Watanabe fighting cancer, delays Broadway return

Actor Ken Watanabe underwent surgery for stomach cancer last month. PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO • Japanese actor Ken Watanabe, an Academy Award nominee for his performance in the 2003 movie The Last Samurai and lauded in the recent Broadway revival of The King And I, is fighting stomach cancer and will have to postpone plans to return to Broadway.

The lean, ruggedly handsome Watanabe, who more than 20 years ago survived two bouts of leukaemia, was diagnosed "almost miraculously early" with the cancer last month and underwent surgery, he said on Twitter.

"I was really shocked, my wife and daughter pushed me to have a health check and the cancer was found. It was a very early stage and they operated immediately," he added. "I'll be resting in February so my arrival in New York will be somewhat delayed."

Watanabe, 56, became the first Japanese to be nominated for a Tony Award for his 2015 performance as the king in The King And I on Broadway.

He had been set to reprise the role, starting from March 1, but a statement on his Facebook page said this would be postponed.

He is recuperating at a hospital in Japan, Kyodo News said.

The son of school teachers in the rural north-western prefecture of Niigata, he had hoped to attend a conservatory after high school, but abandoned the plan due to financial problems, going to Tokyo and straight into acting instead.

Known at first in Japan mainly for his samurai roles, he was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia in 1989, resuming acting while still gaunt and bald from chemotherapy. The cancer returned in the early 1990s, but he underwent treatment again and has been in remission since.

His real introduction to Western audiences came when he played a rebel samurai in The Last Samurai opposite Tom Cruise. It earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.

A slew of other films followed, including Memoirs Of A Geisha (2005), Batman Begins (2005), Letters From Iwo Jima (2006) and the 2014 American reboot of Godzilla.

Approached about doing The King And I, he said his first reaction was "'In English? A musical? Oh no, no, no, I can never do this'," The New York Times reported.

But he won rave reviews and a Tony nomination for his performance, which ended in July.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on February 11, 2016, with the headline Watanabe fighting cancer, delays Broadway return. Subscribe