Daisuke SAKAGUCHI as Yuzuhiko
Family name (in kanji): 阪口
Given name (in kanji): 大助
Date of birth: 1973-10-11
Hometown: Kashiwazaki, Niigata, Japan
Blood type: A
http://www.aoni.co.jp/talent/0987168.html
Non-anime roles:
Alf Octrhein in "Atelier Lise ~Alchemist of Ordre~" (VG) (Japanese)
Andrew Oikonny in "Star Fox 64" (VG) (Japanese)
Andrew Oikonny in "Star Fox Assault" (VG) (Japanese)
Ashton Anchors in "Star Ocean: The Second Story" (VG) (Japanese)
Bill Grey in "Star Fox 64" (VG) (Japanese)
Child in "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie" (live-action movie) (Japanese)
Gnome in " Tales of Symphonia" (VG) (Japanese)
Golem in "Seiken Densetsu 4/Dawn of Mana" (VG) (Japanese)
Kazuto Iizuka in "Narue no Sekai" (Drama CD) (Japanese)
Kenta Kazama in "True Love Story 2" (VG) (Japanese)
Miguel Casse in "Independence Day" (movie, TV version) (Japanese)
Mikimaro Shimura in "Kekkon ~Marriage~" (VG) (Japanese)
Mikimaro Shimura in "Sotsugyo M ~Seito Kaichou no Karei naru Inbou~" (VG) (Japanese)
Mormo in "Tales of the World: Radiant Mythology" (VG) (Japanese)
Nash in "Lunar: Silver Star Story" (VG) (Japanese)
Noel Chandler in "Star Ocean: The Second Story" (VG) (Japanese)
NUS (ROB 64) in "Star Fox 64" (VG) (Japanese)
Rourry (Llewelyn) in "Valkyrie Profile" (VG) (Japanese)
Roy in "Valkyrie Profile" (VG) (Japanese)
Rudy (Chaz) in "Phantasy Star Memorial Drama" (CD) (Japanese)
Silabus in ".hack//G.U. Vol. 2: Kimi Omou Koe" (VG) (Japanese)
Silabus in ".hack//G.U. Vol. 3: Aruku you na Hayasa de" (VG) (Japanese)
Silabus in ".hack//G.U. Vol.1 Saitan" (VG) (Japanese)
Sunohara Youhei in "Clannad" (PS2)
Xandir P. Wifflebottom in "Drawn Together" (tv series) (Japanese)
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Staff in:
Sotsugyou M: Oretachi no Carnival (OAV) : Ending Song "Heart Wa Koukiatsu"
Cast in:
.hack//Roots (TV) as Silabus (ep 22)
6 Angels (movie) as Akira Canyon
A Tree of Palme (movie) as Shatta
Agatha Christie no Meitantei Poirot to Marple (TV) as Alex Crackenthorpe (ep. 23)
Air Master (TV) as Reiichi Mishima
Apocalypse Zero (OAV) as Ponta
Aquarion (TV) as Jun Lee
Aquarion: Wings of Betrayal (OAV) as Jun
ATASHIn'CHI (movie) as Yuzuhiko
ATASHIn'CHI (TV) as Yuzuhiko
Baccano! (TV) as Jacuzzi Splot
Bamboo Blade (TV) as Yūji Nakata
Beyblade (TV) as Giancarlo (Enrique)
Black Jack (TV) as Mitsuo (Karte 02)
Bleach (TV) as Hou, Ban (Bount, eps 72-73)
Bobobo-bo Bo-bobo (TV) as Halon Oni; Youngest Dynamite Brother (ep. 3)
Bokurano (TV) as Takashi Waku
Clannad (movie) as Youhei Sunohara
Clannad (TV) as Youhei Sunohara
Crayon Shin-chan: Arashi wo Yobu Eikou no Yakiniku Road (movie) as Yoshirin
Crayon Shin-chan: Arashi wo Yobu Jungle (movie) as Yoshirin
Crayon Shin-chan: Bakuhatsu! Onsen Wakuwaku Daikessen (movie) as Yoshirin
Crayon Shin-chan: Densetsu wo Yobu Odore! Amigo! (movie) as Yoshirin
D.I.C.E. (TV) as Jet Siegel
Dai Yamato Zero-go (OAV) as Tom-Tom
Denshin Mamotte Shugogetten (OAV) as Tasuke Shichiri
