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Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa death: ‘Mortal Kombat’ actor dies aged 75

Tagawa died in Santa Barbara from complications due to a stroke

Ap Correspondent
Friday 05 December 2025 02:23 EST
Related: Mortal Kombat II (Featurette)

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, a Tokyo-born actor known for his roles in the film Mortal Kombat and TV series The Man in the High Castle has died. He was 75.

Tagawa died in Santa Barbara from complications due to a stroke, his manager, Margie Weiner, confirmed on Thursday.

“He died surrounded by his family, with love,” she said.

Tagawa's decades of film and TV roles truly got off the ground in 1987 when he appeared in Bernardo Bertolucci’s Oscar-winning film The Last Emperor. Since then, he appeared in such films as Pearl Harbor, Planet of the Apes, and License to Kill.

Tagawa was born in Tokyo but was raised mostly in the US South while his Hawaii-born father was assigned to US mainland Army bases. He lived in Honolulu and on the Hawaiian island of Kauai for a while.

Tagawa played the Baron in Memoirs of a Geisha, a 2005 movie based on the bestselling novel chronicling a young girl’s rise from poverty in a Japanese fishing village to life in high society.

Some critics said the movie lacked authenticity, but Tagawa said it was unrealistic to expect a fictional work written and directed by Americans to fully reflect Japanese style and sensitivities.

Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa at the GBK Pre-OSCAR Luxury Lounge
Cary Hiroyuki Tagawa at the GBK Pre-OSCAR Luxury Lounge (Getty Images for GBK Productions)

“What did they expect? It wasn’t a documentary,″ Tagawa told The Associated Press in 2006. “Unless the Japanese did the movie, it’s all interpretation.″

In 2015, Tagawa took on his final major screen role as Nobusuke Tagomi, the trade minister of the Pacific States of America, in Amazon’s The Man in the High Castle, set in an alternate post-World War II reality where the US is split under Japanese and Nazi control.

Tagawa told the AP that he studied various martial acts but left because he wasn’t into fighting or competition.

Instead, he developed a system he called Ninjah Sportz, which incorporated martial arts as a training and healing tool. He worked with professional athletes like World Boxing Council light flyweight champion Brian Viloria and advised members of the University of Hawaii football team.

He also appeared as Lt. A J Shimamura in Nash Bridges, portrayed Captain Terry Harada in NBC’s Hawaii, featured in ABC’s Revenge as Satoshi Takeda, Netflix’s Lost in Space, and most recently voiced the Swordmaker in Season 1 of Netflix’s animated Blue Eye Samurai.

In 2008, Tagawa pleaded guilty in a Honolulu court to a petty misdemeanor charge of harassing a girlfriend. She had bruises to her legs, police said at the time. His attorney said he took full responsibility for the case from the beginning and made no excuses.

The actor is survived by three children, Calen, Brynne and Cana; and his two grandchildren, River and Thea Clayton.

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