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・ Akira Ogata
・ Akira Ogata (film director)
・ Akira Ohashi
・ Akira Ohgi
・ Akira Otaka
・ Akira Oze
・ Akira Psycho Ball
・ Akira Rabelais
・ Akira Raijin
・ Akira Ryō
・ Akira Saito
・ Akira Sakata
・ Akira Sakuma
・ Akira Sasaki
・ Akira Sasanuma
Akira Sasō
・ Akira Satō
・ Akira Satō (photographer)
・ Akira Satō (ski jumper)
・ Akira Senju
・ Akira Shichijo
・ Akira Shimada
・ Akira Shinoda
・ Akira Shoji
・ Akira Sudou
・ Akira Suzuki
・ Akira Suzuki (chemist)
・ Akira Suzuki (director)
・ Akira Suzuki (writer)
・ Akira Tachikawa


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Akira Sasō : ウィキペディア英語版
Akira Sasō

is a Japanese illustrator and educator. He has won a Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize and two Japan Media Arts Awards, the latter for his manga ''Shindō'' (1997–98) and ''Maestro'' (2003–07).
==Biography==
Sasō was born in Takarazuka, Hyōgo, Japan, in 1961. He completed his secondary education at Ikeda Senior High School in Osaka, then attended the Faculty of Literature at Waseda University, graduating in 1984. That year he made his debut in manga with ''Shiroi shiroi natsu yanen'', which was published in ''seinen'' oriented ''Young Magazine'' in 1984. By the late 1990s he had finished such works as ''Busy Love'' (''Ai ga isogashii'') and (''Oretachi ni Asu wa Naissu'').
Between 1997 and 1998 Sasō wrote ''Shindō'' (''The Prodigy''), which was published in ''Manga Action'' in four volumes. It follow Uta, a young musical prodigy who rejects her gifts in her grief over her father's disappearance. For this manga, Sasō received the 3rd Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize, as well as a Japan Media Arts Award for Excellence. Receiving the latter award, Sasō stated that he had attempted to convey sound through his narrative. The Japan Media Arts Council stated that the manga's "delicate illustrations express the tempestuous emotions of the young girl and boy, while also creating a rhythm for the piano music". A film version of the manga, directed by Koji Hagiuda and starring Riko Narumi and Kenichi Matsuyama, was released in 2007.
In early 2004 Sasō began publishing ''Kodomo no Kodomo'' (''Child's Child'') in ''Manga Action''. The manga's three volumes followed Haruna, an 11-year-old fifth grader who became pregnant after having sex with her childhood friend Hiroyuki. In 2008 the story was adapted to film, with Haruna Amari in the lead role.
Sasō's won a Japan Media Arts Award for Excellence in 2008, and was nominated for the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize. Published in Futabasha's ''Manga Action'', and later its website, from 2003 to 2007, the comic follows an unorthodox conductor named Tendō who leads an orchestra and restores its members confidence. A film adaptation, directed by Shōtarō Kobayashi and starring Tori Matsuzaka and Toshiyuki Nishida, is scheduled for 2015.
From February to August 2008, Sasō published an adaptation of Yōjirō Takita's film ''Departures'', serialized in twelve instalments in the bi-weekly ''Big Comic Superior''. He agreed to take on the adaptation as he was impressed by Kundō Koyama's script. Sasō had the opportunity to view the film before beginning the adaptation, and came to feel that a too-literal adaptation would not be appropriate. He made changes to the settings and physical appearances of the characters, and increased the focus on the role of music in the story. Later in 2008 the serial was compiled in a 280-page volume released by Shogakukan.
Sasō has written a variety of manga, including ''Toto's World'' (about a child who is unable to speak) and ''Fujisan''. ''Toto's World'' was adapted to film by NHK. In June 2014 he was one of twenty artists to collaborate on a special ''Godzilla'' manga, published by ''Big Comic Original'' in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the title character. Sasō became a professor at the Department of Manga at Kyoto Seika University in 2006.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Akira Sasō」の詳細全文を読む



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