Fighting Spirit (TV) as Masahiko Umezawa (some eps); Naomichi Yamada
Fly High (TV) as Fujimaki Shun
Fullmetal Alchemist (TV) as Man A (ep 26)
Gambalist! Shun (TV) as Fujimaki Shun
Gegege no Kitaro (TV 2007) as Kobayashi (ep 5)
Ghost Stories (TV) as Reiichirou Miyanoshita (Young)
Gintama (OAV) as Shimura Shinpachi
Gintama (TV) as Shimura Shinpachi
Haruba-Ke no Sanninme (TV) as Mashimaro
Heat Guy J (TV) as Claire Leonelli
Kiba (TV) as Ginga
Kiteretsu Daihyakka (TV) as Kiteretsu Kite (Youth)
Maburaho (TV) as Kazuki Shikimori
Magical Meow Meow Taruto (TV) as Geppei
Major (TV) as Tokashiki
Mamotte Shugogetten (TV) as Tasuke
MÄR (TV) as Jack
Marmalade Boy (TV) as Yamaguchi
Marriage (OAV) as Mikimaru Shimura
Mars Daybreak (TV) as Kato Takigawa, Jr.
Mobile Suit Victory Gundam (TV) as Üso Evin (debut role)
Mononoke (TV) as Hyoue Sasaki (Umibouzu)
Nazca (TV) as Keita Seino/Amaro
One Piece: Omatsuri Danshaku to Himitsu no Shima (movie 6) as Rick
Orphen (TV) as Killing Doll
Paprika (movie) as Hajime Himuro
Paranoia Agent (TV) as Shonen Bat; Makoto Kozuka; [+ unlisted credits] (ep 9)
Pocket Monster Crystal: Raikou Ikazuchi no Densetsu (special) as Junichi
Pocket Monsters Diamond & Pearl: Dialga vs. Palkia vs. Darkrai (movie) as Ussoki
Pocket Monsters: Diamond & Pearl (TV) as Takeshi's Sudowoodo; Kojirou's Masukippa
Pokemon Advance (TV) as Tom Pei (122,123)
Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Team Go-Getters Out of the Gate! (special) as Hitokage
Pokémon Ranger and the Temple of the Sea (movie) as Buoysel; Tamanta
Pokémon: Lucario and the Mystery of Mew (movie) as Manyula (1)
Psychic Academy (ONA) as Ai Shiomi
Ragnarok The Animation (TV) as Roan
Record of Lodoss War: Chronicles of the Heroic Knight (TV) as Marle
Rockman.EXE (movie) as Tomahawkman
Rockman.EXE Beast (TV) as Tomahawkman
Rockman.EXE Stream (TV) as Tomahawkman
Sailor Moon (TV) as Cat (ep 31)
Sailor Moon S (TV) as Boy A (ep 105); Young Man (ep 93)
Sailor Moon SuperS (special) as Dummy (ep 2); Kyuusuke Sarashina (ep 3)
Sailor Moon SuperS (TV) as Kyuusuke Sarashina
Shin Kyūseishu Densetsu Hokuto no Ken: Yuria-den (OAV) as Ryuga
Shingu: Secret of the Stellar Wars (TV) as Narita Jirou
Shinshaku Sengoku Eiyuu Densetsu Sanada Jyuu Yuushi The Animation (TV) as Chunagon Hideaki Kobayakawa
Soreike! Anpanman (TV) as Hamigakiman (2000-)
Sotsugyou M: Oretachi no Carnival (OAV) as Mikimaro Shimura
Submarine 707R (OAV) as Senta Umino
Sukisho (TV) as Hiromu
Super GALS (TV) as Naoki Kuroi; Gori (ep 43)
Tales of Agriculture (TV) as Tadayasu Sawaki
Tantei Gakuen Q (TV) as Masashi Tominaga (ep 29)
The Big O (TV) as Jeff Meyers
The Twelve Kingdoms (TV) as Hakuchi (ep 21,23); Suguru Takasato (ep 15,20)
The World of Narue (TV) as Kazuto Iizuka
Thunder Jet (TV) as Toramaru
Tide-Line Blue (TV) as Keel
Tokyo Majin (TV) as Ryouichi Karasu
Tokyo Mew Mew (TV) as Quiche
Welcome to the NHK (TV) as Kaoru Yamazaki
Yoiko (TV) as Kenji Amimoto
Yomigaeru Sora - RESCUE WINGS - (TV) as Kotaro Kumata (ep 7,8); Takefumi Inoue (ep 6)
