Le Grand Maison Tokyo ((better)) May 2026

Kimura, Japan’s perennial heartthrob, plays Obana as a man who is arrogant yet vulnerable, obsessive yet generous. He’s not always likable—and that’s the point. His redemption feels earned, not scripted. The Real-World “Le Grand Maison” Experience In 2020–2021, a pop-up restaurant actually called Le Grand Maison Tokyo opened in Tokyo’s Azabudai Hills (and later in Paris). Chef Kei Kobayashi (a real three-Michelin-star chef) supervised the menu.

As of 2025, reservations vanish within 30 seconds of release. Scalpers resell seats for double. If you’re not in Japan with a local phone number and perfect timing, you’ll be watching from YouTube food vlogs. le grand maison tokyo

There is no mustache-twirling antagonist. Conflicts arise from ego, timing, budget, and—most interestingly—the rigid scoring system of Michelin inspectors. The show respects that getting a star isn’t about luck; it’s about consistency, innovation, and an almost inhuman attention to detail. Kimura, Japan’s perennial heartthrob, plays Obana as a