Ojamajo Doremi

Ojamajo Doremi

Cover of the first DVD video volume featuring main heroines Doremi (pink), Aiko (blue), and Hazuki (orange).
おジャ魔女どれみ
Genre Magical girl
Anime television series
Directed by Junichi Sato
Takuya Igarashi
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Licensed by
Original network TV Asahi (1999-2000)
Animax
English network
4Kids TV (2005-2008)
The CW4Kids (2010)
Original run February 7, 1999 January 30, 2000
Episodes 51
Anime television series
Ojamajo Doremi #
Directed by Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Takuya Igarashi
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Original network TV Asahi (2000-2001)
Animax
Original run February 6, 2000 January 28, 2001
Episodes 49
Anime film
Ojamajo Doremi #: The Movie
Directed by Takuya Igarashi
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Released July 8, 2000
Runtime 30 minutes
Manga
Written by Izumi Todo
Illustrated by Shizue Takanashi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Shōjo
Magazine Nakayoshi
Original run October 2000December 2000
Volumes 3
Anime television series
Mo~tto! Ojamajo Doremi
Directed by Takuya Igarashi
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Original network TV Asahi (2001-2002)
Animax
Original run February 4, 2001 January 27, 2002
Episodes 50
Anime film
Motto! Ojamajo Doremi: Secret of the Frog Stone
Directed by Shigeyasu Yamauchi
Written by Midori Kuriyama
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Released July 14, 2001
Runtime 30 minutes
Manga
Mo~tto! Ojamajo Doremi
Written by Izumi Todo
Illustrated by Shizue Takanashi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Shōjo
Magazine Nakayoshi
Published December 2001
Anime television series
Ojamajo Doremi Dokka~n!
Directed by Takuya Igarashi
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Original network TV Asahi (2001-2002)
Animax
Original run February 3, 2002 January 26, 2003
Episodes 51
Original video animation
Ojamajo Doremi Na-i-sho
Written by Takashi Yamada
Music by Keiichi Oku
Studio Toei Animation
Released June 26, 2004 December 11, 2004
Episodes 13
Light novel
Ojamajo Doremi 16
Written by Midori Kiriyama
Illustrated by Yoshihiko Umakoshi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Male
Imprint Kodansha Light Novel
Original run December 2, 2011November 30, 2012
Volumes 3
Light novel
Ojamajo Doremi 17
Written by Midori Kiriyama
Illustrated by Yoshihiko Umakoshi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Male
Imprint Kodansha Light Novel
Original run July 2, 2013February 28, 2014
Volumes 3
Light novel
Ojamajo Doremi 18
Written by Midori Kiriyama
Illustrated by Yoshihiko Umakoshi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Male
Imprint Kodansha Light Novel
Original run September 2, 2014June 2, 2015
Volumes 2
Light novel
Ojamajo Doremi 19
Written by Midori Kiriyama
Illustrated by Yoshihiko Umakoshi
Published by Kodansha
Demographic Male
Imprint Kodansha Light Novel
Published December 2, 2015

Ojamajo Doremi (おジャ魔女どれみ, lit. "Bothersome Witch Doremi"), also known as Magical DoReMi in some countries, is a Japanese magical girl anime television series created by Toei Animation. It focuses on a group of elementary school girls, led by Doremi Harukaze, who become witch apprentices. The series aired in Japan on TV Asahi between February 1999 and January 2003, spanning four seasons and 201 episodes, and was followed by an original video animation series released between June and December 2004. An English language version of the first season, produced by 4Kids Entertainment, aired in North America in 2005. The franchise has also spawned two companion films, various manga adaptations, and a sequel light novel series.

Plot

Ojamajo Doremi

Doremi Harukaze (Dorie Goodwyn in the American English dub), a third grade elementary school girl living in the fictional Japanese town of Misora (the fictional American town of Port Mystic in the English dub), comes across an esoteric shop known as the Maho-Do (MAHO堂), accidentally discovering that its owner, Majo Rika, is a witch. Due to a curse placed on any witch whose identity is exposed by a human, Majo Rika is transformed into a magical frog. Wanting to return to her original form, Majo Rika makes Doremi her witch apprentice, giving her the ability to cast magic. Feeling guilty for placing that curse on her, Doremi accepts Majo Rika's offer in hopes of fixing her mistake. In order to become a fully fledged witch capable of turning Majo Rika back into a human, Doremi has to pass nine different witch tests, whilst also keeping her identity a secret from other humans. Doremi is soon joined by her two best friends, Hazuki Fujiwara /Reanne Griffith and Aiko Senoo/Mirabelle Haywood , and later by her younger sister Pop, / Caitlyn Goodwyn who all become witch apprentices, helping to run the Maho-Do whilst using magic to help out their friends and families, with the occasional mishap. They soon come across a rival witch apprentice, Onpu Segawa,/Ellie Craft who has been using forbidden magic to influence people's memories. Whilst initially cold towards the other girls, Onpu soon warms up to them and sacrifices herself to prevent their identities from being revealed. In order to save Onpu from an eternal sleep, the girls give up their magic powers to awaken her.[1]

