Pat Morita

American actor
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican actor
A.K.A.Noriyuki "Pat" Morita Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita Noriyuki Morita
A.K.A.Noriyuki "Pat" Morita Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita Noriyuki Morita
PlacesUnited States of America
wasActor Film actor Television actor
Work fieldFilm, TV, Stage & Radio
Gender
Male
Birth28 June 1932, Isleton, Sacramento County, California, USA
Death24 November 2005Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada, USA (aged 73 years)
Star signCancer
Family
Spouse:Evelyn Guerrero (-2005)
Stats
Height:1.6002 m
Education
Armijo High School
Awards
star on Hollywood Walk of Fame 
The details

Biography

Noriyuki "Pat" Morita (June 28, 1932 – November 24, 2005) was a Japanese-American actor and comedian. He was known for his roles as Matsuo "Arnold" Takahashi on Happy Days, Mr. Miyagi in The Karate Kid film series, Captain Sam Pak on the sitcom M*A*S*H, Ah Chew in Sanford and Son, Mike Woo in The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo, and The Emperor of China in Mulan and Mulan II. He was the series lead actor in the television program Mr. T and Tina and in Ohara, a police-themed drama. The two shows made history for being among the few TV shows with an Asian American series lead.

Morita was nominated for the 1984 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of Mr. Miyagi in The Karate Kid, which would be the first of a media franchise in which Morita was the central player.

Early life

Morita was born in Isleton, California, in 1932. Morita's father Tamaru, born in 1897, immigrated to California from Kumamoto Prefecture on the Japanese island of Kyushu in 1915. Tamaru's wife, Momoe, born in 1903, immigrated to California in 1913. Noriyuki, as Pat was named, had a brother named Hideo (Harry) who was twelve years older.

Morita developed spinal tuberculosis (Pott disease) at the age of two and spent the bulk of the next nine years in the Weimar Institute in Weimar, California, and later at the Shriners Hospital in San Francisco. For long periods, he was wrapped in a full-body cast, and he was told that he would never walk. During his time at a sanatorium near Sacramento, Morita befriended a visiting priest who would often joke that, if Morita ever converted to Catholicism, the priest would rename him to "Patrick Aloysius Ignatius Xavier Noriyuki Morita". Released from the hospital at age 11 after undergoing extensive spinal surgery and learning how to walk, Morita was transported from the hospital directly to the Gila River camp in Arizona to join his interned family. After about a year and a half, he was transferred to the Tule Lake War Relocation Center.

After World War II ended, Morita moved back to the Bay Area and he graduated from Armijo High School in Fairfield, California, in 1949. For a time after the war, the family operated Ariake Chop Suey, a restaurant in Sacramento, California, jokingly described by Morita years later as "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". Morita would entertain customers with jokes and serve as master of ceremonies for group dinners. After Morita's father was killed in 1956 in a hit-and-run accident while walking home from an all-night movie, Morita and his mother kept the restaurant going for another three or four years. Needing a regular job to support his wife and a newly born child, Morita became a data processor in the early 1960s with the Department of Motor Vehicles and other state agencies, graduating to a graveyard shift job at Aerojet General. In due time, he was a department head at another aerospace firm, Lockheed, handling the liaison between the engineers and the programmers who were mapping out lunar eclipses for Polaris and Titan missile projects.

However, Morita suffered from occupational burnout and decided to quit his job and try show business. He began working as a stand-up comedian at small clubs in Sacramento and San Francisco, and took the stage name "Pat Morita", in part due to the presence of comedians including Pat Henry and Pat Cooper, and in part due to memories of the priest he had befriended as a boy. Morita struggled for many years in comedy, until fellow performer—ventriloquist Hank Garcia—told him to try his luck in Los Angeles. Sally Marr, Lenny Bruce's mother, acted as his agent and manager after he moved to Los Angeles, and booked him in the San Fernando Valley and at the Horn nightclub in Santa Monica. Morita sometimes worked as the opening act for singers Vic Damone and Connie Stevens and for his mentor, the comedian Redd Foxx. Morita used the nickname "The Hip Nip".

