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IMDbPro

Shô Kosugi

  • Actor
  • Additional Crew
  • Stunts
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Shô Kosugi in Enter the Ninja (1981)
CIA agent must outrace KGB agent in searching of super weapon lost in Mediterranean.
Play trailer2:10
Black Eagle (1988)
8 Videos
40 Photos
Easily the best known actor/martial artist during the 1980s ninja cinema craze, Kosugi was a proficient martial artist & skilled weapons performer which was highlighted in his several starring roles.

Kosugi grew up as the youngest child and only son of a Tokyo fisherman, and began his martial arts training at the age of five studying karate at a local dojo. Sho expanded upon his martial arts studies, also learning judo & kendo, and by his 18th birthday he had achieved the status of All Japan Karate Champion. Intent on entering the world of international finance, Sho left Japan at only 19 years old to study and reside in Los Angeles, USA where he achieved a Bachelor's Degree in Economics, yet he also remained focused on constantly improving his martial arts skills. Throughout the early 1970s, Sho competed in hundred's of martial arts tournaments & demonstrations including winning the L.A. Open in 1972, 1973 & 1974. In addition, he also met a young Chinese woman named Shook, who was eventually to become his wife and mother of his children, plus Sho had his first foray into the cinema with part's in a minor Taiwanese film titled "The Killers", and then in a Korean production, shot in Los Angeles known as "The Stranger From Korea".

Sho's big break came in 1981 when karate legend Mike Stone pitched a screenplay under the title of "Dance of Death" to Cannon Films. Cannon was at the time, a lackluster production house that had two years prior been purchased by film producer cousins Menahem Golan & Yoram Globus. The innovative cousins quickly turned Cannon into a profitable key player in the independently produced film market by latching onto topics popular to the youth market, having rapid shooting schedules, relatively unknown casts and tight budgets. Menehem Golan once remarked that he believed it was impossible to lose money on a film shot for the US market with a budget of under $5 million!!

Cannon Films backed Stone's screenplay and the title was changed to _Enter The Ninja (1981)_ starring Franco Nero, Christopher George & Susan George with filming completed in the Phillipines in early 1981. Sho's role was as the evil black ninja "Hasegawa", and his icy screen presence and martial arts skills grabbed the attention of martial arts film fans, and ignited the huge fascination with ninjitsu that engulfed martial arts for the next decade. With the financial success of their first "ninja" film, Cannon readily backed a further ninja movie, only this time Sho was elevated to being the star of the film and had become a good guy!! Revenge of the Ninja (1983) was shot in Salt Lake City, Utah in late 1982 and featured Sho as a ninja master forced to flee from Japan to America with his only surviving son, after the rest of his family are butchered by opposing ninjas's. Launching into an art importing business with an American business partner, Sho finds out too late that his partner is also a ninja, importing drugs hidden in Sho's Japanese dolls. The second film outstripped the first on box office takings, and Sho Kosugi was now the hottest star in martial arts cinema!

Based on those booming ticket sales, Cannon were once again happy to back another ninja movie, and in late 1983 shooting commenced in Phoenix, Arizona on Ninja III: The Domination (1984). The plot line however, was a rather strange affair, with the spirit of dead ninja possessing the body of dance instructor Christie (played by Solid Gold dancer Lucinda Dickey)......it was a misguided attempt by Cannon to combine ninjutsu with the 80s break dancing craze and horror movies about possession. None the less, fans didn't seem to mind, and the third installment in Cannon's ninja trilogy did reasonable business at the box office.

Kosugi then starred in the short lived action TV series _"The Master" (1984)_ alongside legendary screen bad guy 'Lee van Cleef', before going onto star in several more ninja films, including taking on Mafia thugs in the bloody Pray for Death (1985), stopping terrorists as a ninja commando in Nine Deaths of the Ninja (1985) and as a ninja secret agent taking on "the Muscles from Brussels" Jean-Claude Van Damme in the military adventure Black Eagle (1988).

However, by 1990 the US movie going public had grown tired of a decade of black clad ninja's hurling shuriken's and swords at each other, and Sho Kosugi left Hollywood to venture back to Japan where he became involved in numerous TV productions again centered around martial arts. In 1992, Kosugi starred in his biggest budgeted movie to date, a samurai epic titled _Journey of Honor (1992)_ also featuring screen legends Toshirô Mifune and Christopher Lee. Since then, Kosugi has remained very active in Japanese TV, was involved in contributing martial arts choreography for the highly popular Sony Playstation game "Tenchu; Stealth Assassins", plus he returned to Hollywood in the late 1990s to set up the Sho Kosugi Institute to assist Asian actors wishing to break into the mainstream US film market.