Ojamajo Doremi # (Sharp)

At the start of the fourth grade, Doremi and the others, who sneak into the Witch World to visit Majo Rika, witness the birth of a magical baby, who is given the name Hana. As witch law dictates that whoever witnesses a magical baby's birth must take care of it for a year, Doremi and the others are once again made witch apprentices, tasked with raising Hana. While also taking care of the Maho-Do, which has now become a gardening store, the girls must ensure Hana's growth and help her pass several health examinations held by the Witch World's head nurse, Majo Heart. Meanwhile, a wizard named Oyajide attempts to kidnap Hana to help aid the Wizard World, later enlisting the help of four young wizards known as the FLAT 4. At the end of the series, after the witch apprentices help mend relations between the Witch and Wizard Worlds, they once again give up their powers in order to protect Hana from the past queen of the Witch World.[2]

Mōtto! Ojamajo Doremi

As the Queen of the Witch World pleads to the other witch senates to make Doremi and the others witches again, half of the senates are opposed to the decision. Thus, the Queen offers a compromise in that the girls, who are made into apprentices again, must pass six patissiére exams in order to become full witches. With the Maho-Do remodeled into a bakery, Doremi and the others are joined by Momoko Asuka, a returnee from America who initially has little experience with Japanese outside of using a special intercom, to help them bake sweets needed for their exams. Midway through the series, Hana is afflicted by a curse from the past queen, causing her to have a dislike for vegetables which are necessary for her magical growth, prompting Doremi and the girls to help her get over her pickiness. After curing Hana's pickiness and passing the patissiére exams, the girls appeal to the past queen, Majo Tourbillon, who had despised humans ever since she lost her human husband and child, undoing a curse placed upon a forest, where her true form is found sleeping, protected by magical vines.[3] The OVA series, Ojamajo Doremi Na-i-sho!, takes place during this time frame.

Ojamajo Doremi Dokka~n!

Hana, who has gotten bored of the Witch World and wants to be with Doremi and the others, uses all of her magic to instantly grow up and become a sixth grader. This results in the Maho-Do being transformed into a crafts shop and Hana's magical crystals shattering, requiring Doremi and the others to supply her with the energy needed to become a witch apprentice. Meanwhile, the Queen discovers Majo Tourbillon's power will eventually cause all worlds to be put to sleep. As such, the Queen tasks the girls, who are assisted by Majo Tourbillon's fairy, Baba, to recreate various handmade gifts that Majo Tourbillon's six grandchildren had made and received from her in order to remind her of the happy times and break the vines imprisoning her. The vines soon start spawning black flowers that cause people and magical beings alike to be affected with laziness, with the girls enlisting the help of Hana and a white elephant named Pao to put a stop to them.[4]

Media

Anime

Ojamajo Doremi is produced by Toei Animation and ABC. In Japan, the show aired on each of the ANN TV stations (Asahi Broadcasting Corporation (ABC, Japan), TV Asahi, Nagoya TV (Metele), and others) and Broadcasting System of San-in Inc.. The show replaced the time slot for Yume no Crayon Oukoku after its end and lasted from February 7, 1999 to January 30, 2000, with a new episode airing every week.[5] The series soon followed with direct sequels, Ojamajo Doremi # (おジャ魔女どれみ しゃーぷっ, Ojamajo Doremi Shāpu), Mōtto! Ojamajo Doremi (も〜っと! おジャ魔女どれみ), and Ojamajo Doremi Dokkān! (おジャ魔女どれみドッカ〜ン!) until January 26, 2003. Each series lasted from 49 to 51 episodes. It was then followed by a thirteen-episode original video animation series, Ojamajo Doremi Na-i-sho (おジャ魔女どれみナ・イ・ショ), released between June 26 and December 11, 2004.

