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Emi Wada
Emi Wada
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Emi Wada (和田 惠美, Wada Emi, 18 March 1937 – 13 November 2021) was a Japanese costume designer who worked extensively in stage, screen, and ballet productions. She was born in Kyoto, and attended Kyoto City University of Arts before she married Tsutomu (Ben) Wada at age 20. She was nominated for 13 awards and won six, most notably the Academy Award for Best Costume Design for her work on Akira Kurosawa's film Ran (1985). Wada died on 13 November 2021, at the age of 84.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Wada was born in Kyoto Prefecture. She was the eldest of four daughters and went to high school at Doshisha Girls’ Junior High School. Wada wanted to become a painter, and even though there were few women studying painting in university, her liberal family supported her dream. She took the entrance exam and entered the Department of Western Painting in Kyoto City University of Arts.

While visiting Yoshihide Yoda, her mother’s acquaintance who worked on film screenplays, Wada met Tsutomu (Ben) Wada. Tsutomu Wada was a NHK Osaka TV drama director at the time. Wada had recently submitted her work to the New York Parson School of Arts and the Chicago Art Institute. However, instead of studying abroad on scholarship, she married Tsutomu Wada at age 20, six months after their first encounter.[1]

Despite having initially gone to school to become a painter, her relationship with her husband led to designing the stage effects and costumes for plays he was involved with. From then, Wada continued designing for the stage.[2]

Career

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She created costumes for the Akira Kurosawa film Ran, which earned her an Academy Award for costume design, the Peter Greenaway film Prospero's Books, and the Zhang Yimou films, Hero and House of Flying Daggers. She designed costumes for operas, including the 2006 premiere performance of Tan Dun's The First Emperor[3] and for ballets, including The Peony Pavilion by Fei Bo (National Ballet of China, 2008).

Wada also designed the costumes for the 2018 Chinese adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear.[4]

She released multiple books of her works, including My Costumes, EMI WADA WORKS, and My Life in the Making, the latter of which was created on pieces of textiles with pictures of her work inside.

Wada died on 13 November 2021, at the age of 84.[5]

Awards

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Wada and her costumes were nominated for thirteen awards and won six.[6]

Year Title Award
2005 House of Flying Daggers Nominated for BAFTA Award for Best Costume Design
2005 House of Flying Daggers Nominated for Satellite Award for Best Costume Design
2005 House of Flying Daggers Won OFTA Award for Best Costume Design
2005 House of Flying Daggers Won NETPAC Award for Best Costume Design and Make Up
2005 House of Flying Daggers Nominated for INOCA Award for Best Costume Design
2005 House of Flying Daggers Nominated for Golden Derby Film Award for Costume Design
1986 Ran Won Academy Award for Best Costume Design
1987 Ran Nominated for BAFTA Award for Best Costume Design
2003 Hero Won Hong Kong Film Award for Best Costume/Make Up
2005 Hero Nominated for OFTA Award for Best Costume Design
2009 Lang Zai ji Nominated for Golden Horse Award for Best Makeup & Costume Design
2010 Lang zai ji Nominated for Asian Film Award for Best Costume Designer
1993 Oedipus Rex Won Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding individual achievement in Costume Design for a Variety or Music Program
2022 Love After Love Nominated for Hong Kong Film Award for Best Costume & Make Up Design
2011 Reign of Assassins Nominated for Hong Kong Film Award for Best Costume & Make Up Design
1998 The Soong Sisters Won Hong Kong Film Award for Best Costume & Make Up Design
2007 The Restless Nominated for Grand Bell Award for Best Costume Design
2007 The Go Master Nominated for Asian Film Award for Best Production Designer

Reception

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Her work for the 2015 production of The Peony Pavilion was described by The Washington Post as "some of the loveliest ballet creations in memory" with the newspaper further noting that: "Skirt hems flickered like flames as the dancers moved, and the leading ballerina’s sheer overdress floated around her like an afterglow."[7]

Recent works

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  • Rokumeikan (1986)
  • Princess from the Moon (1987)
  • Rikyu (1989)
  • Dream (1990)
  • Prospero’s Books (1991)
  • The Pillow Book (1997)
  • The Soong Sisters (1998)
  • 8 ½ Women (2000)
  • Hero (2002)
  • Lovers (2004)
  • House of Flying Daggers (2005)
  • Spirit (2006)
  • The Go Master (2007)
  • Mongol (2007)
  • Warrior & Wolf (2011)
  • Reign of Assassins (2011)
  • Wu Dang (2013)
  • Oh My General (2017)
  • Ran (2017)
  • Lady Of The Dynasty (2017)
  • God of War (2018)
  • They Say Nothing Stays the Same (2019)
  • Samurai Marathon (2019)
  • Love After Love (2020)[8]

