Tazuko Mineno [new] -
But she didn’t stay there. She became obsessed with the man who would define Japanese silent cinema: .
In the annals of world cinema, the name Tazuko Mineno is barely a whisper. When film historians list pioneering female directors, Alice Guy-Blaché (France) and Lois Weber (USA) are celebrated. Dorothy Arzner is canonized. But in Japan, a woman picked up a megaphone and directed a feature film in 1936—ten years before Hollywood’s Ida Lupino, and nearly two decades before Japan would produce another female director. Her name was Tazuko Mineno, and for over 70 years, she was erased. The Apprentice in the Shadow of a Master Born in 1910 in the Asakusa district of Tokyo, Tazuko was a working-class woman with an obsession. She loved the cinema not as an ethereal art form, but as a machine of sweat and labor. In 1926, at just 16 years old, she managed to talk her way into the Shochiku studio as a script girl (continuity supervisor). tazuko mineno
When screened in Tokyo in 2018, modern critics were astonished. The film is not a curiosity; it is a real work of art. One sequence—a 360-degree pan around a weeping willow tree as the heroine decides to die—is a shot that Mizoguchi himself would have envied. Tazuko Mineno retired from film in 1941, married, and ran a small grocery store in Yokohama until her death in 1989. She never gave an interview. She never protested her erasure. When a young journalist found her in 1985 and asked about her films, she reportedly said: “They were burned. So was I. Let the dead rest.” But she didn’t stay there
Today, a single restored 35mm print of The Garden of First Love (missing its ending) sits in the National Film Archive of Japan. It is watched perhaps ten times a year. But every time that projector runs, Tazuko Mineno steps out of the shadow of Mizoguchi, raises her megaphone, and speaks again. When film historians list pioneering female directors, Alice