Yu-Gi-Oh! (TV) as Hamada Haiyama (ep 7)
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Five ways to become a seiyū
By looking at the career of today's most popular seiyū, the vast majority of them became famous treading one of the following five paths:
1.From Broadcasting Drama Troupe member
Trained by Broadcasting Drama Troupes, they specialized in roles requiring voice acting other than announcing, particularly radio drama acting.
Former members of the Tokyo Broadcasting Drama Troupe include Ryō Kurusawa, Kazue Takahashi, Masato Yamanouchi, Hisashi Katsuta, Akira Nagoya and Kiyoshi Kawakubo.
Examples of seiyū coming from privately funded drama troupes are Tōru Ōhira and Tadashi Nakamura from the Tokyo Radio Broadcasting Drama Troupe (ラジオ東京放送劇団, Rajio Tōkyō Hōsō Gekidan?)), Junpei Takiguchi, Nobuo Tanaka, Mariko Mukai.
Local broadcasting stations also helped many seiyū in the early stages of their careers, before the television age and the advent of foreign drama series concentrated most of the seiyū business in the Tokyo area. Some examples include the aforementioned Genzō Wakayama from NHK's Sapporo Broadcasting Drama Troupe (札幌放送劇団, Sapporo Hōsō Gekidan?), Kenji Utsumi from NHK's Kyūshū Broadcasting Drama Troupe (九州放送劇団, Kyūshū Hōsō Gekidan?)) and Jōji Yanami from RKB's Mainichi Broadcasting Drama Troupe (毎日放送劇団, Mainichi Hōsō Gekidan?)).
2.From child actor
Some seiyū are talented middle-school children who joined juvenile theatrical companies (Himawari Company, Komadori Group) and honed their acting skills with them, then took up a career as full-time seiyū after graduating from high school.
The first to follow this path include Ryūsei Nakao, Tōru Furuya, Shūichi Ikeda, Yoku Shioya, Hiromi Tsuru, Miina Tominaga and Katsumi Toriumi (the first two debuting while still in middle-school but continuing only after graduating).
More recent seiyū include Daisuke Namikawa, Maaya Sakamoto, Mayumi Iizuka, Akeno Watanabe, Saeko Chiba, Yūka Nanri, Kaori Nazuka.
There have been cases of young people who started appearing in seiyū roles while still in middle-school. Miyu Irino, Eri Sendai, Ayaka Saitō, Aya Hirano, Subaru Kimura and Miyū Tsuzurahara are a few examples.
3.From theatre actor
Sometimes theatre actors, whether they be in high school, specialization schools, university or having just graduated, are scouted by people in the anime industry to become seiyū. This happens to actors affiliated with the major Shingeki theatre companies, which include the Bungaku Company, the Seinen Company, the Troupe Pleiades, the Theatrical Group EN and Theatre Echo. Actors performing in minor theatres may sometimes be spotted by the theatre's sound production staff or by managers affiliated with seiyū management agencies. It is also common for actors affiliated with seiyū-led theatre companies, such as Nachi Nozawa's Rose Company or Kaneta Kimotsuki's 21st Century Fox Company, to become seiyū themselves.
