Talk:A Little Snow Fairy Sugar

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Contents

[edit] Minor Character Names

If anybody could fill in Basil's friend's name, that'd be just great! (Also, I wanted Phil's friends' names and Saga's grandmother and possibly the coffee shop owner and piano shop owners on the cast section too-- but couldn't remember any of their names!)--195.92.168.173 01:23, 2 August 2005 (UTC)

Never mind, I got most of them! The name of the piano shop manager needs to be added, and it'd be nice to have the bear pianist there too!--195.92.168.170 02:01, 2 August 2005 (UTC)
I've totally forgotten the name of the bear pianist. He's a pretty important character to the series and should be added. - Squilibob 10:00, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
I just finished watching the series last night. I must say that it left me with a tear in my eye. The bear pianist character is only called that in as much of the play as we see, he is played by Vincent (no last name given that I caught). The manager of the piano shop is only called that as far as I saw, but there is a scene in the last episode that may have his name, I'll double check. The veternarian's name was Barbara. Also, Sugar's mother perhaps should be mentioned, she never appears as a character or is even named, but she does supply the motivation for Sugar, and it is implied that she was the fairy that Saga saw several years before. Cheryl perhaps should also be mentioned, although she is hardly a major character. (BTW, I'd like to know what your basis is for the idea that Regina knows about the fairies.) I also think that Greta's entry should be reworked a bit; it's made pretty clear that her rivalry with Saga is mostly an act in her own mind- Saga responds when Greta angers her, but does not think of Greta as a rival, and Greta actually admires Saga. Because she likes Saga so much, she really just wants Saga's approval and the rivalry is her way of obtaining it. Greta is one of the characters we see 4 years later, and it appears that she and Saga are now good friends although she still plays up the old rivalry as a joke (although Kanon takes her up on the challenge!). CFLeon 01:18, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
Checked it and the Master isn't called by name and he doesn't speak in the last episode, so there's no voice credit. In previous episodes he's just called 'Master' by Paul or Saga and even when he speaks, he's just credited as 'Master'. CFLeon 21:49, 21 April 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Merge

Support

  1. Squilibob 10:00, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
  2. Very Strongly Support --nihon 07:44, 13 January 2006 (UTC)

Oppose

Neutral

MERGED --nihon 00:58, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Rothenburg ob der Tauber

The Japanese articles say that this Bavarian town inspired the settings for this series...Ranma9617 00:17, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Contents from other article

These are the contents from the other article that now redirects here. We will need to include anything that isn't already in this article.

"A Tiny Snow Fairy Sugar", also known as "Sugar the Little Snow Fairy" or "A Little Snow Fairy Sugar" (in the USA) or “Chicchana Yukitsukai Sugar” (in its native Japan) is an animated cartoon series directed by Shinichiro Kimura. The series follows the adventures of a girl called Saga who has the ability to see season fairies, these fairies create and control the weather using special musical instruments. Each fairy plays a different instrument and controls a different aspect of the weather, from Sunlight to snow to clouds and rain. Sugar, an apprentice Snow Fairy, and her friends Salt and Pepper, all want to become full-fledged Season Fairies. The only way to achieve this is to search for and find the "Sparkle" or "Glitter" (In the Japanese versions, the season fairies search for "Kirameki" which can mean sparkle or shine) that will make their magical seeds grow into flowers. None of the apprentice fairies are told what a sparkle is, only that they must find one.

There were a total of 24 episodes aired on TV, and two special episodes available on DVD. nihon 00:57, 18 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Basil and Cinnamon, Ginger and Turmeric

Errrrrm, is the article about the anime or manga? Because in the manga it actually says that Basil and Cinnamon found their kirameki (twinkle in English version) and their kirameki were also told in the ending, and it was never told that they weren't as good as Sugar, Pepper, and Salt in finding the kirameki. And btw, in the manga it was NEVER, EVER said that Ginger has a crush on Turmeric, because they never even met each other. I just want to ask wether it is true or not before I edit the article.

According to CFLeon, there is an episode which shows the characters 4 years in the future. Is this the anime, or is there a side story in the manga series?

Please sign your posts with 4 tildes (~). I haven't seem much of the manga, so I can't say what it has, but the '4 years after' episode is the 2 episode special mentioned above. CFLeon 08:25, 4 October 2006 (UTC)