Osomatsu-kun
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Osomatsu-kun | |
|---|---|
| おそ松くん (Osomatsu-kun) |
|
| Demographic | Shonen |
| Genre | Comedy |
| Manga | |
| Author | Fujio Akatsuka |
| Publisher | Shogakukan/Kodansha/AkeBono Comics |
| Serialized in | Shōnen Sunday/Shonen King/Various |
| Original run | 1962 – 1969 |
| Volumes | 34 |
| TV anime | |
| Director | Akira Shigino |
| Studio | Studio Zero |
| Network | MBS |
| Original run | 1966 – 1967 |
| Episodes | 60 |
| TV anime | |
| Director | Akira Shigino |
| Studio | Studio Pierrot |
| Network | Animax, Fuji TV |
| Original run | 1988 – 1989 |
| Episodes | 88 |
| Movie | |
Osomatsu-kun (おそ松くん?) is a manga series by Fujio Akatsuka which ran in Shōnen Sunday from 1962 to 1969. It has been adapted into two different anime series of the same name, the first in 1966, produced by Studio Zero, and the second in 1988, produced by Pierrot and aired across Japan on Fuji Television and the anime satellite television network, Animax.
This series helped establish Akatsuka's reputation as a gag comic artist, long before his other popular manga, Tensai Bakabon. Osomatsu-kun has appeared in numerous special issues of Shōnen Sunday. Akatsuka has also included several manga adaptations of routines from Charlie Chaplin movies in the series.
In 1964, Akatsuka won the 10th Shogakukan Manga Award for Osomatsu-kun.[1]
Contents |
- Osomatsu: Midori Katō
- Choromatsu: Keiko Yamamoto
- Ichimatsu/Todomatsu: Haruko Kitahama
- Jūshimatsu: Mie Azuma
- Karamatsu: Fuyumi Shiraishi
- Iyami: Kyōji Kobayashi
- Chibita: Kazue Tagami→Yōko Mizugaki
- Hatabō: Takako Sasuga
- Dekapan: Setsuo Wakui
- Osomatsu: You Inoue
- Choromatsu: Rica Matsumoto
- Todomatsu: Megumi Hayashibara
- Karamatsu/Hatabō: Mari Mashiba
- Jūshimatsu/Totoko: Naoko Matsui
- Ichimatsu/Kaasan: Mari Yokoo
- Iyami: Kaneta Kimotsuki
- Chibita: Mayumi Tanaka
- Dekapan: Tōru Ōhira
- Dayōn/Kemunbasu: Takuzō Kamiyama
- Tōsan/Beshi: Tetsuo Mizutori (Kenichi Ogata episodes 85-88))
- Omawari-san/Nyarome/Rerere no Ojisan: Shigeru Chiba
- ^ 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- Studio Pierrot official site (Japanese)
- Animax official site
- Pachinko Slots screenshots (Japanese)