4Kids Entertainment licensed the first season in North America under the title Magical DoReMi, which aired on 4Kids TV for the 2005-2006 broadcasting season.[6] Unlike the international dubs and like many broadcast anime in the USA, Magical DoReMi was heavily edited and localized for US audiences and a lower TV-Y rating. Like many of the series licensed by 4Kids, the series received changes to character names, music, sound effects, and cultural references, as well as heavy edits pertaining to violence, death, and alcohol, to make the series more suitable for a young American audience, along with editing Japanese text to English and the usual 4Kids edit of erasing Japanese text or replacing them with unreadable symbols performed as well.[7]

Manga

From 2000 to early 2003, the manga magazine Nakayoshi ran a manga-adaptation of Ojamajo Doremi. The story was based on the events of the original anime and was drawn by Shizue Takanashi. The chapters were compiled into tankōbon volumes by Kodansha. Four volumes were released in total — the first three were under the title Ojamajo Doremi, covering the events of the original series and Ojamajo Doremi #. The last volume was adapted from the Mo~tto! Ojamajo Doremi story arc and was titled eponymously to it.

Films

Ojamajo Doremi #: The Movie

Ojamajo Doremi #: The Movie (映画おジャ魔女どれみ#, Eiga Ojamajo Doremi Shāpu)[8] was the first theatrical release for the series and was directed by Takuya Igarashi. Roughly twenty-seven minutes long, it was released on July 8, 2000 (along with Digimon Hurricane Touchdown!! / Supreme Evolution!! The Golden Digimentals) for the 2000 Summer Toei Anime Fair.[9] The Digimon movie was split into two parts and Ojamajo Doremi #: The Movie was screened in between.

In the movie, Pop has just passed one of her witch exams, but gets into a heated argument with Doremi because Hana followed her into the Witch World. Initially unbeknownst to everyone, the flower Pop brought home from the Witch World is really the Witch Queen Heart, the Queen's favorite flower, which grants any wish it hears regardless of any possible dangers until it begins to bear seeds. One of the wishes it had granted involves turning Doremi into a mouse, unknowingly made by Pop over her anger towards Doremi. While Pop goes to search for her sister, the other girls track down the runaway flower before it starts to reproduce.

Though the movie bears little relevance to the series on which it is based, it does mostly take place some time between episodes 16 and 37 and is referenced in both episodes 37 and 40 (the latter coinciding with the post-credits scene).

The Secret of the Frog Stone

Mōtto! Ojamajo Doremi: The Secret of the Frog Stone (も~っと!おジャ魔女どれみ: カエル石のひみつ, Mōtto! Ojamajo Doremi: Kaeru Seki no Himitsu)[10] was the series' second theatrical release. It was directed by Shigeyasu Yamauchi and hit theaters on July 14, 2001, screened between Digimon Tamers: Battle of Adventurers and Kinnikuman: Second Generations.

During Doremi and her friends' summer vacation, they visit her grandparents in the fictional mountains of Fukuyama, where they hear of a mysterious legend of Mayuri and Zenjuro, two star-crossed lovers that died in the Edo period. During the next morning, when they investigate the forest, the girls get lost and face the Curse of the Full Moon, which makes them unable to use magic. Meanwhile, due to a traumatizing memory, Aiko develops a fear of Doremi's grandfather.

Music

Throughout the run of the series, multiple singles, albums, and compilations were distributed. The original series' CD's were released under Bandai Music Entertainment, while music from Ojamajo Doremi # was distributed by King Records. From Mo~tto! Ojamajo Doremi onwards, the CDs were distributed by Marvelous Entertainment.

Opening themes
Ending themes

Light novel

On September 5, 2011, Kodansha Limited announced the coming of the light novel Ojamajo Doremi 16, featuring the original work of Izumi Todo, story written by Midori Kuriyama, and illustrations by Yoshihiko Umakoshi. It was published in three volumes by Kodansha between December 2, 2011 and November 30, 2012.[11] The story takes place several years after the events of the anime series, with the main characters now in high school.[12] It was followed by a second series, Ojamajo Doremi 17, released in three volumes between July 2, 2013 and February 28, 2014, and a third, Ojamajo Doremi 18, released in two volumes between September 2, 2014 and June 2, 2015. The final volume, Ojamajo Doremi 19, was released on December 9, 2015. Drama CDs were included with the first Ojamajo Doremi 16 novel, the third Ojamajo Doremi 17 novel, and Ojamajo Doremi 19.[13] Toei producer Hiromi Seki has expressed interested in producing an anime adaptation of the series, but stated it would depend on sales.[14]

