List of Famous people named Toshio
Toshio Mashima
Toshio Mashima was a Japanese composer born in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan.
Toshio Matsumoto
Toshio Matsumoto was a Japanese film director and video artist.
Toshio Suzuki
Toshio Suzuki is a film producer of anime and a long-time colleague of Hayao Miyazaki, as well as the former president of Studio Ghibli. Suzuki is renowned as one of Japan's most successful producers after the enormous box office success of many Ghibli films.
Toshio Nakanishi
Toshio Nakanishi , also known by the pseudonyms Tycoon To$h or Typhoom Tosh, was a Japanese musician and graphic designer who was best known as the founding member of new wave band Plastics in 1976. He was initially a part of the technopop fever in Japan and later acted as a pioneer of the Japanese hip hop scene with his band Major Force.
Toshio Yuasa
Toshio Yuasa was Grand Steward of the Imperial Household Agency (2001–2005). He was a graduate of the University of Tokyo.
Toshio Yamada
Toshio Yamada is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party, a member of the House of Councillors in the Diet.
Toshio Kagami
Toshio Kagami is the chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of The Oriental Land Company, and the representative director, chairman and CEO of the Tokyo Disney Resort in Japan.
Toshio Ikeda
Toshio Ikeda was a Japanese engineer. He was the former managing director of Fujitsu and was the pioneer of domestic computer production in Japan.
Toshio Maeda
Toshio Maeda is an erotic manga artist who was prolific in the 1980s and '90s. Several of Maeda's works have been used as a basis for Original video animations (OVA) including La Blue Girl, Adventure Kid, Demon Beast Invasion, Demon Warrior Koji and his most notorious work, Urotsukidōji. An interviewer commented that Urotsukidōji "firmly placed him in the history books—in Japan and abroad—as the pioneer of the genre known as hentai, or "perverted".
Toshio Kurosawa
Toshio Kurosawa was a Japanese baseball outfielder who played eight seasons in the Japanese Baseball League from 1936 to 1947. His career was cut short due to typhoid fever, from which he died at age 33. Kurosawa's number 4 was retired by his last club, the Yomiuri Giants, the same year, and was among the first to be retired in all of Japanese baseball.