Miiko Taka (b. Miiko Shikata July 24, 1925, Seattle, Washington). A Japanese American actress best known for co-starring with Marlon Brando as Hana-ogi in the 1957 movie Sayonara.
Taka was born in 1925 in Seattle, Washington, but raised in Los Angeles, California, as a Nisei -- as the ethnically Japanese child born in the United States to Japanese-born immigrants (who are called Issei).
In 1942, Taka was interned with her family at the Gila River War Relocation Center in Arizona.
After director Joshua Logan's first choice for the role of Hana-ogi, Audrey Hepburn, turned him down, he looked to cast an unknown actress. Taka, who at the time was working as a clerk at a travel agency in Los Angeles, was discovered by a talent scout at a local Nisei festival. Although she had no previous acting experience, Variety gave her a positive review in their review of the film. Subsequently, Warner Brothers gave Taka a term contract as a result of her performance in Sayonara.
After Sayonara, Taka worked in films with James Garner, Bob Hope, Cary Grant, Glenn Ford, and Toshiro Mifune (alongside whom she also worked in the 1980 television miniseries, Shogun). She also served as an interpreter for Mifune as well as Akira Kurosawa when they visited Hollywood.
Taka married her fellow Gila River War Relocation Center internee, Dale Ishimoto, in Baltimore in 1944. They had one son, Greg Shikata, who works in the film industry, and one daughter. They divorced in 1958.
Taka married Los Angeles television news director Lennie Blondheim in 1963.
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