To name a few, Romi Paku, spotted by animation creator Yoshiyuki Tomino, Fumiko Orikasa, graduated from the Super Eccentric Theatre, and talents discovered in local college theatre groups by Kazuya Tatekabe: Sanae Kobayashi, Gō Aoba, Tetsu Shiratori, Akino Murata and Rieko Takahashi.
Worthy of note is Hitomi Nabatame's career. Shortly after entering the Dorikan Club, a group of seiyū in the making, part of the aniradio program SOMETHING DREAMS Multimedia Countdown (SOMETHING DREAMS マルチメディアカウントダウン, SOMETHING DREAMS Maruchimedia Kauntodaun?, shortened to ドリカン Dorikan) on radio station Nippon Cultural Broadcasting, she showed so much potential that she earned herself a role in Maburaho right after graduating from the seiyū training school she was attending, while also performing as theatre actress.
4.From seiyū training school student
Many seiyū made their debut after attending seiyū training schools for several years after graduating from high school, specialization schools or university, or even just between school terms, and learnt the trade by observation. This is the path most young people who watch anime and want to become a seiyū take. This is probably the easiest path at its beginning, but breakthrough chances are very slim. For example, each school affiliated with the Yoyogi Animation Academy has a seiyū talent department with hundreds of new students each year, but only a very small minority of them manage to become a seiyū after graduating. Many who do not make it enter a different seiyū training school and try again.
People who made it in the past include Megumi Hayashibara, Kōichi Yamadera, Kikuko Inoue, Kotono Mitsuishi and Toshiyuki Morikawa. More recent examples are Ai Shimizu, Rie Tanaka, Yukari Tamura, Mai Nakahara and Kenichi Suzumura.
Some young talents became seiyū after winning nation-wide contests held by magazines or production companies (although they still usually had to attend seiyū training schools after winning the contest to learn the trade). Winners include Asami Sanada, Masumi Asano, Yui Horie, Miyuki Sawashiro and Sakura Nogawa.
5.From a different role in the entertainment world
Junko Iwao and Noriko Hidaka are examples of idols who later took up seiyū roles (the latter having some experience as a child actress). Former "gravure idols" (bikini models) who made a breakthrough as seiyū include Marina Ōno, Ryōka Yuzuki and Chiemi Chiba. Yumi Kakazu and Yuki Matsuoka are two former reporters turned seiyū. Retired owarai sometimes made a comeback as seiyū, like Yūko Saitō. Yūichi Nagashima was very popular as an actor in the role of "Chō", the main character in NHK Educational Channel's Exploring My Town (たんけんぼくのまち, Tanken Boku no Machi?)). Masakazu Morita and Mayuko Aoki, both debuted as the lead characters of Final Fantasy X (ファイナルファンタジーX), are motion actors for video games turned seiyu.
external link:
http://www.usagi.org/~doi/seiyuu/
http://sdb.noppo.com/
http://www.geocities.jp/lesvoixdesanges/
http://hashihime.atspace.com/Hashi_seiyuus.html
http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/people.php
http://www.jade-voice.com/
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History: Seiyū
Voice acting has existed in Japan since the advent of radio. However, it was only in the 1970's that the term seiyū entered popular usage because of the enormously popular anime Space Battleship Yamato. According to a newspaper interview with a voice talent manager, "Since the Yamato boom, the word 'seiyū' has become instantly recognized, before that actors and actresses who introduced themselves as seiyū were often asked, 'You mean you work for Seiyu supermarket?'" [2]
The radio drama era
In 1925, the Tokyo Broadcasting Company (predecessor to the NHK, Japan's public broadcasting system) started radio broadcasts. In that same year twelve students who were specializing in voice-only performances became the first voice actors in Japan when a performance of a radio drama was broadcast. They referred to themselves as seiyū, but in those days the term "radio actor" (ラジオ役者, radio yakusha?) was used by newspapers to refer to the profession.
