Famous people ending with omi - FMSPPL.com
Yasutaka Shiomi
Yasutaka Shiomi is a professional Japanese baseball player. He plays outfielder for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows.
Iwakura Tomomi
Iwakura Tomomi was a Japanese statesman during the Bakumatsu and Meiji period. He was adopted by the influential Iwakura family, and became perhaps the single most influential leader of the nobility during Japan's transition from feudalism to modernity. By 1858 he was an advisor to the Emperor, but was exiled from the royal court from 1862 to 1867 for his moderation. After release he became the liaison between the court and the anti-Tokugawa movement. He played a central role in the new Meiji government after 1868. He successfully opposed aggressive policies in Korea in the crisis of 1873, and was nearly assassinated by his enemies. He led the 50-member Iwakura Mission for 18 months in Europe and America, studying modern institutions, technology, and diplomacy. The Mission promoted many the key reforms that quickly modernized Japan. He promoted a strong imperial system along Western lines, and played a central role in creating financial institutions for the new nation. A 500 Yen banknote issued by the Bank of Japan carried his portrait.
Atsushi Nomi
Atsushi Nomi is Japanese professional baseball pitcher for the Orix Buffaloes of the Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). He has played in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) for the Hanshin Tigers.
Yurie Ōmi
Yurie Omi is a Japanese female announcer, television reporter, television personality, and news anchor for NHK. She is the co-host of NHK's morning talk show Asaichi. She is famous for being the co-host of NHK's geological television series Bura Tamori from April 2016 until March 2018.
Shigeru Omi
Shigeru Omi is the President of the Japan Community Health Care Organization. He previously served as Regional Director of the Western Pacific Regional Office for the World Health Organization. He has been a member of the World Health Organization Executive Board since 2013.
Hiromi
Hiromi is a Japanese comedian, television presenter, radio personality, actor, businessman, and triathlete. He is the president of Be Company. His full name is Hiromi Kozono .
Sansei Shiomi
Sansei Shiomi is a Japanese actor.
Etsuko Shihomi
Etsuko Shihomi , now known by her married name Etsuko Nagabuchi , is a Japanese actress who appeared in several Japanese martial arts films and samurai film and TV productions of the 1970s and 1980s.
Kinue Hitomi
Kinue Hitomi was a Japanese track and field athlete. She was the world record holder in several events in the 1920s – 1930s and was the first Japanese woman to win an Olympic medal. She was also the first woman to represent Japan at the Olympics.
María Cristina De Giacomi
María Cristina De Giacomi, professionally known as Cris Morena, is an Argentine Award-winning television producer, actress, television presenter, composer, musician, songwriter, writer, former fashion model and CEO of Cris Morena Group. She is one of the most successful producers in the country and is the creator of Argentina's most successful youth-oriented shows such as Jugate Conmigo, Chiquititas, Rebelde Way, Floricienta, Alma Pirata, and Casi Ángeles. She was a producer at Telefe from 1991 to 2001, then created the Cris Morena Group as an independent production company, with Rebelde Way (2002) as its first production. Morena is the mother of actress Romina Yan and of producer and director Tomás Yankelevich.
Cocomi
Cocomi Kimura , known professionally as Cocomi, is a Japanese model and flutist.
Omi
Omar Samuel Pasley, better known by his stage name OMI, is a Jamaican singer. He is best known for "Cheerleader", a worldwide hit for him in a remixed version by German DJ Felix Jaehn. He is currently signed to Ultra Music, a part of Sony Music, and released his debut album Me 4 U on 16 October 2015.
Max Domi
Maxwell Johannes Domi is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the Columbus Blue Jackets of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was selected by the Phoenix Coyotes in the first round, 12th overall, of the 2013 NHL Entry Draft.
