Naoki Urasawa
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Naoki Urasawa (浦沢直樹 Urasawa Naoki) is a mangaka born on January 2, 1960 in Fuchu, Tokyo, Japan. He graduated from Meisei University with a degree in economics. He made his professional manga debut with Beta!! in 1984. Three of his series have been adapted into anime: Yawara! A Fashionable Judo Girl, Master Keaton, and Monster.
[edit] Works
- Beta!!: He made his professional debut in 1984 with Beta!!, a gag one-shot.
- Yawara! A Fashionable Judo Girl was Urasawa's first official work and real breakthrough; Published from 1986 to 1993 (serialized in Big Comic Spirits, 1987-93), this manga has 29 volumes in total. This judo romance comedy is about a female judo champion who wants to have fun just like other girls, but her strict grandfather wants her to triumph in tournaments. Yawara! won the 35th Shogakukan Manga Award in 1990.
- Pineapple ARMY: Published by Shogakukan from 1986 to 1988, this is a side-work produced alongside Yawara!. Pinneaple ARMY is composed of 10 volumes in total. The story was written by Kazuya Kudou and the artwork is Urasawa's. The plot is about an ex-military man who trains others to defend themselves on the condition that he never gets involved... but eventually he always does.
- Dancing Policeman: Published by Shogakukan in 1987. This manga is only one volume.
- Master Keaton: Just after Pinneaple ARMY and while writing Yawara!, Urasawa began one of his most famous works, Master Keaton. Master Keaton was published from 1988 to 1994 (serialized in Big Comic Original, 1988-94), and consists of 18 volumes in total. Hokusei Katsushika created the story line behind Master Keaton, while Urasawa did the art. The story revolves around a boy born to an English woman of noble birth and a Japanese zoologist. After his parents' divorce at the age of 5, Keaton moves to England with his mother. As an adult, he studies archeology at Oxford University, where he meets his future wife with whom he has a daughter (Yuriko). However, they too divorce after five years. Meanwhile, Keaton works as an operative/detective for Lloyds of London where he is known for his abilities he acquired as a master sergeant in the SAS, as a veteran of the Falklands War, and as one of the members of the Iran Embassy incident. These experiences help him carry out his dangerous work as an insurance investigator. Although he works at Lloyds, his dream is to excavate an ancient civilization in a Danube basin.
- NASA: Short story collection published in one volume by Shogakukan in 1988. A fantasy about a middle-aged office worker who trains every day in order to become Japan's first astronaut. This work also includes earlier short stories.
- Happy!: Just after Yawara!, Urasawa began writing Happy!, which began in 1993 and ended in 1999. Happy! consists of 23 volumes in total. The copy from the back of the first tankoubon reads: "Miyuki Umino was a senior in high-school. Although Miyuki, her two younger brothers and her younger sister were poor, they were happy living together. But, one day all of a sudden her older brother's debt of 250 million yen fell upon them. To pay back the debt Miyuki quit school. What was the incredible choice she took to do this?".
- Monster : In 1994, after finishing Master Keaton, Urasawa began writing the manga which would become his most famous work: Monster. He wrote Monster alongside Happy!, with Monster ending in 2001. Monster consists of 18 volumes in total and was serialized in Big Comic (1995-2001). Monster is licensed by Viz, and appears to be on a quarterly release schedule. The text on the cover of the first tankoubon reads: "Dusseldorf, West-Germany in 1986. One day, Dr. Kenzo Tenma ignored his boss's order and executed humanitarian rescue of a man's child. That's how this horrible story begins!!".
- Jigoro!: Short story collection published in one volume by Shogakukan in 1994. It features four stories about Jigorou, Yawara's grandfather (from Yawara!) during his younger years. It also includes a samurai and a baseball story not related to Yawara!.
- 20th Century Boys (Nijuuseiki Shounen): In 1999, after finishing Happy!, Urasawa began the all-popular 20th Century Boys. He wrote 20th Century Boys alongside Monster for two years, Monster ending in 2001. 20th Century Boys is currently still serialized, the story being collected into 21 volumes so far. It has been licensed by Viz, however, at Urasawa's request, its release has been rescheduled until after Monster finishes its English serialization due to the change in his art style over time.
- PLUTO: His most recent project, PLUTO, began serialization in late 2003. PLUTO is a joint manga venture by Urasawa and the late Osamu Tezuka. Its story is based on a story arc of the original Astro Boy manga by Tezuka, "Chijou saidai no ROBOTTO" ("The World's Strongest Robot"). So far, 3 volumes have been published.
[edit] Awards
- New Manga Artist Award of Shogakukan in 1982.
- Début ; Return(1981).
- The 35th Shogakukan Manga Award in 1990(by Yawara!).
- The 1997 (1st) Media Arts Festival award for Excellence. (For Monster).
- The 3rd TEZUKA Osamu Award in 1999 by Asahi Newspaper, Grand Prix. (For Monster).
- The 2002 (6th) Media Arts Festival award for Excellence. (For 20th Century Boys).
[edit] References
- http://forums.animesuki.com/showthread.php?t=13449 (Posts by Vicious and brightman).
- http://myhome.naver.com/fischer/Urasawa/UrasawaE.htm (1999~ , Youngrok LEE).
- http://users.skynet.be/mangaguide/au2027.html
- http://www.comicbookgalaxy.com/commentary_ak_010305.html