Television and movie career

Early work

Morita's first movie roles were as a henchman in Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967) and a similar role in The Shakiest Gun In The West (1968), starring Don Knotts. Morita had other notable recurring television roles on Sanford and Son (1974–1976) as Ah Chew, a good-natured friend of Lamont Sanford, and as a South Korean Army Captain Sam Pak on the sitcom M*A*S*H (1973, 1974). He was also cast as Rear Admiral Ryunosuke Kusaka in the war film Midway (1976).

Happy Days

Morita (with Ron Howard, left) played Arnold Takahashi on the TV series Happy Days in the 1975–76 season.
The handprints of Pat Morita in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World's Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park

Morita had a recurring role on Happy Days as Matsuo "Arnold" Takahashi (the owner of Arnold's Drive-In) during season three (1975–76). He stated that he obtained the moniker when he purchased Arnold's restaurant and people thought it was named after him, explaining that it was too costly to buy enough letter signs needed to rename it "Takahashi". He moonlighted as a martial arts instructor, teaching self-defense classes at the drive-in after hours. Morita also portrayed "Arnold" as a guest star during seasons four and six before returning as a recurring character for season ten and as a main character in the final eleventh season. He also portrayed the character of Arnold on Blansky's Beauties in 1977.

The Karate Kid film series

Morita gained particular fame playing wise karate teacher Mr. Miyagi, who taught young "Daniel-san" (Ralph Macchio) the art of Goju-ryu karate in The Karate Kid (1984). He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and a corresponding Golden Globe Award, reprising his role in three sequels: The Karate Kid Part II (1986), The Karate Kid Part III (1989) and The Next Karate Kid (1994), the last of which starred Hilary Swank instead of Macchio. Though he was never a student of karate, he learned all that was required for the films. Although he had been using the name Pat for years, producer Jerry Weintraub suggested that he be billed with his given name to sound "more ethnic." Morita put this advice into practice and was recognized as Noriyuki "Pat" Morita at the 57th Academy Awards ceremony. Weintraub initially did not want to cast Morita for the part of Mr. Miyagi, wanting a dramatic actor for the part and labeling Morita a comedic actor. Morita eventually tested five times before Weintraub himself offered him the role.

Television series

Morita was the star of two television series. In 1976, he starred as inventor Taro Takahashi in his own show, Mr. T and Tina, the first Asian-American sitcom on network TV. The sitcom was placed on Saturday nights by ABC and was quickly canceled after a month in the fall of 1976. He also starred in the ABC detective show Ohara (1987–1988); it was cancelled after two seasons due to poor ratings.

Later work

Morita in 2002

Morita went on to play Tommy Tanaka in the Kirk Douglas-starring television movie Amos, receiving his first Primetime Emmy Award nomination and second Golden Globe Award nomination for the role.

He wrote and starred in the World War II romance film Captive Hearts (1987). Morita hosted the educational home video series Britannica's Tales Around the World (1990–1991). He made an appearance on The Fresh Prince of Belair in the 1994 Season 5 episode “ Love Hurts”.Later in his career Morita starred on the Nickelodeon television series The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo (1996–1998), and had a recurring role on the sitcom The Hughleys (2000). He also made a guest appearance on a 1996 episode of Married... with Children. He went on to star in the short film Talk To Taka as a sushi chef who doles out advice to anyone who will hear him. Morita voiced the Emperor of China in Disney's 36th animated feature Mulan (1998) and reprised the role in Mulan II (2004), a direct-to-video sequel and Kingdom Hearts II.

Morita spoofed his role as "Mr. Miyagi" in a series of commercials for Colgate toothpaste; he portrayed the white-clad Wisdom Tooth, hailing Colgate as "The Wise Choice".

Morita had a cameo appearance in the 2001 Alien Ant Farm music video "Movies". Morita's appearance in the video spoofed his role in The Karate Kid. In 2002, he made a guest appearance on an episode of Spy TV. In 2003, he had a cameo on an episode of Yes, Dear, as an unnamed karate teacher, potentially being Miyagi. He would also reprise his role (to an extent) in the stop-motion animated series Robot Chicken in 2005.

