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Fujio Akatsuka

From CartoonWiki

Template:Short description

Template:Anime and manga

Template:Nihongo was a Japanese manga artist. Known as the Master of Gag Manga, he created many popular manga such as Osomatsu-kun, Himitsu no Akko-chan, and Tensai Bakabon.

Biography

He was born in Rehe, Manchuria, the son of a Japanese military police officer. After World War II, he grew up in Niigata Prefecture and Nara Prefecture. When he was 19, he moved to Tokyo.

While working at a chemical factory, he drew many manga. After that, Tokiwa-so accepted him. He started his career as a shōjo artist, but in 1958, his Nama-chan (ナマちゃん) became a hit, so he became a specialist in comic manga. He won the Shogakukan Manga Award in 1964 for Osomatsu-kun[1] and the Bungeishunjū Manga Award in 1971 for Tensai Bakabon. He is said to have been influenced by Buster Keaton and MAD magazine.

In 1965, Akatsuka established his own company "Fujio Productions Ltd.".[2]

In 2000, he drew manga in braille for the blind.[3]

Many of his manga featured supporting characters who ended up becoming more popular and more associated with their series than the main character, such as Papa (Tensai Bakabon), Iyami, Chibita (Osomatsu-kun), and Nyarome (Mōretsu Atarō).

In April 2002 he was hospitalized for intra-axial hematoma and was said to frequently be in a persistent vegetative state from 2004 until his death.[4] In July 2006, his second wife Machiko, who had been nursing him, suddenly died from a subarachnoid hemorrhage.[5] On August 2, 2008, he died of pneumonia at a hospital in Bunkyō, Tokyo.[6]

Works

Among Akatsuka's extensive body of work, his series of Osomatsu-kun, Himitsu no Akko-chan, Tensai Bakabon, and Mōretsu Atarō are often considered his top four major series[7] by Fujio Pro, due to their success in garnering animated adaptations and their lengthy runs and revivals.

Serial Works

(In order of publication)[8]

1950s

1960s

  • Template:Nihongo (January 1960-March 1962, Shojo Club)
  • Template:Nihongo (March 1960-June 1961, Ribon)
  • Template:Nihongo (April to September 1960, Fun 4th Grader)
  • Template:Nihongo (April 1960-March 1961, Fun 5th Grader)
  • Template:Nihongo (May–September 1961, Adventure King)
    • January 1964-April 1965, Shonen Book
  • Template:Nihongo (April 15, 1962- May 18, 1969, Weekly Shonen Sunday)- Serialization changed to monthly from August 13, 1967, to allow for less frequent but longer chapters
    • April 1964-March 1969, Separate Edition Shonen Sunday
    • April to December 1966, Boys' Life
    • April to October 1966, Elementary School 4th Grade
    • April to December 1966, Elementary School 2nd Grade
    • April 1966-March 1967, Kindergarten
    • May 1966-March 1967, Elementary School 1st Grade
    • July 1966-March 1967, Monthly Shogakukan Book
    • March 19, 1972 – December 24, 1973, Weekly Shonen King
    • November 1987-March 1990, Comic BomBom
    • February 1988-January 1990, TV Magazine
  • Template:Nihongo (April 1962-March 1963, Fun 5th Grader)
  • Template:Nihongo (April 1962-March 1963, Junior High 1st Year Course)
  • Template:Nihongo (June 1962-September 1965, Ribon)
    • November 1968-December 1969, Ribon
    • October 1988-September 1989, Nakayoshi
  • Template:Nihongo (April 1963-March 1964, Elementary School 4th Grade)
  • Template:Nihongo (August–December 1963, Adventure King)
  • Template:Nihongo (August–September 1963, Bokura)
  • Template:Nihongo (October 1963-September 1965, Shonen)
  • Template:Nihongo (January 1964-December 1965, Adventure King)
    • January–September 1967, Adventure King
  • Template:Nihongo (April 1964-March 1965, Elementary School 4th Grade)
  • Template:Nihongo (1964, Margaret)
  • Template:Nihongo (June 22, 1965- July 5, 1966, Shojo Friend)
  • Template:Nihongo (July 1965-August 1966, Heibon)
  • Template:Nihongo (August 1-August 29, 1965, Weekly Shonen Magazine)
  • Template:Nihongo (October 1965-August 1966, Ribon)
  • Template:Nihongo (January–March 1966, Boys' Life)
  • Template:Nihongo (April–September 1966, Shonen Book)
  • Template:Nihongo (January–May 1967, Shonen Book)
  • Template:Nihongo (January–July 1967, Ribon)
  • Template:Nihongo (June 1967-January 1969, Shonen Book)
  • Template:Nihongo (January–September 1967, Elementary School 2nd Grade)
  • Template:Nihongo (April 9, 1967 – February 23, 1969, Weekly Shonen Magazine)
    • August 1967-January 1969, Separate Edition Shonen Magazine
    • August 24, 1969 – April 5, 1970, Weekly Shonen Sunday
    • September 9, 1969-June 1970, Deluxe Shonen Sunday
    • May 10, 1971 – June 1, 1971, Weekly Bokura Magazine
    • June 27, 1971 – December 7, 1976, Weekly Shonen Magazine
    • August 1974-May 1975, Separate Edition Shonen Magazine
    • June 1976-December 1978, Monthly Shonen Magazine
    • October 1987-October 1991, Comic BomBom
    • November 1987-January 1991, TV Magazine
    • January 1988-February 1989, Monthly Shonen Magazine
    • October 1989-January 1991, Monthly Hero Magazine
    • November 1991-December 1992, Deluxe BomBom
  • Template:Nihongo (September 1967-August 1969, Ribon)
  • Template:Nihongo (September 1967-December 1969, Elementary School 1st Grade)
  • Template:Nihongo (1967-1968, Shojo Friend)
  • Template:Nihongo (November 28, 1967 – June 28, 1970, Weekly Shonen Sunday)
    • April 1969-October 1971, Kindergarten
    • October 1969-March 1971, Elementary School 4th Grade
    • January 1970-June 1971, Elementary School 3rd Grade
    • January 1970-November 1971, Elementary School 2nd Grade
    • April 1990-January 1991, Comic BomBom
    • May 1990-January 1991, TV Magazine
  • Template:Nihongo (1968, Weekly Shonen King)
  • Template:Nihongo (1968, Weekly Shonen King)
  • Template:Nihongo (May–September 1969, Deluxe Shonen Sunday)
  • Template:Nihongo
  • Template:Nihongo (1969, Shonen Jump)
  • Template:Nihongo (1969, Weekly Shonen Jump)

1970s

1980s

1990s

Short stories

Adaptations

These series or one-shots are derivative works, created as adaptations of TV shows or novels by other authors.

  • Template:Nihongo (April to November 1959, Ribon)- Based on TV series by Kazuo Funahashi
  • Template:Nihongo (November 1961-April 1962, Ribon)- Based on the TV series by Aoi Takagaki
  • Template:Nihongo (Weekly Shonen Sunday: #17 for 1973)- Based on the original story by Hisashi Yamanaka
  • Template:Nihongo (Weekly Shonen Magazine: #50 to #52 for 1977)- Based on Eight Family Scenes by Yasutaka Tsutsui
  • Template:Nihongo (1978, Weekly Shonen Magazine)- Based on the original story by Shusaku Endo

Assistants

See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

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