Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Footer Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga series by Noboru Kawasaki and serialized by Shogakukan in Shogakukan no Gakushū Zasshi. The manga series won the 14th Shogakukan Manga Award. An anime adaptation was created by Tatsunoko Production.[1]
Plot
A lively boy named Daizaemon in traditional Japanese clothing comes with various kinds of animals to the capital of Tokyo. He has a funny habit of dancing whenever he hears music. He visits a friend of his late father's to learn judo and makes friends with the young daughter of the judo master Kikuko and the cat Nyanko-sensei. For a little girl, Kikuko has wonderful judo tricks inherited from her father while Nyanko-sensei is able to perform a difficult trick of triple turn in the air. Both of them are worthy instructors for Daizaemon. Although he shows clownish behavior once in a while, he is always popular among people around and grows stout and shrewd to be a future champion.
Characters
- Daizaemon Kaze
- Voiced by: Masako Nozawa
- Nicknamed "Dai-chan," he comes from Aomori and is a country boy. He always wears a hakama and plays judo. He moves to Tokyo after the death of his father. He has good intentions but is often naive.
- Nyanko-sensei
- Voiced by: Kinya Aikawa
- A cat with a tiger-like appearance who helps Daizaemon.
- Kikuko Ogaki
- Voiced by: Mari Okamoto
- A beautiful girl who Daizaemon falls in love with at first sight. This is Okamoto's debut role at the age of 16.
- Hanako Mori
- Voiced by: Kazuko Sugiyama
- A childhood friend of Daizaemon.
- Yagoro Ogaki
- Voiced by: Tōru Ōhira
- Kikuko's father.
- Nishi Ishiboshi
- Voiced by: Shun Yashiro
- Daizaemon's mischievous friend who is from Osaka.
- "Tori" Maruko Tono
- Voiced by: Hiroko Maruyama
- One of Daizaemon's classmates.
- Nana Shirayuki-sensei
- Voiced by:Haruko Kitahama
- The beautiful teacher who tends to the rose garden.
Release
The series was broadcast from October 4, 1970, to September 24, 1972, for 208 15 minute episodes (technically 104). It was rebroadcast in Japan in 2014 and 2015.
References
External links
Template:Shogakukan Manga Award - General Template:Hiroshi Sasagawa Template:Tatsunoko Production