasujiro SHIMAZU (June 3, 1897 - September 18, 1945) is a film director from the Taisho to the Showa era. He was born as the son of an established marine product trader in Surugadai, Kanda Ward (today's Surugadai, Kanda, Chiyoda Ward), Tokyo.

  6. A Brother and His Younger Sister (兄とその妹, Ani to sono imoto), also titled An Older Brother and His Younger Sister, is a 1939 Japanese comedy-drama film written and directed by Yasujirō Shimazu.

  7. Yasujirô Shimazu was born on 3 June 1897 in Tokyo, Japan. He was a director and writer, known for Ani to sono imôto (1939), Totsugu hi made (1940) and Tonari no Yae-chan (1934). He died on 18 September 1945 in Tokyo, Japan.