Shizue Tatsuta was a Japanese actress of the silent and early sound eras. Much is unknown about her life before her acting career. As an actress, she symbolized the "moga" (modern girl) archetype of the era. She appeared in nearly seventy films, including works by Yasujiro Ozu, Mikio Naruse, and Heinosuke Gosho. After about ten years of acting experience, she retired from Shochiku in 1936, at the age of thirty-three. After retiring, she opened a bar in Ginza. She married Aikichi Ikeda, a high-class furniture dealer, and they had a child.
Stick Girl
(Beautiful woman)
Umi mo yusha
Love and Power
The Bride Talks in Her Sleep
(Madame at Bar)
A Primer on Marriage
(Mineko)
Young Lady
(Bad Madam)
Nikutai no bōfū
Scenes of Love
(The shabby woman)
If Only She...
The Glory of the Shōwa Era
(Taeko (Shōwa chapter))
The Model of New Women
The Father and His Son
The Beating
The Big City: Explosion
Love, Be with Humanity: Part 1
(Sakura)
Love, Be with Humanity: Part 2
(Sakura (Kokichi's second daughter))
Sisters: Part 1
Sisters: Part 2