Lista de Personas Famosas llamadas Nobuko
Nobuko Miyamoto
Nobuko Miyamoto es una actriz japonesa. Nació en Otaru, Hokkaidō, y se crio en Nagoya, Aichi. Estuvo casada con el director de cine Juzo Itami desde 1969 hasta el aparente suicidio de éste en 1997, y participó con asiduidad en sus películas.
Nobuko Iwaki
Nobuko Iwaki is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party, was a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet until 2009. A native of Minamiamabe District, Ōita, she attended Beppu University as an undergraduate and received a master's degree from Takushoku University. She was elected to the House of Representatives for the first time in 2005 after running unsuccessfully for the House of Councillors in the Diet in 2003.
Nobuko Otowa
Nobuko Otowa was a Japanese actress. She appeared in 134 films between 1950 and 1994. She gave up a career as a star to appear in Story of a Beloved Wife and became the mistress of the director Kaneto Shindo. She later married him in 1977 after his previous wife divorced him and then died. She posthumously won the award for best supporting actress at the 19th Japan Academy Prize for A Last Note, having been diagnosed with terminal liver cancer during its production. Half of her ashes are scattered on the island of Sukune in Mihara, Hiroshima where The Naked Island was filmed.
Nobuko Yoshiya
Nobuko Yoshiya fue una novelista japonesa activa durante los periodos Taisho y Showa. Fue una de las escritoras del Japón moderno más exitosas comercialmente, especializada en novelas románticas serializadas y ficción para jóvenes adolescentes. A su vez, se consagró como una de las pioneras en la literatura lésbica japonesa, incluyendo el género Clase S.
Nobuko Takagi
Nobuko Takagi (japonés, 高樹 のぶ子 alias Nobuko Tsuruta es una escritora japonesa nacida el 9 de abril de 1946 en Hōfu en la prefectura de Yamaguchi. Trabaja actualmente como profesora adjunta de la Universidad Kyushu.
Nobuko Motomura
Nobuko Motomura is a member of the Japanese Communist Party serving in the House of Representatives. She is supportive of foreigner suffrage, giving foreigners living in Japan the right to vote, citing that the foreigners pay taxes and are a part of Japanese communities. She also supports the creation of a committee that would protect the human rights of foreign workers, as the current body, the International Training Cooperation Organization, has income that comes from the companies that commit violations of human rights of the foreign workers.