The next era began in 1941 when the NHK opened a training program to the public in order to prepare actors to specialize in radio dramas. This was called the "Tokyo Central Broadcasting Channel Actor Training Agency" (東京中央放送局専属劇団俳優養成所, Tōkyō Chūō Hōsō Kyoku Senzoku Gekidan Haiyū Yōsei Sho?). Then in 1942 the Tokyo Broadcasting Drama Troupe debuted its first performance. This was the second time that the term "seiyū" was used to refer to voice actors and from this time on, this word was used.
There are several theories as to how the term "seiyū" was coined. One theory is that Oyhashi Tokusaburo, a reporter for the Yoimuri Newspaper, coined the term. Another theory is that Tatsu Ooka, an entertainment programming managing producer for the NHK came up with the term.
At first, seiyū, like those at the Tokyo Radio Drama Troupe and similar companies specialized in only radio dramas; however, with the advent of television, the term took on the additional meaning of one who does dubbing for animation. Television broadcasting aside, when radio was the leading mass medium, actors who played in radio dramas were not without their fans; for example, actors in the Nagoya Radio Drama troupe who played the lead love interest roles often received many fan letters.
[edit] 1960s: First seiyū boom period
In 1961, during the early days of commercial television broadcasting, the Five-Company Agreement (Gosha Agreement) caused the supply of Japanese movies that were available to Japanese television stations to dry up. As a result, in the 1960s many foreign dramas and other foreign programming was imported and dubbed into Japanese language for television broadcast.
At first, the NHK subtitled most foreign shows; however, shows dubbed in the Japanese language soon became the standard. This increased the popularity of seiyū. At the center of the first seiyū boom were actors like Nachi Nozawa, who gained fame by repeatedly dubbing the same foreign actors, in Nozawa's case Alain Delon, Robert Redford, and Clint Eastwood. Because of problems with pay guarantees arising from the Gosha Agreement, cinema actors were prevented from dubbing foreign movies for television. Television actors were also prevented from dubbing because of a similar agreement. This caused studios to turn to actors from the radio age and actors from the Shingeki style of acting. Around this time dubbing of foreign animation was done by Rakugo story tellers, Asakusa comedians, and the like, and seiyū were called "dubbing talents" if they specialized in dubbing, while those giving voice to a character went under the name of "ateshi". It is during this golden age for dubbing that the Tokyo Actors Cooperative Haikyo was founded. Later, Haikyo seiyū managers left and opened their own management agencies.
The first dubbed show broadcast in Japan was an episode of the American cartoon Superman, on October 9, 1955, on KRT (today TBS), and the first non-animated dubbed show broadcast was Cowboy G-Men, again by KRT, in 1956. Both were dubbed live; the first show to be broadcasted with pre-recorded dubbing was The Adventures of Television Boy (テレビ坊やの冒険, Terebi Bōya no Bōken?) on April 8, 1956.
[edit] 1970s: Second seiyū boom period
During the late 1970s, the boom in the animation world allowed seiyū of particularly attractive male anime characters to become extremely popular. Akira Kamiya, Tōru Furuya and Toshio Furukawa were the first to unite into a band, Slapstick, and perform live. Many other seiyū released their own albums. In 1979 radio programs featuring seiyū as DJs such as Animetopia became widely popular, and at around the same time the first anime magazines began to be published. The then editor-in-chief of Animage, Hideo Ogata, was the first to publish editorials on the ongoing transformation of seiyū into idols. Following his lead, the other magazines created "seiyū corners" with information and gossip about seiyū every new issue: this was one of the main causes of young anime fans yearning to become seiyū. This led to a sudden increase in the number of students in seiyū specialized schools, which also grew in number and began to specialize in single fields. For the first time, anime seiyū were young people who grew up dreaming to become exactly that, as opposed to being members of drama troupes or theatre actors who performed as a hobby. This boom lasted roughly until the first half of the 1980s.
