In July 1930, Aizome dropped out of high school to join the
Shochiku Kagekidan
musical theatre revue. Her first role was that of a pirate in a play titled
merry-go-round. She appeared on stage until she was transferred to the
Shochiku Kamata film division and made her screen debut in
Mikio Naruse's 1932 film
Moth-eaten Spring, now considered
lost. Released on June 28, 1934, the film was a major success and established Aizome as a leading star. Bolstered by this success, Aizome and several other actors left Shochiku in September 1934 to form their own production company, Kyōdō Eiga, with distribution handled by
Nikkatsu. After Kyōdō Eiga proved unsustainable and dissolved in mid-1935, Aizome joined the Tokyo Hassei studio, Following a lawsuit by the studio, a judge ordered Aizome to pay 10,000 yen in damages. Despite the dispute, Shinkō Kinema reinstated her by the end of the year, and in 1940 alone she appeared in 14 films. In 1947, she played the sister of
Setsuko Hara's character in
A Ball at the Anjo House. She retired from acting in 1955, but in 1965 made one more film appearance in
Yoji Yamada's
Kiri no Hata. In 1985, Aizome was interviewed along with her
Our Neighbor, Miss Yae co-star
Sanae Takasugi. She was last heard from in 2002, when she provided source material for a book on Japanese modernist film. == Personal life ==