Personal life Born in
Yokohama in 1973, Okada attended Nagatadai Elementary and Nagata Secondary School there. In 1992, he started attending
Keio University under the Faculty of Business and Commerce. Being a fan of
Jim Jarmusch and
Wim Wenders, Okada aspired to be a movie director when he was in middle school, which led him to join a theater club in Keio University. During this process, he gained experience in writing scenarios and scripts, which piqued his interest in stage directing as well. In his first year at Keio, he learned of
Hideki Noda through Noda's troupe, , who had their final performance in 1992. Noda's modern and "unexpected" style influenced Okada's earlier works. The name is a play on the English word "selfish," and is always written with a
lowercase c. After the
2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, chelfitsch relocated from
Yokohama to
Kumamoto to avoid the threats of the earthquake and nuclear contamination. He received his first award, Yokohama Cultural Award / Yokohama Award for Art and Cultural Encouragement in 2005. In the same year,
Five Days in March, a play that juxtaposes a couple spending five days in a
love hotel against the beginning of the
Iraq War, won the 49th
Kishida Prize for Drama. was a finalist at the 2005 Toyota Choreography Awards. In 2006, Okada participated as the representative for Japan in the Stuecke '06/International Literature Project in
Mülheim, Germany during the
2006 FIFA World Cup. In December 2006, was presented at the
New National Theatre Tokyo. In contrast to his international acclaim,
Enjoy was not well received by Japanese theater critics, who voted the play as the year's worst play. Between 2006 and 2007, he was appointed the director of the Performing Arts Festival "Summit" at the Komaba Agora Theater, where one of his role models,
Oriza Hirata served as the artistic director. His book, , was published in February 2007 and consisted of two novels. One is a reworking of his play
Five Days in March; the other, an earlier piece, is called . The book received the 2008
Ōe Kenzaburō Prize. In 2015, Okada was nominated for the 28th
Mishima Yukio Prize for his novel adaptation of his play, , which was first staged at the Kanagawa Arts Theatre on April 20, 2012. Besides directing his own plays, he has also directed
Samuel Beckett's
Cascando for the Tokyo International Arts Festival and Beckett Centennial Memorial Festival, and
Kōbō Abe's
Friends at the Setagaya Public Theater. Since 2012, he has been a judge for
Kishida Prize for Drama. He also leads workshop programs with theater students in Japanese universities during his free time. ==Style==