Death

Morita died of kidney failure, following a urinary tract and gallbladder infection, on November 24, 2005, at his home in Las Vegas, Nevada, at the age of 73. Throughout his life, Morita had battled alcoholism. He was cremated at Palm Green Valley Mortuary and Cemetery in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Posthumous credits

Roles created prior to his passing were included in a few posthumous works. He voiced Master Udon in the 2006 SpongeBob SquarePants Season 4 episode "Karate Island" (the episode was dedicated to his memory). He had a role in the independent feature film Only the Brave (2006), about the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, where he plays the father of lead actor (and director) Lane Nishikawa (the film included two other Karate Kid stars, Yuji Okumoto and Tamlyn Tomita). He also had roles in Act Your Age (2011), Royal Kill (2009), and Remove All Obstacles (2010).

The fifth episode of the 2018-present series Cobra Kai (a web-streaming follow up to the original Karate Kid films) was dedicated to his memory. Mr. Miyagi is frequently referenced via archival footage from the first three films during the series, having died on November 15, 2011 (6 years after Morita's death).

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1964Jidôsha dorobôUnknown
1967Thoroughly Modern MillieAsian #2
1968The Shakiest Gun in the WestWong
1971Green AcresCharlie LeeSeason 6, Episode 25, "Hawaiian Honeymoon"
1972Evil Roy SladeTurhan
1972ColumboHouseboyEpisode: "Etude in Black"
1972Every Little Crook and NannyNonaka
1972Where Does It Hurt?Nishimoto
1972Cancel My ReservationYamamoto
1972The Odd CoupleMr. WingEpisode: "Partner's Investment"
1973‘’Hawaii Five-O ’’PhoebeSeason6, Episode 7, “Tricks Are Not Treats”
1973–1974M*A*S*HCaptain Sam PakSeason 2, Episode 13, "Deal Me Out".

Season 2, Episode 19, "The Chosen People".