Takanori Gomi
Takanori Gomi is a Japanese professional mixed martial artist who gained international fame in Pride Fighting Championships. Later in his career, Gomi also competed in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Gomi is the only Pride FC Lightweight Champion in the organization's history. He became the Lightweight Grand Prix Winner at Pride Shockwave 2005, thus winning every lightweight accolade put forth by Pride FC. Gomi also held a record twelve-fight winning streak in Shooto, where he was a former Shooto Lightweight Champion, as well as a four-time All-Japan Combat Wrestling Champion.
Hitomi
Hitomi Furuya , known professionally as Hitomi , is a Japanese singer-songwriter. She began her career as teen model before making her singing debuting under the helm of Tetsuya Komuro in 1994, who produced Hitomi's earliest work in pop music. Hitomi strove for artistry over the course of her career, penning "forward-looking" lyrics and becoming known for her "unusual" fashion sense that accompanied a "supermodel allure". Her signature songs include "Candy Girl", "Love 2000" and "Samurai Drive".
Adesua Etomi
Adesua Etomi-Wellington, also known as Adesua Etomi, is a Nigerian actress. In 2014, she starred in her first feature film Knocking On Heaven's Door. She won the Best Actress in a Drama award at the 2016 Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards for her role in the 2015 romantic drama film Falling.
Boku no Lyric no Bōyomi
Tanaka is a Japanese rapper, vocalist and lyricist. He was known by the moniker Boku no Lyric no Bōyomi from 2014 to 2018. In 2021, Tanaka formed a band with Ichika Nito and Sasanomaly called Dios.
Tatsuya Nōmi
Tatsuya Nōmi was a Japanese actor associated with Ohta Production. He is best known for playing Tengensei Daigo/ShishiRanger in Gosei Sentai Dairanger.
Tie Domi
Tahir "Tie" Domi is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player. Known as a fighter, he played for the Toronto Maple Leafs, New York Rangers and Winnipeg Jets over a 16-year NHL career. He has more penalty minutes than any other player in Maple Leafs history and is third overall in penalty minutes in NHL history. He is also the player in NHL history with most fighting majors: 333.
Akira Gomi
Akira Gomi is a Japanese photographer whose work focuses on beauty across racial lines. His work is in the style of Laurie Toby Edison.
Hajime Satomi
Hajime Satomi is a Japanese business magnate. Satomi is known as the founder of Sammy Corporation, which merged with the Japan-based video game and arcade game producer Sega to form the holding company Sega Sammy Holdings.
Klaus Nomi
Klaus Sperber, known professionally as Klaus Nomi, was a German countertenor noted for his wide vocal range and an unusual, otherworldly stage persona.
Kōtarō Satomi
Kōtarō Satomi is a Japanese actor from the city of Fujinomiya, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. He appears in both contemporary roles and in the historical dramas known as jidaigeki.
Shin Nakagomi
Shin Nakagomi is a retired Japanese professional baseball player and the former manager of Brother Elephants.
Toshinori Omi
Toshinori Omi is a Japanese actor.
Li Kotomi
Li Qinfeng, known by her pen name Li Kotomi (りことみ), is a Taiwanese-born fiction writer, translator and essayist, who writes in Mandarin and Japanese. Her Japanese novel Hitorimai received the 60th Gunzo New Writers' Award for Excellence in 2017. In 2021, her latest novel won the 165th Akutagawa Prize.
Nana Kinomi
Nana Kinomi , born July 11, 1946 in Sumida, Tokyo, Japan, is a Japanese actress and singer.
Ayumi Yasutomi
Ayumi Yasutomi is a Japanese economist and politician. She is a professor at the Institute of Advanced Studies on Asia at the University of Tokyo. Yasutomi came out as a transgender woman in 2014.
Kana Satomi
Kana Satomi is a Japanese women's professional shogi player ranked 6-dan. She is the current holder of the Women's Meijin and Ōi titles as well as the Kurashiki Tōka Cup and Seirei titles, thus making her a 4-crown title holder .
Ujitoshi Konomi
Ujitoshi Konomi was a Japanese sport shooter who competed in the 1956 Summer Olympics.