Izou Oikawa

Izou Oikawa

Birth : 1960-03-05, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan

History

Izou Oikawa (及川 いぞう, Oikawa Izō, March 5, 1960) is a Japanese actor and voice actor (seiyuu). His former stage name is Izou Oikawa (及川 以造, Oikawa Izō) and his real name is Tetsuji Sugou (須郷 哲司, Sugō Tetsuji). He was born in Yamaguchi Prefecture and graduated from Toho Gakuen College of Drama and Music. He is affiliated with the Seinenza Theater Company.

Profile

Izou Oikawa
Izou Oikawa

Movies

Dokidoki! Pretty Cure the Movie: Memories for the Future
Sebastian
One day, Mana Aida receives a wedding dress from her mother and grandmother that they had worn in the past. While thinking about who she would wear this beside someday, a mysterious man named Marsh appears, and Mana is thrown back into the past. She was happy to see her grandmother she loved and her old dog Maro, but she then realizes that Alice and Rikka aren't there because memories have been altered. In order to save precious memories, the future, dreams and hope, Mana transforms into Cure Heart.
Tears
Shiba
A magazine editor loses his wife to cancer and he keeps her ashes in a jar. When he begins dating her sister, he becomes overwhelmed with guilt.
Forensics Classroom Incident Files 13
Koji Arita
Izumi, a woman who is troubled by dreams of the same murder every night... Saki is asked to conduct an autopsy on the body in that dream! In her dream, Izumi relives the incident as it happened 25 years ago and is possessed by the murdered woman!?
Family without a Dinner Table
This gripping docudrama is a fictionalized account of what could happen to a Japanese family when one of their sons shames them in front of the entire nation.
Willful Murder
The president of the Japanese National Railways is found dead during a period in which train service is plagued by numerous layoffs, strikes and shutdowns. The government says that the president was murdered; the police claim it was a suicide. A quizzical reporter follows the case for years, but the basic question remains unanswered: was the victim killed by members of the burgeoning Communist movement in Japan, or was the death stage-managed by the authorities in hopes of discrediting the Communists?