Machiko Soga

Machiko Soga
曽我 町子
Soga as Bandora in Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger of the Super Sentai Series. Scenes of her character were redubbed in English and used as Rita Repulsa for Mighty Morphin Power Rangers
Born(1938-03-18)March 18, 1938
DiedMay 7, 2006(2006-05-07) (aged 68)
Resting placeTama Cemetery, Tokyo, Japan
Other namesStella Soga (ステラ 曽我, Sutera Soga)
Occupations
Years active1956–2006

Machiko Soga (曽我 町子, Soga Machiko, March 18, 1938 – May 7, 2006) was a Japanese actress and voice actress.[1] She also performed by the stage name Stella Soga.[2]

Life and career

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Early life and family

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Machiko was born on March 18, 1938, in Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan. She had a humble upbringing and was raised to be a singer, though her talents were with acting. Her mother died when she was a child; she was raised by her father. She had two brothers and a sister. One of her brothers died during the Second World War; the other is still alive. Her father died of cancer in 1991.

She studied at Tokyo Metropolitan Minamitama High School. During high school, she was best at science and mathematics and made her own lotions. She decided to pursue a career in acting to overcome stage fright after she failed a chemistry presentation at school.[3] She later graduated from Tokyo Announce Academy. In 1973, she went to study in Italy for two years.

Career

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She was "discovered" after doing a play in Tokyo Center. From that night on, her life would forever change as she met many important figures in the world of Japanese television.

She made her debut on NHK's children's show Minna issho in 1956.[3] After taking jazz dance lessons for a number of years, her first roles were mainly radio and voice character roles. After appearing in NHK's radio drama Chorinmura to Kurumi no Ki (1961), she gained fame as the first voice actress to portray the lovable ghost Q-taro in Obake no Q-tarō (TBS, 1965–1968).

She appeared in numerous tokusatsu films and series and played many villainous roles[3] in the Super Sentai franchise such as Queen Hedrian in Denziman and Sun Vulcan. She also appeared in Maskman portraying Tube Empire's field commander, Baraba's mother for one episode, as well as the evil sorceress Bandora in Zyuranger, better known to audiences in English speaking countries as Rita Repulsa in the American adaptation of Zyuranger, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. In an odd twist, she soon found herself re-dubbing her own lines as Rita when Power Rangers was broadcast in Japan after the show became a surprise hit in America. Her final tokusatsu role was Magiel, Queen of the Sky Saints in Magiranger, which incidentally was one of her few non-villainous roles. In her memory, the producers of Power Rangers: Mystic Force used footage of Soga as Magiel to depict a reformed Rita Repulsa in the two-part final episode of Mystic Force, "Mystic Fate".

In 1983, she opened an antiques shop in Harajuku, Tokyo, as a side-business alongside her acting career, inspired by her antique art collection hobby.[3]

Her very final role was in the PlayStation 2 game Space Sheriff Spirits as the voice and the "face" of Ankoku Ginga Jyoou (Dark Galaxy Queen), last boss and original character of this game inspired to the 80s Metal Hero series. Soga also played the voices of Cyborg 007 in the 1968 Cyborg 009 anime series and the sidekick Ball Boy in 1984 series Machineman. Machiko also ran her own shop, selling jewellery, antique clothing, and tapestries among other goods.

Death

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In early August 2005, it was revealed that she had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer about two years earlier. On the morning of May 7, 2006, she was found dead by a friend visiting her home.[3] She was 68 years old. Her interment was in Fuchū, Tokyo's Tama Cemetery. Juken Sentai Gekiranger vs Boukenger was dedicated to her memory.

Appearances

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Super Sentai/Power Rangers

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Metal Hero

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Other works

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Anime TV series

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Anime films

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Games

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Songs

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Radio

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  • Million Nights (Nazo no Onna B)

References

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  1. ^ "7 Surprising Things You Never Knew About The 'Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers'". Etonline.com. 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
  2. ^ Seiyū jiten. キネマ旬報社 (Dai 2 han ed.). Kinema Junpōsha. 1996. p. 439. ISBN 4-87376-160-3. OCLC 47491092.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e Uchūsen iyā bukku. 2007. Asahi Sonorama. 2007. p. 85. ISBN 978-4-257-13096-3. OCLC 676336350.
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