Undeniably, many of the ninja films featuring Sho Kosugi were marred by low budgets & cheap production....however his superb martial arts skills and captivating on screen presence have assured him a unique place in the history of martial arts cinema, and his name has become synonymous with the art of ninjitsu.
BornJune 17, 1948
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BornJune 17, 1948
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Photos40

Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Rage of Honor (1987)
Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
Shô Kosugi and Arthur Roberts in Revenge of the Ninja (1983)
Shô Kosugi in Revenge of the Ninja (1983)
Shô Kosugi in Revenge of the Ninja (1983)

Known for

Ninja Assassin (2009)
Ninja Assassin
6.3
  • Ozunu(as Sho Kosugi)
  • 2009
Michael Clarke Duncan, Kelly Hu, Steven Brand, and Dwayne Johnson in The Scorpion King (2002)
The Scorpion King
5.5
  • Additional Crew(taiko)
  • 2002
Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
Pray for Death
5.7
  • Akira Saito
  • 1985
Shô Kosugi in Enter the Ninja (1981)
Enter the Ninja
5.2
  • Hasegawa(as Sho Kosugi)
  • 1981

Credits

Edit
IMDbPro

Actor

  • Ninja Assassin (2009)
    Ninja Assassin
    • Ozunu (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 2009
  • Tenchu (1998)
    Tenchu
    • Rikimaru (Japanese version, voice, uncredited)
    • Video Game
    • 1998
  • Ninja Sentai Kakuranger (1994)
    Ninja Sentai Kakuranger
    • Gali (voice)
    • TV Series
    • 1994
  • Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero (1993)
    Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero
    • Ultraman Powered (voice)
    • TV Series
    • 1993
  • Kyokutô kuroshakai (1993)
    Kyokutô kuroshakai
    • Larry Matsuda
    • 1993
  • Journey of Honor (1991)
    Journey of Honor
    • Daigoro Mayeda
    • 1991
  • Rutger Hauer in Blind Fury (1989)
    Blind Fury
    • The Assassin (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 1989
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme and Shô Kosugi in Black Eagle (1988)
    Black Eagle
    • Ken Tani
    • 1988
  • Aloha Summer (1988)
    Aloha Summer
    • Yukinaga Konishi (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 1988
  • Rage of Honor (1987)
    Rage of Honor
    • Shiro Tanaka
    • 1987
  • Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
    Pray for Death
    • Akira Saito
    • 1985
  • Nine Deaths of the Ninja (1985)
    Nine Deaths of the Ninja
    • Spike Shinobi
    • 1985
  • Lucinda Dickey in Ninja III: The Domination (1984)
    Ninja III: The Domination
    • Yamada (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 1984
  • Lee Van Cleef, Shô Kosugi, and Timothy Van Patten in The Master (1984)
    The Master
    • Okasa
    • TV Series
    • 1984
  • Revenge of the Ninja (1983)
    Revenge of the Ninja
    • Cho Osaki
    • Black Ninja (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 1983

Additional Crew

  • Michael Clarke Duncan, Kelly Hu, Steven Brand, and Dwayne Johnson in The Scorpion King (2002)
    The Scorpion King
    • choreographer: taiko
    • 2002
  • Tenchu (1998)
    Tenchu
    • motion capture performer: Rikimaru
    • Video Game
    • 1998
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme and Shô Kosugi in Black Eagle (1988)
    Black Eagle
    • fight choreographer
    • 1988
  • Diamond Ninja Force (1988)
    Diamond Ninja Force
    • fight choreographer (as Sho Kosugi, host segment)
    • 1988
  • Rage of Honor (1987)
    Rage of Honor
    • martial arts choreographer
    • special weapons designer
    • 1987
  • Shô Kosugi in Pray for Death (1985)
    Pray for Death
    • martial arts choreographer (as Sho Kosugi)
    • 1985
  • Lee Van Cleef, Shô Kosugi, and Timothy Van Patten in The Master (1984)
    The Master
    • ninja coordinator
    • technical advisor
    • ninja choreographer
    • TV Series
    • 1984
  • Revenge of the Ninja (1983)
    Revenge of the Ninja
    • martial arts choreographer
    • 1983

Stunts

  • Lucinda Dickey in Ninja III: The Domination (1984)
    Ninja III: The Domination
    • fight choreographer
    • 1984
  • Lee Van Cleef, Shô Kosugi, and Timothy Van Patten in The Master (1984)
    The Master
    • stunt coordinator
    • TV Series
    • 1984

Videos8

Ninja III: The Domination
Clip 1:57
Ninja III: The Domination
Ninja III: The Domination
Clip 1:55
Ninja III: The Domination
Ninja Assassin
Clip 0:57
Ninja Assassin
Ninja Assassin
Clip 0:43
Ninja Assassin
Ninja Assassin
Clip 0:32
Ninja Assassin
Trailer
Trailer 2:10
Trailer
Revenge of the Ninja
Trailer 1:40
Revenge of the Ninja
Enter the Ninja
Trailer 2:54
Enter the Ninja

Personal details

Edit
  • Official site
    • Official Site
  • Alternative name
    • Sho Kosugi
  • Height
    • 6′ 0½″ (1.84 m)
  • Born
    • June 17, 1948
    • Tokyo, Japan
  • Spouse
    • Shook Gim Chan? - present (3 children)

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Father of Shane Kosugi and Kane Kosugi. Also has a daughter named Ayeesha Elisa Kosugi who was born in 1983.
  • Nickname
    • The visible ninja

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