[edit] 1980s: An interim period
In 1989 the seiyū of the five main stars of the animated television show Ronin Warriors (Nozomu Sasaki, Takeshi Kusao, Hiroshi Takemura, Tomohiro Nishimura and Daiki Nakamura) formed an all-male singing group called "NG5". The group became popular, to the extent that it was featured as the subject of a special documentary program on MBS. The atypical popularity of NG5, however, did not spread to other seiyū groups.
In this period seiyū production companies also began to provide specialized courses at on-site training schools specifically for training in animation dubbing.
[edit] 1990s: Third seiyū boom period
The 1960s and 1970s booms were centered mainly around general public types of media, such as the TV. In the 1990s a new boom centered around more personal ways of communication, such as radio shows, Original Video Animation, television quizzes, public events and the Internet, gave way to the publication of the first seiyū-specialized magazines, Seiyū Grand Prix and Voice Animage. Seiyū acquired a score of new fans thanks to the radio, and their CD sale figures increased drastically. Concerts began to be held in the bigger halls. While the second boom also saw the seiyū become popular as DJs, this time the recording houses backed the seiyū radio shows as sponsors, and large sums of money began to circulate. Megumi Hayashibara, Hekiru Shiina and Mariko Kōda are the first examples of this new trend. Recording companies and seiyū forming schools began to devise new ways to raise young seiyū to nation-wide popularity, another radical change from the previous booms and one of the cornerstones of the ongoing transformation from seiyū to idol.
When voice acting was introduced in television games, the existence of seiyū became known throughout the entire country. As a consequence, the same seiyū would perform in a series of events related to the television game world, making appearances and participating to radio programs based on the television games to attract the fanbase.
In the second half of the 1990s, the boom in the animation world led to the sudden increase of anime shown in the Tokyo area. With the newly acquired ability to connect to the Internet, gathering information on their favourite seiyū became very easy for fans, and seiyū began to appear in Internet-based radio shows. Rather than just the spur of the moment, these changes appear to have become solidly established.
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Actors and seiyū
Initially, dubbing and doing voice-overs was nothing more than the performance of an actor who used only his voice. When doing this job, they would usually be called "voice actors" (声の俳優, koe no haiyū?). For convenience, the term was shortened to a new compound consisting of the first and last kanji to make seiyū (声優, seiyū?). It was only after the seiyū booms however that this word became widespread. For this reason, elderly voice actors resent being called seiyū, because during their time the term had a different (and minimizing) connotation. For example, the renowned Chikao Ōtsuka, who dubbed Charles Bronson among others, was quoted in a special issue of Animage saying "We are actors. Even if a performance only requires the use of our voice, we still remain actors, and it is therefore incorrect to refer to us as just voice actors, isn't it?". He was strongly opposed to the new trend of separating actors and seiyū, even in the face of emerging seiyū like Genzō Wakayama, who only learned how to act using their voice and never set foot in a theater.
There are three main causes that set seiyū and actors apart.
1. Their professional upbringing by the Tokyo Broadcasting Drama Troupe (東京放送劇団, Tōkyō Hōsō Gekidan?), formed by NHK and other private networks during the golden age of radio dramas.
2. The increasing popularity of the television: due to the lack of Japan-made movies and dramas, TV networks were forced to air foreign shows, and that demand for seiyū raised exponentially.
3. The boom in the anime world market, which produced a wave of young talents whose aim was to become a seiyū rather than an actor.
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Seiyū...
A seiyū, seiyuu or seiyu (声優, seiyū, seiyuu or seiyu?) is a Japanese voice actor. Seiyū work in radio, television and movies, perform voice-overs for non-Japanese movies, provide narration, and work as anime and video game character actors. Conventional usage among English-speaking fans is to use "seiyū" to refer to the Japanese actor and "voice actor" when speaking of a character actor in a series translated into English.
