Template:Short description Template:More citations needed
Template:Nihongo was a Japanese director of anime and puppet shows.[1] He also wrote the lyrics for the anime's theme song under the name Template:Nihongo.[1]
Nagahama has produced hits in a wide variety of genres, including super robot, sports, and comedy. He is best known as the director of Sunrise and Toei's Robot Romance Trilogy, which added human drama to the Super Robot genre.[2][3] He is also known as the director of several popular anime series that are still well known among Japanese viewers.[4] His most famous work is the national hit,Template:Efn Star of the Giants, which contributed to the popularity of baseball in Japan.[5][6]
Biography
Nagahama began his theatrical career in the drama club of his junior high school, and not only directed but also acted on stage himself.[5] After entering the Department of Drama at Nihon University College of Art, he studied theater at Butai Geijyutsu Gakuin, Kirin-za, Seinen Haiyū Club, and Mingei Theatre Company, while working part-time in the editorial department of theater magazine Theaterux.
In the early 1960s, while working in the production department of the puppet theater troupe Hitomi-za, he was assigned to direct puppet shows for television.[7][8]
In 1965, he joined A Production, which was contracted to produce anime for Tokyo Movie, an animation studio founded by Yutaka Fujioka, a colleague at Hitomi-za and producer of the TV puppet show Iga no Kagemaru, where he began directing TV anime.[7] The TV series he directed, Star of Giants, which began airing in 1968, was a huge hit and raged at the time.[2][8] However, he gave up on anime after working on Samurai Giants and left A Production to start a company, where he worked on commercial production for about a year.
In 1975, he returned to the anime industry as the director of Reideen The Brave, replacing Yoshiyuki Tomino, who was dropped midway through the show. This was his first robot anime.[7][9]
In 1976, he took on the job of director for Toei (not Toei Animation)'s robot anime, Combattler V and was involved from the planning stage with the Raiden staff.[4] From this work, he began teaching acting to voice actors and handling sound effects, which led to his being credited as sound director.[5] He went on to direct two more Toei's robot anime, Voltes V and Tōshō Daimos.[7] These three works later became known as the Robot Romance Trilogy.[4][10] Voltes V, in particular, became so popular in the Philippines that after more than 45 years, a live-action remake of the TV series was produced by the Philippines' largest terrestrial television station in 2023.[11] In Daimos, Toei's Sword Fight Arranger directed the action at the suggestion of Toei's producer, and Nagahama had animators draw action scenes based on a video of his movements.[4][12] Meanwhile, the same producer brought anime elements from these works to Toei's live-action tokusatsu productions, including giant robots made of multiple mechas combined into one, beautiful enemy characters and anime-style designs.Template:Efn
In 1979, he directed Future Robot Daltanious, which was produced under the same structure as the previous three works, albeit with a different broadcaster. However, he left the show midway through to direct The Rose of Versailles at his old home, Tokyo Movies. However, he dropped out of that show as well due to a conflict with a voice actor over a difference in acting policy.[4][13]
During the production of the joint anime between Japan and France, Ulysses 31, he contracted fulminant hepatitis and died suddenly from the disease at the age of 43.[5]Template:Efn
Filmography
Puppetry
- Iga no Kagemaru (1963-1964) Episode director
- Template:Ill (1964–1969) Puppet performance director
- Terrahawks (Japan-UK co-production) (canceledTemplate:Efn)
Anime
- Obake no Q-tarō (1965) Episode director/Storyboard
- Perman (1967-1968)
- Star of the Giants (1968-1971) CompositionTemplate:Efn (episodes 1-85) → Episode directorTemplate:Efn (episodes 86-final episode)
- Chingō Muchabē (1971) Episode director
- Shin Obake no Q-tarō (1971-1972) Director/Script
- The Gutsy Frog (1972-1974) Episode Director (9th-80th), Chief Director (81st-final), Storyboard
- Template:Ill (1973-1974) Director
- Brave Raideen (1975-1976) General Director (Episode 27-Final episodeTemplate:Efn)/Storyboard
- Combattler V (1976-1977) General director/Sound director[14]
- Voltes V (1977-1978) General director/Sound director/Voice actorTemplate:Efn[15]
- Ore wa Teppei (1977-1978) Episode directorTemplate:Efn
- Tōshō Daimos (1978-1979) General director/Sound director[15]
- Future Robot Daltanious (1979-1980) General director/Sound director (Episodes 1-26Template:Efn)
- The Rose of Versailles (1979-1980) General director/Sound director (Episodes 1-13Template:Efn)
- Zukkoke Knight - Don De La Mancha (anime adaptation of Don Quixote) (1980)
- Ulysses 31 (Japan-France co-production) (1981) Chief director on the Japanese side, his last workTemplate:Efn
Music
Lyrics
- Voltes V Ending theme
- Tōshō Daimos Ending theme
- Future Robot Daltanious Ending theme
Notes
References
Sources
External links
Template:Robot Romance Trilogy Template:Authority control
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite web
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- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Template:Cite web
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Template:Cite web
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- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Template:Cite web