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      • Born in Bangkok, Thailand, in 1968, she lived in Singapore and Indonesia before moving with her family to Hawaiʻi at age 16.
      womenshistory.si.edu › blog › folk-musician-nobuko-miyamoto-and-eight-more-women-know-asian-pacific-american-heritage-month
  1. Miyamoto and her family were sent to Glasgow, Montana, after her father volunteered to work harvesting beets on a farm. [5] They were eventually released to live with Miyamoto's grandfather in Parker, Idaho, and later Ogden, Utah, until the end of World War II. [1]

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  3. -Nobuko In 1970 we went to Chicago to an historic gathering of East and West Coast Asian activists coming together for the first time. After intense meetings with the Panthers and urban Native Americans, a few of us late nighters were cooling down.

  4. Jul 31, 2024 · A new documentary about Miyamoto’s life and work, Nobuko Miyamoto: A Song in Movement, follows a life lived largely on screen; a rarity for her generation of Asian Americans, particularly women. Born in 1939, she’s the missing link between the generations before—like Anna May Wong and Miyoshi Umeki—and the baby boomers who would come a ...

  5. Nobuko Miyamoto (宮本 信子, Miyamoto Nobuko, born March 27, 1945) is a Japanese actress. She was born in Otaru, Hokkaidō, and raised in Nagoya. She was married to director Juzo Itami from 1969 until his death in 1997, and regularly starred in his films. She has been nominated for eight Best Actress Japanese Academy Awards, winning in 1988 ...

  6. May 3, 2024 · Nobuko Miyamoto is flanked by both parents in a 1945 photo with relatives. Courtesy Harry Hayashida The family moved to Idaho then Utah before making it back to L.A.

    • Josie Huang
    • Asian American Communities Reporter
  7. Aug 5, 2023 · Beginning with the harrowing early years of her life as a Japanese American child navigating a fearful west coast during World War II, Miyamoto leads readers into the landscapes that defined the experiences of twentieth-century America and also foregrounds the struggles of people of color who reclaimed their histories, identities, and power ...

  8. Jun 15, 2021 · A total of about 120,000 men, women and children of Japanese ancestry, the majority of whom were American citizens, were incarcerated at the concentration camps, or "relocation centers" as they were officially called, as a result of the order. Miyamoto's family was split up.

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