
Keiichirō Akagi
- Date of Birth: 1939-05-08
- Date of Death: 1961-02-21
- Place of Birth: Tokyo, Japan
Biography
Keiichirō Akagi (赤木 圭一郎), born Chikahiro Akatsuka (赤塚 親弘) was a Japanese actor. Akagi appeared in over 26 films in his short three-year career. Kenju burai-chō series and The Call ... Keiichirō Akagi (赤木 圭一郎), born Chikahiro Akatsuka (赤塚 親弘) was a Japanese actor. Akagi appeared in over 26 films in his short three-year career. Kenju burai-chō series and The Call of the Foghorn are Akagi's notable films. In 1958, he joined the Nikkatsu company. He landed the lead role for the first time in 1959 film Age of Nudity directed by Seijun Suzuki. In 1960, Akagi won Elan d'or Award for Newcomer of the Year. Akagi was one of the box office hitter of Nikkatsu company alongside Yujiro Ishihara and Akira Kobayashi. At around 12:20 PM on February 14, 1961, during a lunch break while shooting Gekiryū ni Ikiru Otoko, where he served as a replacement for injured Yūjirō Ishihara, Akagi was driving a go-cart brought by a salesman in the Nikkatsu studio but spun out of control and crashed into a steel door of a large tool warehouse at a speed of more than 60 km/h. He regained consciousness for a time, but on February 20 he fell into a coma again and died at 7:50 AM on February 21 of a subdural hematoma associated with a fracture of the cracked frontal bone, at the young age of 21. At the time, some of his family conceded to his funeral in the Soto Zen religion at the Dai-enji Temple in Suginami, Tokyo. Later on, his cremated ashes were moved to the Head Temple Taisekiji in Fujinomiya.

Age of Nudity
Crime, Action • 1959 September

A Killer Without a Grave
Action • 1961 February

The Man with a Sinister Laugh
Action • 1960 August

The Lost Diamond
• 1960 June

Ryuji, the Gun Slinger
Action, Crime • 1960 February

The Cards Will Tell
Crime • 1960 January

The Wild Reporter
Action, Drama • 1959 September

Umi no jōji ni kakero
Drama, Action • 1960 September

The Gun Like Lightning
Action • 1960 May

Crazy Jailbreak
Drama, Crime • 1959 April