Notes

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Emi Wada was a Japanese costume designer known for her Academy Award-winning work on Akira Kurosawa's Ran (1985) and her collaborations with internationally acclaimed directors including Zhang Yimou and Peter Greenaway. Renowned for her perfectionism and insistence on complete creative control over wardrobe production, she crafted costumes that fused historical references, theatrical traditions, and innovative color and texture choices across film, opera, and stage productions. Born in Kyoto in 1937, Wada studied at the Kyoto City University of Arts with an initial ambition to become a painter before shifting to costume design after her marriage to television director Ben Wada. Her film career began in the early 1970s with projects such as Marco (1971), but she remained highly selective, accepting only assignments that granted her full authority over costume design. Her breakthrough came with Ran, where she spent three years designing and overseeing the creation of nearly 1,000 hand-dyed and hand-woven costumes, personally guaranteeing production costs during delays to maintain her exacting standards. This work earned her the Oscar for Best Costume Design, along with a BAFTA, marking her as one of the few Japanese designers to achieve such international recognition. Wada's later career featured prominent collaborations with Zhang Yimou on Hero (2002) and House of Flying Daggers (2004), with Peter Greenaway on films including The Pillow Book (1996) and 8½ Women (1999), and with other directors such as Kon Ichikawa and Hiroshi Teshigahara. She also designed for opera, earning a Primetime Emmy for the 1992 production of Oedipus Rex, and continued working into her eighties, with her final credit on Ann Hui's Love After Love (2020). Wada died on November 13, 2021, at the age of 84.

Early life

Family background and education

Emi Wada was born Emiko Noguchi on March 18, 1937, in Kyoto, Japan, in a prosperous family. She went on to study Western Painting at Kyoto City University of Arts. From an early age, she aspired to become a painter, and her family supported her artistic ambitions despite the prevailing gender norms that limited opportunities for women in the arts. She met her future husband, Tsutomu Wada, through a family acquaintance.

Marriage and entry into costume design

Emi Wada married Tsutomu Wada, also known as Ben Wada, in 1957 at the age of 20, six months after their first meeting. The couple met when she visited the home of Yoshihide Yoda, a screenwriter and acquaintance of her mother, where Tsutomu Wada had come to discuss a television drama script. At the time, her husband was working as a television drama director for NHK Osaka and was also active as a theatre director. This marriage directly led to Wada's entry into costume design, as she began creating stage effects and costumes for her husband's theatre and television productions. In an interview, she recalled that marrying the TV director Ben Wada prompted requests to design stage effects and costumes for plays he was involved in, marking the start of her professional work in the field. These early experiences shifted her focus from painting to the dynamic world of performance design. The couple remained married until Tsutomu Wada's death in 2011. This initial involvement in her husband's projects served as the foundation for her subsequent career in costume design.

Career

Early work in theatre and television

Emi Wada began her professional career in costume design following her marriage at age 20 to Ben Wada, a television director at Japan's public broadcaster NHK. This union led her to take on responsibilities for designing stage effects and costumes for the plays and productions her husband was involved with, marking her entry into the field in the late 1950s. Her early contributions focused on theatrical productions linked to her husband's work at NHK and in Japanese theatre, where she created costumes and visual elements that supported dramatic storytelling on stage. She also worked on television commercials, her first ventures into screen-related design, while her marriage redirected her artistic interests toward performing arts, including contemporary dance and pantomime. These experiences proved engaging, and positive reception from audiences and collaborators resulted in a consistent stream of offers for costume design in theatre and television. Through this foundational period, Wada established herself as a costume designer in Japan's theatre and television sectors, building practical expertise in creating wardrobe and stage effects for live and broadcast dramatic works. These early projects provided essential training that later informed her approach to more elaborate costume design challenges.

Collaboration with Akira Kurosawa

Emi Wada began her collaboration with Akira Kurosawa on the epic historical drama Ran (1985), serving as the film's costume designer. She devoted three years to designing and overseeing the creation of nearly one thousand costumes, personally dyeing and weaving yarn to achieve the desired effects. Wada fused elements from Noh theatre with Renaissance influences, such as drawing a color inspiration from Botticelli for one character's costume and adapting it into a Japanese kimono form. Her philosophy balanced historical fidelity with artistic innovation; she stressed the need for period costumes to incorporate modern colors and prioritize character expression over rigid historical accuracy to connect with contemporary audiences. Amid production difficulties that suspended filming due to financial issues, Kurosawa insisted on maintaining the costume department, and Wada committed her own funds to secure $200,000 worth of ordered fabrics from Kyoto suppliers. She later described Kurosawa as a perfectionist unwilling to compromise on his vision. Wada reunited with Kurosawa on his 1990 omnibus film Dreams, where she designed costumes for its whimsical and varied segments. Her work on Kurosawa's late-career jidaigeki films became recognized for blending historical accuracy with expressive artistic choices that enhanced the director's visual storytelling.

