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Waki Yamato

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Waki Yamato
Born木野 和紀[1]
(1948-03-13) March 13, 1948 (age 76)
Sapporo, Japan
NationalityJapan
Area(s)Manga artist
Notable works
Awards1st Kodansha Manga Award for shōjo manga - Haikara-san ga Tōru

Waki Yamato (Japanese: 大和 和紀, Hepburn: Yamato Waki, born March 13, 1948)[1] is a Japanese manga artist. She debuted in 1966 with the short story Dorobō Tenshi.[1][2][3]

Since her debut, Yamato steadily created and published a variety of works in the genre of shōjo manga.[1] Among her early time works, Mon Cherie CoCo, 1971, was adapted into an anime television series, and her work, Haikara-san ga Tōru, 1975 to 1977, was very successful, winning the 1st Kodansha Manga Award for shōjo manga in 1977.[3][4] It was also made into a musical for the Takarazuka Revue, an anime series (which reached an international audience through TV broadcasts in Italy and France), and a live-action film. Through these early works, she established her position as one of the most popular manga artists.

Works

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After the success of Haikara-san ga Tōru, she continued to create many manga, including the comedy Aramis '78 (series), Yokohama Monogatari (The Story of Yokohama), and N. Y. Komachi (The Belle of New York). The latter two were historical manga, set during the Meiji period.

The heroines of these stories were active girls who traveled overseas. Yamato's early work Reidii Mitsuko (Lady Mitsuko), 1976, was based on the true story of Mitsuko Aoyama, who was the mother of Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi.

Similarly, in Yokohama Monogatari, Uno visits California, marries her Japanese lover there and returns to Yokohama, while Mariko visits London to meet her Japanese husband. In N. Y. Komachi tomboy Shino travels to New York and becomes a camerawoman. At the end she settles in America with her husband Danny.

Asaki Yume Mishi

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Yamato's major work is Asaki Yume Mishi. Yamato spent 13 years (1980–93) completing this famous long work, based on Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji. Yamato studied the historical details of the Heian period. But she made radical changes to the characters and plot, to fit contemporary mores. Yet her work remains one of the best visualizations of the Heian era.

List of works

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  • Dorobou Tenshi, (どろぼう天使, Thief Angel) debut short work, 1966
  • Mon Cheri CoCo, (モンシェリCoCo) 1971
    • Adapted into an anime television series in 1972
  • Redii Mitsuko, (レディーミツコ, Lady Mitsuko[5]). 1975–1976
  • Haikara-san ga Tōru, (はいからさんが通る, "The Modern Girl Passes By") 1975–1977
    • Adapted into an anime television series in 1978-1979 and a live-action movie in 1987
  • Killa, (Killa) 1977–1978
  • Ten no Hate, Chi no Kagiri, (天の果て地の限り) 1978
  • Aramis ’78, (アラミス’78) 1978–1984
  • Kigen 2600 nen no Playball, (紀元2600年のプレイボール) 1979–1980
  • Gekkou-ju, (月光樹, Moonlight Shining Tree) 1980
  • Yokohama Monogatari, (ヨコハマ物語, The Story of Yokohama) 1981–1983
  • N. Y. Komachi, (NY小町, The Belle of New York) 1985–1988
  • Asaki Yume Mishi, (あさきゆめみし, Asakiyunemishi, based on Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji) 1980–1993
  • Hi-heel Cop, (ハイヒールCOP) 1989–1994
  • Tenshi no Kajitsu, (天使の果実, Fruit of the Angel, based on novel by Shizuka Ijuuin) 1993–1994
  • Niji no Natascha, (虹のナターシャ, Natascha of Rainbow, based on novel by Mariko Hayashi) 1995–1997
  • Nishimuku Samurai, (にしむく士, Samurai facing to the West) 1997
  • Baby-sitter Gin!, (ベビーシッター・ギン!) 1997
  • Kurenai Niwofu, (紅匂ふ)

Reception

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Yamato's story manga Haikara-san ga Tōru series had been sold over 10 million copies. Also, the total sales number of her representative work Asaki YUmemishi had been over 12 million, as of 1997.[1]

Notes and references

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  1. ^ a b c d e Nichigai Associates Editorial Department (1997), p.462.
  2. ^ According to 「BOOK著者紹介情報」, which can be confirmed in this Amazon page etc.
  3. ^ a b 「あさきゆめみし PerfectBook」 p.181 Special Interview
  4. ^ Joel Hahn. "Kodansha Manga Awards". Comic Book Awards Almanac. Archived from the original on August 16, 2007. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
  5. ^ The story of Japanese woman, Mitsuko Aoyama, who is the mother of Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi
  • Waki Yamato manga Archived 2016-03-08 at the Wayback Machine at Media Arts Database (in Japanese)
  • List of Works Archived 2010-12-01 at the Wayback Machine fan site, based on 「大和和紀自選集5」(Author's Selected Works, Vol.5) Kodansha, (Japanese)
  • List of Works Archived 2007-03-02 at the Wayback Machine fan site, based on 「大和和紀自選集5」(Author's Selected Works, Vol.5) Kodansha, (Japanese)
  • Yamato Waki Haikara-san ga Tooru Kodansha (Japanese comic)
  • Yamato Waki Lady Mitsuko Kodansha (Japanese comic)
  • Yamato Waki Yokohama Monogatari 8 volumes, Kodansha (Japanese comic)
  • Yamato Waki N. Y. Komachi 8 volumes, Kodansha (Japanese comic)
  • Yamato Waki Asaki Yume Mishi 13 volumes, Kodansha (Japanese comic)

Bibliography

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  • Nichigai Associates Editorial Department (April 21, 1997), Dictionary of Manga and Anime artists. Nichigai Associates Co., Ltd. ISBN 4-8169-1423-4
  • 「あさきゆめみし PerfectBook」宝島社 (Takarajima co.ltd.), 2003/2007 ISBN 978-4-7966-3603-2