Born into a renowned
Tokyo kabuki acting family (known as Omodakaya or Kagawa family), Takahiko is the fourth kabuki actor to assume the prestigious name Ichikawa Ennosuke, being known as Ichikawa Ennosuke IV (四代目 市川猿之助). His great-great-grandfather, Ichikawa Danshirō II (二代目 市川段四郎) was a prominent Japanese kabuki actor and dancer who was the founder of the Omodakaya acting house and also the first kabuki actor from this acting house to bear the name Ichikawa Ennosuke (usually given to the head of the Omodakaya house), being known as Ichikawa Ennosuke I (初代 市川猿之助). His great-grandfather, Ichikawa En'ō I (初代 市川猿翁) was one of the most important Kabuki actors and dancers of the
Showa era, being responsible for creating numerous dance-dramas for the Kabuki theater, in addition to being the founder of Shunjūza, a well-known study group focused on Kabuki theater. He was the second Kabuki actor to bear the name Ichikawa Ennosuke, being known for most of his career as Ichikawa Ennosuke II (二代目 市川猿之助). His great-great-uncle, Ichikawa Chūsha VIII (八代目 市川中車) was a
tachiyaku actor whose career spanned from the end of the
Meiji era to the middle of the Showa era and who, unlike the rest of his family, was a member of the Tachibanaya acting house and not the Omodokaya acting house. His grandfather, Ichikawa Danshirō III (三代目 市川段四郎) was an actor and Kabuki dancer known for his dancing skills, although he did not achieve the same level of fame as his father (Ennosuke II/En'ō I) or grandson (Ennosuke III/En'ō II). His father, Ichikawa Danshirō IV (四代目 市川段四郎) was a popular and outstanding
tachiyaku and
katakiyaku actor who was known for playing
aragoto roles, being considered one of the leading aragotoshi of the late Showa and early Heisei eras and was the leading
aragotoshi of the Omodakaya acting house until his retirement in 2015. His uncle,
Ichikawa Ennosuke III (三代目 市川猿之助) or
Ichikawa En'ō II (二代目 市川猿翁), was one of the most celebrated and revolutionary Kabuki actors and dancers of the Showa era and the early
Heisei era, as he was the creator of a new genre of Kabuki theater, known as Super Kabuki, in addition to being famous for perfecting several techniques that had been sidelined in more recent eras of Kabuki theater, known as
keren and for having flown over the audience more than any other Kabuki actor (which earned him the nickname "The King of Chunori"). His cousin (son of the late
Ichikawa En'ō II),
Ichikawa Chūsha IX (九代目 市川中車) is a popular Kabuki,
film and
television actor who is known for his prolific career in both Kabuki theater and in film and television, as well as being the ninth Kabuki actor of the Omodakaya house to be the bearer of the prestigious name Ichikawa Chūsha. His nephew (Chūsha IX's son), Ichikawa Danko V (五代目 市川團子) is a rising kabuki star who is the heir to the Omodakaya acting house and the future head of the Omodakaya house. It is said that he will become the head of the Omodakaya acting house in the future and take one of these four possible names: • Ichikawa En'ō III (三代目 市川猿翁), in honor of his great-great-grandfather Ichikawa En'ō I (初代 市川猿翁) and his grandfather
Ichikawa En'ō II (二代目 市川猿翁). • Ichikawa Danshirō V (五代目 市川談四郎), in honor of his great-uncle, Ichikawa Danshirō IV (四代目 市川段四郎). • Ichikawa Ennosuke V (五代目 市川猿之助), the most prestigious name in his family (and one of the most prestigious in Kabuki theater) in honor of his grandfather,
Ichikawa Ennosuke III (三代目 市川猿之助)/
Ichikawa En'ō II (二代目 市川猿翁) and his uncle, Ichikawa Ennosuke IV. • Ichikawa Chūsha X (十代目 市川中車), in honor of his father, Ichikawa Chusha IX (九代目 市川中車). == Filmography ==