Morita was also in a short-lived tv series called "Ohara," where he played a NYPD homicide lieutenant whom everyone throught was Irish because of his name.
Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita, 73; Played 'Karate Kid' Teacher By Patricia Sullivan Washington Post Staff Writer Saturday, November 26, 2005; Page B04
Noriyuki "Pat" Morita, 73, whose portrayal of the wise and sly master teacher in "The Karate Kid" earned him an Oscar nomination, died Nov. 24 at his home in Las Vegas.
There were conflicting reports about the cause of death. His daughter Aly Morita said he died of heart failure at a Las Vegas hospital. His longtime manager, Arnold Soloway, said the actor died of kidney failure at a hospital while awaiting a transplant.
Search Paid Death Notices To place a death notice call (202) 334-4122 or email deathnotices@washpost.com. Please be sure to include your name, daytime phone number, address, method of payment, name of funeral home/crematory to contact for verification of death. Search Death Notices: Death notices are searchable for 90 days. Leave field blank and click "Go" to see full list. Search our archive for death notices published more than 90 days ago. Share memories about friends and loved ones in the Guest books. Who's Blogging? Read what bloggers are saying about this article. Megumi's blog What Now?! Scratchin the Surface... | www.patrickrial.com | You stay classy Tokyo!
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As Kesuke Miyagi, the mentor to Ralph Macchio's "Daniel-san" in the 1984 movie, Mr. Morita taught karate and such skills as how to catch flies with chopsticks. He lost the Academy Award for best supporting actor to Haing S. Ngor, who appeared in "The Killing Fields." But he won more roles, including three "Karate Kid" sequels, the last one in 1994 with actress Hilary Swank.
An experienced stand-up comic and comic actor, Mr. Morita had previously been best known for his recurring role in the 1970s and 1980s as the excitable malt shop owner Arnold on the popular television series "Happy Days." He also was a regular on "Sanford and Son" as Lamont's buddy Ah Chew. He was the first Japanese American to star in a television series with the leading role in "Mr. T and Tina," which aired in 1976.
He had worked frequently in movies since the 1980s and provided the voice for a character in the Disney movie "Mulan" in 1998. He had a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Mr. Morita's success in Hollywood was a long way from his start as the son of migrant fruit pickers in the fields and groves of Northern California. He contracted spinal tuberculosis at the age of 2, and when he was finally able to walk unassisted, he and his family were forced into the World War II-era internment camp at Manzanar, Calif.
"One day I was an invalid," he recalled in a 1989 interview with the Associated Press. "The next day I was public enemy No. 1 being escorted to an internment camp by an FBI agent wearing a piece."
After being released, the family opened a restaurant in Sacramento, serving Chinese cuisine because of lingering anti-Japanese prejudice. "You get the picture?" he once said to the Los Angeles Times. "A Japanese family running a Chinese restaurant in a black neighborhood with a clientele of blacks, Filipinos and everybody else who didn't fit in any of the other neighborhoods."
He eventually became a data processor with the state Department of Motor Vehicles, then secured a graveyard-shift job at Aerojet-General Corp. At age 30, he made the make-or-break decision to go into comedy full time.
His first appearances were in small clubs, until he was asked to fill in for entertainer Don Ho at a 2,000-seat hall in Hawaii. Mr. Morita unexpectedly found himself facing a huge crowd of World War II veterans, many of them disabled. They were there to observe the 25th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
"If you're a comic, these are the moments when you have to prove you've really got it," he told the San Jose Mercury News in 1998. "So, I began by telling them I wanted to apologize, on behalf of my people, for screwing up their harbor."
The vets roared. He went on to build a two-decade career in nightclubs, but not until he began making movies was he was able to develop a believable Japanese accent. He won the audition for the sensei in "The Karate Kid" even though he had no martial arts experience and the producers wanted a Japanese rather than a Japanese American actor. He agreed to use his given name, Noriyuki, rather than his stage name of Pat, for the credits, to make him sound more ethnic.
He is survived by his wife, Evelyn, and three daughters from a previous marriage.
The Green Berets with John Wayne. There is a scene where the A team's base camp is being overrun in the middle of the night. They cut the dialogue right out of it.
15 Comments:
sionara...........
Remember Pearl Harbor!
GOOKS IN THE WIRE!
PHOO GAS!
What movie was that in a subsequently edited out for DVD release (PC)?
Morita was also in a short-lived tv series called "Ohara," where he played a NYPD homicide lieutenant whom everyone throught was Irish because of his name.
LIKED HIM BETTER AS ARNOLD ON HAPPY DAYS
Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita, 73; Played 'Karate Kid' Teacher
By Patricia Sullivan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, November 26, 2005; Page B04
Noriyuki "Pat" Morita, 73, whose portrayal of the wise and sly master teacher in "The Karate Kid" earned him an Oscar nomination, died Nov. 24 at his home in Las Vegas.