1974CannonChuck YamagataEpisode: "The Avenger"
1974Punch and JodyTakahasi
1974–1976Sanford and SonAh Chew7 episodes
1975I Wonder Who's Killing Her Now?Heshy Yamamoto
1975Kung FuChanSeason Three Episode 58 Ambush
1975–1983Happy DaysMatsuo "Arnold" Takahashi26 episodes
1976Welcome Back, KotterMr. Takahashi
1976Mr. T and TinaMr. Takahashi
1976Farewell to ManzanarZenahiro
1976MidwayRear Admiral Ryūnosuke Kusaka
1977Blansky's BeautiesArnold13 episodes
1977–1987Love BoatUnknown
1978The Incredible Hulk (1978 TV series)FredEpisode: "Stop the Presses"
1980Hito Hata: Raise the BannerYamada
1980When Time Ran OutSam
1981Full Moon HighThe Silversmith
1982Savannah SmilesFather OHara
1982Jimmy the KidMaurice
1982Slapstick of Another KindChinese Ambassador Ah Fong
1983The Daltons on the LooseJolly JumperEnglish dub
1984The Karate KidMr. MiyagiNominated – Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
1984Night PatrolRape Victim
1985Alice in WonderlandThe Horse
1986The Karate Kid Part IIMr. Miyagi
1986Babes In ToylandThe Toymaster
1987Captive HeartsFukushima
1987–1988OharaLieutenant Ohara
1988Big Bird in Japan"Bamboo Princess" Play NarratorVoice
1989The Karate Kid Part IIIMr. MiyagiNominated – Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actor
1989The Karate Kid (animated television series)Mr. MiyagiOpening narration; 12 episodes
1989Collision CourseInspector Fujitsuka Natsuo
1990Hiroshima: Out of the AshesYoodo Toda
1991Strawberry RoadOld Man's Brother
1991Harry and the HendersonsKenji Sahuara1 episode
1991Do or DieMasakana "Kane" Kaneshiro
1991Lena's HolidayFred
1991Goodbye ParadiseBen
1992Honeymoon in VegasMahi Mahi
1992Miracle BeachGus
1992Auntie Lee's Meat PiesChief Koal
1992Great Conquest: The Romance of 3 KingdomsNarratorEnglish version
1992Genghis KhanEmperor Wang
1993American Ninja VMaster Tetsu
1993Even Cowgirls Get the BluesThe Chink
1993Living and Working in SpaceCap
1993Space RangersNazzer
1994The Next Karate KidKeisuke Miyagi
1994The Fresh Prince of Bel-AirMr. YoshiEpisode: "Love Hurts"
1995TimemasterIsaiah
1995The Misery BrothersJudge
1996Murder She WroteAkira HitakiEpisode: "Kendo Killing"
1996Bloodsport II: The Next KumiteDavid Leung
1996Boy Meets WorldWise ManEpisode: "I Was a Teenage Spy"
1996Spy HardBrian, Waiter In Restaurant
1996Reggie's PrayerPrincipal
1996Bloodsport IIIDavid Leung
1996Earth Minus ZeroDr. Mobius Jefferson
1996–1998The Mystery Files of Shelby WooMichael "Mike" Woo
1997Captured AliveSam Kashawahara
1997Beyond Barbed WireNarratorDocumentary
1998Family MattersMr. TanakaEpisode: "Grill of My Dreams"
1998The Outer LimitsDr. Michael ChenEpisode: "In the Zone"
1996Married... with ChildrenBank OwnerEpisode: "Turning Japanese"
1998Diagnosis MurderMartin GaylordEpisode: “Food Fight” Season 5 Episode 23
1998MulanThe Emperor of ChinaVoice
1998–1999Adventures with Kanga RoddyVarious CharactersRecurring
1999King CobraNick Hashimoto
1999InfernoJubal Early
1999Los GringosThe SamuraiShort film
2000BrotherGuy At The Poker TableUncredited
2000Talk to TakaTakaShort film
2000I'll Remember AprilAbe Tanaka
2000HammerlockUn Huong Lo
2000Diamonds in the Rough:
The Legacy of Japanese American Baseball
NarratorNBRP Documentary
2001Son of the BeachThe KingEpisode: B.J Blue Hawaii
2001Baywatch: HawaiiHideki TanakaRecurring role as the father of Kekoa Tanaka
2001House of LukKwang Luk
2001The Boys of Sunset RidgeCharlie Watanabe
2001The Center of the WorldTaxi Driver
2001Shadow FuryDr. Oh
2001HwasangoVice Principal Jang Hak-SaDubbed version
2002The Stone manProfessor Stevens
2002The Biggest FanRichard Limp
2003High Roller: The Stu Ungar StoryMr. Leo
2003Yes, DearKarate TeacherEpisode: "When Jimmy Met Greggy"
2004Miss Cast AwayHimselfCameo
2004Elvis Has Left the BuildingMan In Turban
2004Mulan IIThe Emperor of ChinaVoice
2004The Karate DogChin Li
2005Robot ChickenHimselfVoice;
Episode: "S&M Present"
2005Down and DerbyOno Yakimoto
2005American FusionLao Dong

Posthumous credits

YearTitleRoleNotes
2006SpymateKiroFilmed in 2003
2006Only the BraveSeigo Takata
2006The Number One GirlMr. Sakata
200618 Fingers of Death!Freeman Lee
2006SpongeBob SquarePantsMaster UdonVoice;
Episode: "Karate Island"
2006Kingdom Hearts IIThe Emperor of ChinaVoice
2009Royal KillExhibition ManagerLast acting role
2010Remove All ObstaclesThe GuruShort film
2010Interviews of Ninja's CreedIntervieweeDocumentary
2011Act Your AgeTom
2013Blunt MovieMr. Miyami
2014Rice GirlPeter Ong(final film role)
2015The Real MiyagiIntervieweeDocumentary
2018–PresentCobra KaiMr. MiyagiArchival footage
2019Pat Morita: Long Story ShortManuscript Writer & IntervieweeDocumentary
2021More Than Miyagi: The Pat Morita StoryArchival footage & IntervieweeDocumentary
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 25 Nov 2021. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.