Japan currently produces 70% of the animated series in the world.[1] Because the animation industry in Japan is so prolific, seiyū are able to achieve fame on a national level and are able to have full time careers performing voice overs. Seiyū are able to take greater charge of their careers than character actors can in other countries. Japan also has the institutions to support the career path, with around 130 seiyū schools [2] and troupes of voice actors that work for a specific broadcast company or talent.
Seiyū frequently branch into music, and many have also branched into live action film and television acting as well. They often attract their own appreciators and fans who will watch shows specifically in order to hear that actor or actress. Popular seiyū, especially female seiyū such as Kikuko Inoue, Megumi Hayashibara, and Aya Hisakawa, often have devoted fan clubs that have memberships from all over the world.
"CV" is a common notation used in Japanese publications to denote a "character voice" in one of the roles listed above. This term was first used in the 1980s in anime magazines such as Animec and Newtype.
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who's Mikan???
Fumiko ORIKASA as Mikan
Family name (in kanji): 折笠
Given name (in kanji): 富美子
Date of birth: 1974-12-27
Hometown: Taito, Tokyo, Japan
Blood type: A
Hobbies:
Shopping
Skills & Abilities:
Dance
Website:
Official Orikasa Fumiko website (Japanese)
Non-anime roles:
Bernandette Simmons in "Sakura Wars Side Story: Mysterious Paris" (VG/PS2) (Japanese)
Cecille in "Luminous Arc" (VG) (Japanese)
Chie Rumiko in "Higurashi Daybreak" (Doujin Game) (Japanese)
Chisato in "Suikoden V" (VG) (Japanese)
Chise in "Saishuu Heiki Kanojo" (VG) (Japanese)
Eren in "Kingdom Under Fire: The Crusaders" (VG)
Firiel Dee in "Nishi no Yoki Majo - Astraea Testament" (drama CD) (Japanese)
Gabriela Montez (voiceover for Vanessa Anne Hudgens) in "High School Musical" (live-action movie) (Japanese)
Hoshina Airi in "MeruPuri: Märchen Prince " (Drama CD)
Kim Hotaru in "RahXephon Sokyu Gensokyoku" (VG) (Japanese)
Komomo in "Dear" (drama cd) (Japanese)
Liselsia Cesarini in "Symphonic Rain" (VG) (Japanese)
Meyrin Hawke in "Gundam Seed: Alliance V.S. Z.A.F.T." (PSP) (Japanese)
Miakis in "Suikoden V" (VG) (Japanese)
Nora Easton in "C.S.I.: Crime Scene Investigation" (live-action TV series) (Japanese)
Norma in "Suikoden V" (VG) (Japanese)
Rukia Kuchiki in "Bleach -Hanatareshi yabou-" (VG)
Saori Kido / Athena in "Saint Seiya Ougon 12 Kyu Hen" (Radio Drama)
Saori Kido/Athena in "Saint Seiya The Hades" (VG)
Shelk Luui in "Dirge Of Cerberus - Final Fantasy VII" (VG) (Japanese)
Toma in "Suikoden V" (VG) (Japanese)
Yoko in "Tantei Jinguuji Saburo: Kind of Blue" (VG)
Staff in:
Animal Yokocho (TV) : Theme Song Lyrics (ED2), Theme Song Performance (ED2)
Ichigo Mashimaro (OAV) : Theme Song Performance (OP/ED)
MapleStory (TV) : Theme Song Performance (ED)
Pani Poni Dash! (TV) : Theme Song Performance (OP)
