The following year after Akimoto enrolled into Miyoshi's Drama Workshop
Gikyoku Kenkyū she published her first play
Keijin (The Light Dust) in the journal
Gekisaku in 1946. 1949 was when her second play,
Mourning Clothes (Reifuku), was published, and when her career started to take off working with important directors such as
Koreya Senda and
Yukio Ninagawa who staged her plays. There was a time in her career where she felt under appreciated as a playwright. So she stopped writing plays for a while and chose to become a scriptwriter for radio and television shows instead, but did not make what she hoped to get out of it. Regardless, her play
Kaision of Priest of Hitachi won over
Hanada Kiyoteru, a well-known critic in 1967 at the
Engeki Theatre and since then her plays have been performed. In Akimoto's work death reoccurs and the various Japanese customs developed to conquer it. Topics included mourning which can be found in (
Mourning Clothes, 1949), immortality in (
The Life of Muraoka Iheji, 1960), and
shinkō shūkyō, or "new religions" in (
Thoughts on our Lady of Scabs, 1968). Her 1964 work,
Kaison the Priest of Hitachi, deals with a group of boys whose parents die in the
1945 firebombing of Tokyo, this play is considered to be a landmark in Japanese drama. Despite her serious and often tragic topics, one of Akimoto's strengths lies in injecting comic elements into her plays. Her collected works were published in five volumes in 2002, a year after her death. ==Namesake awards ==