There were conflicting reports about the cause of death. His daughter Aly Morita said he died of heart failure at a Las Vegas hospital. His longtime manager, Arnold Soloway, said the actor died of kidney failure at a hospital while awaiting a transplant.
Search Paid Death Notices
To place a death notice call (202) 334-4122 or email deathnotices@washpost.com. Please be sure to include your name, daytime phone number, address, method of payment, name of funeral home/crematory to contact for verification of death.
Search Death Notices:
Death notices are searchable for 90 days. Leave field blank and click "Go" to see full list.
Search our archive for death notices published more than 90 days ago.
Share memories about friends and loved ones in the Guest books.
Who's Blogging?
Read what bloggers are saying about this article.
Megumi's blog
What Now?!
Scratchin the Surface... | www.patrickrial.com | You stay classy Tokyo!
Full List of Blogs (6 links) ยป
Most Blogged About Articles
On washingtonpost.com | On the web
As Kesuke Miyagi, the mentor to Ralph Macchio's "Daniel-san" in the 1984 movie, Mr. Morita taught karate and such skills as how to catch flies with chopsticks. He lost the Academy Award for best supporting actor to Haing S. Ngor, who appeared in "The Killing Fields." But he won more roles, including three "Karate Kid" sequels, the last one in 1994 with actress Hilary Swank.
An experienced stand-up comic and comic actor, Mr. Morita had previously been best known for his recurring role in the 1970s and 1980s as the excitable malt shop owner Arnold on the popular television series "Happy Days." He also was a regular on "Sanford and Son" as Lamont's buddy Ah Chew. He was the first Japanese American to star in a television series with the leading role in "Mr. T and Tina," which aired in 1976.
He had worked frequently in movies since the 1980s and provided the voice for a character in the Disney movie "Mulan" in 1998. He had a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Mr. Morita's success in Hollywood was a long way from his start as the son of migrant fruit pickers in the fields and groves of Northern California. He contracted spinal tuberculosis at the age of 2, and when he was finally able to walk unassisted, he and his family were forced into the World War II-era internment camp at Manzanar, Calif.
"One day I was an invalid," he recalled in a 1989 interview with the Associated Press. "The next day I was public enemy No. 1 being escorted to an internment camp by an FBI agent wearing a piece."
After being released, the family opened a restaurant in Sacramento, serving Chinese cuisine because of lingering anti-Japanese prejudice. "You get the picture?" he once said to the Los Angeles Times. "A Japanese family running a Chinese restaurant in a black neighborhood with a clientele of blacks, Filipinos and everybody else who didn't fit in any of the other neighborhoods."
He eventually became a data processor with the state Department of Motor Vehicles, then secured a graveyard-shift job at Aerojet-General Corp. At age 30, he made the make-or-break decision to go into comedy full time.
His first appearances were in small clubs, until he was asked to fill in for entertainer Don Ho at a 2,000-seat hall in Hawaii. Mr. Morita unexpectedly found himself facing a huge crowd of World War II veterans, many of them disabled. They were there to observe the 25th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
"If you're a comic, these are the moments when you have to prove you've really got it," he told the San Jose Mercury News in 1998. "So, I began by telling them I wanted to apologize, on behalf of my people, for screwing up their harbor."
The vets roared. He went on to build a two-decade career in nightclubs, but not until he began making movies was he was able to develop a believable Japanese accent. He won the audition for the sensei in "The Karate Kid" even though he had no martial arts experience and the producers wanted a Japanese rather than a Japanese American actor. He agreed to use his given name, Noriyuki, rather than his stage name of Pat, for the credits, to make him sound more ethnic.
He is survived by his wife, Evelyn, and three daughters from a previous marriage.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Hey SCC can we please have thread on whos got worst beat car?
1631 3rd watch has to be worst in city.....
Liked the parts he played, can't think of anything more than Rest in Peace.
PPO Frugoli's uniform looks nicer than PPO Hall's.
Ok people, enough with the crude jokes! PLease send a bottle of fine Turtle Wax to the funeral in honor of Mr. Miaggi.
12:18 a.m., was it Platoon? How about Casualties of War?
PC, gimme a break! I thought the whole purpose of buying DVD's was for the unedited content.
RIP, Anrnold.
The Green Berets with John Wayne. There is a scene where the A team's base camp is being overrun in the middle of the night. They cut the dialogue right out of it.
Hey SCC,
Can you start deleting the comments about 016? No one cares anymore!! Get a life you dope....and stop whining.
16th district coppers are a bunch of hacks..get a real life..ron rufo rules
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