ACTOR

Hiroki Takahashi

1974 - Today

Photo of Hiroki Takahashi

Icon of person Hiroki Takahashi

Hiroki Takahashi (高橋 広樹, Takahashi Hiroki) is a Japanese actor, voice actor and singer. His major roles include Eiji Kikumaru in The Prince of Tennis, Tobias in Pokémon, Kenji Harima in School Rumble, Hisoka in Hunter × Hunter (1999), Katsuya Jonouchi in Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, and Takato Saijō in Dakaichi. On video games, he voiced Ryu in the Street Fighter series. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroki Takahashi is the 9,149th most popular actor (down from 9,088th in 2024), the 2,373rd most popular biography from Japan (down from 1,972nd in 2019) and the 211th most popular Japanese Actor.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hiroki Takahashi by language

Loading...

Among ACTORS

Among actors, Hiroki Takahashi ranks 9,149 out of 13,578Before him are J. Farrell MacDonald, Zelda Williams, Merrin Dungey, Violett Beane, Alyssa Diaz, and Yui Ishikawa. After him are Fahadh Faasil, Sheila Kelley, Hera Hilmar, Vincent Zhao, Carlos Valdes, and Swann Arlaud.

Most Popular Actors in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Hiroki Takahashi ranks 454Before him are Craig Harrison, Pietro Piller Cottrer, Dash Mihok, Tomáš Řepka, Kenichi Uemura, and Diego Klimowicz. After him are Andradina, Julian Knowle, Philippe Clement, Zhang Jin, Claudio Husaín, and Dayanara Torres.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroki Takahashi ranks 2,368 out of 6,245Before him are Yui Ishikawa (1989). After him are Kenshi Yonezu (1991), Tatsuro Hagihara (1982), Naoko Matsui (1961), Kinoko Nasu (1973), Mika Kanai (1964), Kyosuke Yoshikawa (1978), Masaki Tanaka (1991), Tetsuya Asano (1967), Manabu Kubota (1981), Oribe Niikawa (1988), and Joi Ito (1966).

Among ACTORS In Japan

Among actors born in Japan, Hiroki Takahashi ranks 208Before him are Yūki Kaji (1985), Jun'ichi Kanemaru (1963), and Yui Ishikawa (1989). After him are Naoko Matsui (1961), Mika Kanai (1964), Kishō Taniyama (1975), Rie Tanaka (1979), Kae Araki (1966), Nobuhiko Okamoto (1986), Tsukasa Aoi (1990), Saori Hayami (1991), and Yukie Nakama (1979).