International film projects

Emi Wada's international film career flourished through collaborations with acclaimed directors outside Japan, most notably British filmmaker Peter Greenaway. She served as costume designer on his visually distinctive films Prospero’s Books (1991), The Pillow Book (1996), and 8½ Women (1999), contributing elaborate designs such as the embroidered cloak for Prospero in the first film, which complemented Greenaway's color-drenched and experimental style. She also collaborated with Japanese directors such as Kon Ichikawa on Princess from the Moon (1987) and Hiroshi Teshigahara on Rikyu (1989). Wada later worked with Chinese director Zhang Yimou on the wuxia epics Hero (2002) and House of Flying Daggers (2004), where her costumes integrated historical references with bold artistic choices, employing vibrant colors and intricate details to amplify the films' fantastical and poetic narratives. She also designed costumes for other international period and action dramas, including The Soong Sisters (1998), Mongol (2007), Reign of Assassins (2010), Samurai Marathon (2019), and Love After Love (2020). Across these projects, Wada was recognized for blending historical accuracy with creative innovation, adapting her meticulous approach to diverse cultural and stylistic contexts in wuxia and period storytelling.

Opera, ballet, and later designs

Emi Wada expanded her costume design work beyond cinema into opera, ballet, and theatre. She shared a Primetime Emmy Award for her costume design on the 1992 production of Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex (broadcast 1993). She served as costume designer for the world premiere of Tan Dun's opera The First Emperor at the Metropolitan Opera in 2006, collaborating with director Zhang Yimou on the production. Responding to the music's demands, she chose lightweight silk over heavier fabrics to enable greater fluidity and movement in the costumes, enhancing their stage presence. Wada also designed costumes for the National Ballet of China's production of The Peony Pavilion in 2008, adapting her approach to the demands of ballet performance. Her work on this ballet drew on her sensitivity to fabric dynamics and visual elegance, contributing to the production's aesthetic impact. In 2018, she created costumes for a Chinese-language adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear, further demonstrating her versatility in theatrical design. Throughout these later stage projects, Wada's costumes remained distinguished by their focus on fabric movement and striking visual beauty, sustaining the distinctive style that marked her career.

Awards and recognition

Academy Award for Best Costume Design

Emi Wada won the Academy Award for Best Costume Design for her work on Akira Kurosawa's film Ran (1985) at the 58th Academy Awards in 1986. This victory marked the only Oscar won by the film, which received four nominations in total. The award highlighted her elaborate, historically inspired costumes that evoked the period setting of feudal Japan in Kurosawa's epic adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear. Wada became the first Japanese woman to win an Oscar in the costume design category. Her designs were praised for their detailed craftsmanship and use of vibrant colors and textures to distinguish characters and enhance the film's dramatic visual storytelling. The recognition underscored the international impact of her collaboration with Kurosawa and the artistic merit of Ran's production design.

Other major awards and nominations

Emi Wada received multiple major awards and nominations for her costume design work throughout her career, particularly for her contributions to international cinema and television. In 1993, she won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costume Design for a Variety or Music Program for her costumes in the PBS production of Oedipus Rex, directed by Julie Taymor. Wada earned two Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Costume & Make Up Design, first for The Soong Sisters in 1998 and later for Hero in 2003. Her designs for House of Flying Daggers (2004) brought further recognition, including the Online Film & Television Association (OFTA) Award for Best Costume Design in 2005 and the NETPAC Award for Best Costume Design and Make Up from the Asian Film Critics Association Awards in 2005. Wada also received BAFTA nominations for Best Costume Design for Ran in 1987 and House of Flying Daggers in 2005. Additional nominations included the Golden Horse Film Festival for Best Makeup & Costume Design for The Warrior and the Wolf in 2009 and the Asian Film Awards for Best Costume Designer for the same film in 2010, among others. Overall, excluding her Academy Award, she secured five documented wins and multiple nominations from prominent film and television organizations.

Personal life

Marriage to Tsutomu Wada

Emi Wada married Tsutomu Wada, known professionally as Ben Wada, at the age of 20. Her husband was a television director whose work in theatre and television directly prompted her initial foray into costume and stage design. In her own words, "When I was 20, I married the TV director Ben Wada, which led to me being asked to design the stage effects and costumes for the plays he was involved in." Their marriage lasted until Tsutomu Wada's death in 2011.

Death

Passing in 2021

Emi Wada died on November 13, 2021, at the age of 84. The news of her passing was reported by industry publications, with no cause of death publicly disclosed in primary announcements. She had remained active in costume design into her later years.

Legacy

Emi Wada is remembered for her distinctive approach to costume design that blended rigorous historical research with bold artistic interpretation, particularly in period films and wuxia productions. Her international collaborations with directors Akira Kurosawa, Peter Greenaway, and Zhang Yimou helped introduce Japanese aesthetic sensibilities to global cinema and theater audiences. Wada published several books documenting her process and philosophy, including My Costumes, EMI WADA WORKS, and My Life in the Making. As a Japanese woman who achieved the highest international recognition in costume design, Wada's contributions continue to inspire designers across film, opera, and stage.

References

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