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Sonny Chiba, martial arts legend, ‘Kill Bill’ star, dead at 82

Sonny Chiba dies Shinichi “Sonny” Chiba, the Japanese actor and martial arts legend who had roles in American films like “Kill Bill” and “The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift,” died Thursday. He was 82. (Chesnot/Getty Images)
(Chesnot/Getty Images)

Shinichi “Sonny” Chiba, a Japanese actor and martial arts legend who had roles in films like “Kill Bill: Volume 1,” died Thursday from complications caused by COVID-19, his manager said. He was 82.

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Chiba’s career in film and television spanned five decades, Variety reported. He appeared in numerous Japanese films and popular American movies, including “The Street Fighter,” “The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift” and “Bullet Train,” according to Chiba’s biography on IMDb.com. He also appeared in both of Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” movies, CNN reported.

“Sonny passed away from COVID-19 yesterday. Such tragic news,” Chiba’s manager, Timothy Beal, told Entertainment Tonight in a statement. “He was a great friend and an awesome client. Such a humble, caring and friendly man .We were set to work on a feature film together prior to the pandemic entitled, ‘Outbreak Z,’ in which Sonny would have starred in opposite Jesse Ventura and Wesley Snipes. I will surely miss him.”

“Bond of Justice: Kizuna” will be Chiba’s final, posthumous film role, Variety reported.

In many of his films, Chiba showcased his expertise in martial arts and later choreographed fight scenes, Entertainment Tonight reported.

Born Sadaho Maeda in Fukuoka, Japan, on Jan. 22, 1939, Chiba learned about martial arts at Nippon Sport Science University in 1957, according to Variety. He studied under karate master Masutatsu “Mas” Oyama and earned a first-degree black belt in 1965, the publication reported. In 1984 he received a fourth-degree black belt and also held black belts in ninjutsu, shorinji kempo, judo, kendo and goju-ryu karate, Variety reported.

Chiba’s first martial arts film was “Karate Kiba” in 1973. The following year, he started in “The Street Fighter,” which received an X rating in the United States because of its violence, according to Variety.

In “The Street Fighter,” Chiba hits a man hard enough to lose several teeth and crushes another man’s skull,” CNN reported.

“For me, the most enjoyable role to play is the bad guy,” Chiba said in a 2007 interview with British television personality Jonathan Ross.

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