Shōkichi_Umeya

Shōkichi Umeya

Shōkichi Umeya

Japanese film producer (1868–1934)


Shōkichi Umeya (梅屋 庄吉, Umeya Shōkichi) (1868 – 1934) was a Japanese film promoter and producer who financially supported Sun Yat-sen's revolutionary activities over a period of nearly 20 years.[1] He was the founder in 1906 of the early Japanese film production company M. Pathe.[2]

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Biography

Umeya was a pan-Asianist activist.[3]:1

Umeya was born in 1868 to a merchant family in Nagasaki.[3]:44 In 1882, he took his first trip abroad, going to Shanghai.[3]:44 There, he was both impressed by the city's Euro-American aspects and also witnessed the city's semi-colonial nature, racism, and inequality.[3]:44

In his early 20s, Umeya worked in his family's international business, selling rice in Korea and speculating on gold mining in China.[3]:44 In 1891, having experienced a series of business losses, he relocated to Amoy and then to Singapore, where he opened a photography studio.[3]:44

By 1895, Umeya had relocated his family and photography studio to Hong Kong.[3]:44 He first met Sun Yat-sen in 1895 in Hong Kong and became a supporter of Sun's revolutionary cause.[3]:1 Umeya began contributing funds to Sun's revolutionary activities and helped to secure weapons for the aborted Canton Uprising in 1895.[3]:45 In 1903, Umeya fled the authorities and went to Singapore.[3]:2 Drawing on his contacts with Sun's network, he entered the film exhibition business in order to help generate funds and popular support for the revolution.[3]:2

Umeya's film exhibition business became extremely profitable through showing news films about the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905).[3]:2 Audiences were enthused to see the success of a rising Asian power on the film screen.[3]:2

Returning to Japan in 1906, Umeya founded one of Japan's earliest film companies, M. Pathé.[3]:1,44 He named the film company after the French company Pathé Frères.[3]:44 Umeya used his profits to fund Sun's revolutionary activities, including providing financial support for the Mingbao newspaper.[3]:2 Purportedly based on Sun's suggestion to use cinema for the public benefit, Umeya sought to connect film to the development of science, industry, and education.[3]:46 As a result, M. Pathe in 1906, M. Pathe imported more than 120 educational and scientific films form Europe.[3]:46

In 1911, Umeya published A Treasured Encyclopedia of Moving Pictures, which provided synopses of approximately 400 scientific and educational films.[3]:46

M. Pathe documented the success of the 1911 Xinhai Revolution beginning with the Wuchang uprising and leading to Sun's inauguration, producing three documentary films that covered the revolution.[3]:1

See also


References

  1. Qian, Ying (2024). Revolutionary Becomings: Documentary Media in Twentieth-Century China. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231204477.

Further reading



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