No.TitleJapanese release dateJapanese ISBN
1Ojamajo Doremi 16
おジャ魔女どれみ16
December 2, 2011ISBN 978-4-06-3752069
2Ojamajo Doremi 16 - Naive
おジャ魔女どれみ16 Naive
May 2, 2012ISBN 978-4-06-375235-9
3Ojamajo Doremi 16 - Turning Point
おジャ魔女どれみ16 TURNING POINT
November 30, 2012ISBN 978-4-06-375273-1
4Ojamajo Doremi 17
おジャ魔女どれみ17
July 2, 2013ISBN 978-4-06-375287-8
5Ojamajo Doremi 17 2nd ~Kizashi~
おジャ魔女どれみ17 2nd 〜KIZASHI〜
October 2, 2013ISBN 978-4-06-375327-1
6Ojamajo Doremi 17 3rd ~Come On!~
おジャ魔女どれみ17 3rd 〜COME ON!〜
February 28, 2014ISBN 978-4-06-375347-9
7Ojamajo Doremi 18
おジャ魔女どれみ18
September 2, 2014ISBN 978-4-06-375371-4
8Ojamajo Doremi 18 2nd: Spring has...
おジャ魔女どれみ18 2nd Sping has...
June 2, 2015ISBN 978-4-06-3814255
9Ojamajo Doremi 19
おジャ魔女どれみ19
December 2, 2015ISBN 978-4-06-3587791

Ojamajo Kids

During the run of Ojamajo Doremi Dokka~n!, Toei hosted live events with dance performances by select actresses who portrayed the girls, titled "Ojamajo Kids". These girls were selected via auditions.[15]

References

  1. "Toei's summary of Ojamajo Doremi (season one)". toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  2. "Toei's summary of Ojamajo Doremi". toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  3. "Toei's summary of Motto! Ojamajo Doremi". toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  4. "Toei's summary of Ojamajo Doremi Dokka~n!". toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  5. "Toei's list of Ojamajo Doremi episodes". toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  6. "4Kids Plans to Release Magical Doremi in 2005". animenewsnetwork.com. Anime News Network. 11 November 2004. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  7. "Magical DoReMi to Re-air on The CW4Kids on Saturdays". animenewsnetwork.com. Anime News Network. 18 April 2010. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  8. "MAGICAL DOREMI #". corp.toei-anim.co.jp. Toei Animation. 8 July 2000. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  9. "2000 summer Toei Anime Fair" 2000年夏アニメフェアTOP. toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. 8 July 2000. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  10. "Magical DoReMi 3: The Secret of the Frog Stone". toei-anim.co.jp. Toei Animation. 14 July 2001. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  11. "ラノベ文庫 TOP 講談社コミックプラス". kodansha.co.jp (in Japanese). Kodansha. Archived from the original on 9 July 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  12. Chiemi, Chiba (4 September 2011). "Contact manager witches appeared in high school!" Twitter / @ChiemiChiba: おジャ魔女達が高校生になって登場!小説『おジャ魔女ど .... twitter.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  13. Chiema, Chiba (21 March 2013). "Ojamajo Drama CD 2013 years early summer will be released!" Twitter / @ChiemiChiba: おジャ魔女どれみ ドラマCD 2013年初夏発売予定!! .... twitter.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  14. "Ojamajo Doremi Producer Wants to Make Anime of Franchise's High School Novels". animenewsnetwork.com. Anime News Network. 12 June 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  15. "DoReMi D" おジャ魔女キッズ (Ojamajo Kids). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  16. "Kasumi Suzuki" 春風どれみ (Harukaze Doremi). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  17. "Shinohara Manami" ハナちゃん (Hana-chan). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  18. "Tanaka Miiya" 藤原はづき (Fujiwara Hazuki). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  19. "Chiharu Watanabe" 妹尾あいこ (Senō Aiko). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  20. "Makoto Takeda" 瀬川おんぷ (Segawa Onpu). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
  21. "Chisato Maeda" 飛鳥ももこ (Asuka Momoko). toei-anim.co.jp (in Japanese). Toei Animation. Retrieved 25 October 2016.
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