Petite Princess Yucie (TV) : Theme Song Performance (OP)
Strawberry Marshmallow (TV) : Theme Song Performance (OP/ED)
Tsukihime, Lunar Legend (TV) : Theme Song Performance (ED)
Cast in:
6 Angels (movie) as Maki Aoba
Agatha Christie no Meitantei Poirot to Marple (TV) as Mabel West
Animal Crossing (movie) as Sari (Margie)
Aquarian Age the Movie (OAV) as Misuzu Itsukushima
Ashita no Nadja (TV) as Sylvie Alte
ATASHIn'CHI (movie) as Mikan
ATASHIn'CHI (TV) as Mikan
Ayakashi Ayashi (TV) as Atoru
Battle Programmer SHIRASE (TV) as Yoriko Yunomi
Black Jack (OAV) as Tsukiko (ep 10)
Bleach (TV) as Rukia Kuchiki
Bleach: Memories in the Rain (OAV) as Kuchiki Rukia
Bleach: Memories of Nobody (movie) as Rukia Kuchiki
Bleach: The DiamondDust Rebellion - Mō Hitotsu no Hyōrinmaru (movie) as Rukia Kuchiki
Bleach: The Sealed Sword Frenzy (OAV) as Kuchiki Rukia
Boogiepop Phantom (TV) as Saki Yoshizawa
Boys Be... (TV) as Sayaka Kamizaki
Chobits (TV) as Yuzuki
Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion (TV) as Shirley Fenette
Denno Coil (TV) as Yasako
Devil May Cry (TV) as Lady
Digimon Tamers (TV) as Ruki Makino
Digimon Tamers Movie 6: The Runaway Digimon Express as Ruki Makino
Digimon Tamers: The Adventurers' Battle (movie) as Ruki Makino
Figure 17 (TV) as Hikaru Shiina
Fullmetal Alchemist (TV) as Lybia (ep 35)
Gad Guard (TV) as Arashi Shinozuka
Gegege no Kitaro (TV 2007) as Sayoko Tsukino (ep 3)
Genma Wars (TV) as Meena
Ghost Stories (TV) as Tomomi Takahashi
Gin-iro no Olynssis (TV) as Airi
Glass Mask (TV 2005) as Sayaka Minazuki
Great Teacher Onizuka (TV) as Azusa Fuyutsuki; Kyoko Sasaki; Kyoko Sasaki; Mikan
Gundam Seed Character Theater (special) as Meyrin Hawke
Haibane Renmei (TV) as Hikari
Hamtaro (TV) as Inatori Sakura
Hell Girl (TV) as Inori Ujiie (ep 19)
Hellsing (OAV) as Seras Victoria
Hellsing (TV) as Seras Victoria
Hidamari no Ki (TV) as Oseki
Higurashi no Naku Koroni Kai (TV) as Chie Rumiko
Ichigo Mashimaro (OAV) as Miu Matsuoka
Inu Yasha (TV) as Enju (Ep 92); Nazuna; Sara-hime (ep 133/134)
Inuyasha the Movie 4: Fire on the Mystic Island as Asagi
Jinki:Extend (TV) as Aoba Tsuzaki
Kaiketsu Zorori (TV) as Princess Else
Kaleido Star (TV) as Marion
Kaleido Star: Good dayo! Goood!! (OAV) as Marion
Kaleido Star: Legend of Phoenix ~Layla Hamilton Story~ (OAV) as Marion
Kaleido Star: New Wings Extra Stage (OAV) as Marion
Kinnikuman Nisei - Ultimate Muscle (TV) as Rinko Nikaidou
Kinnikuman Nisei - Ultimate Muscle 2 (TV) as Rinko Nikaidou
Kinnikuman Nisei: Muscle Ninjin Soudatsu! Choujin Daisensou (movie) as Rinko
Kogepan (TV) as Strawberry
Kyo Kara Maoh! (TV) as Elizabeth (ep. 45)
L/R: Licensed by Royalty (TV) as Leila
Mars Daybreak (TV) as Ester Ein Astrada
Massugu ni Ikou (TV) as Wakatsuki Ikuko
Millennium Actress (movie) as Chiyoko Fujiwara (teen)
Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Destiny (TV) as Meyrin Hawke
Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Destiny Final Plus: The Chosen Future (OAV) as Meyrin Hawke
Mobile Suit Gundam Seed Destiny Special Edition (OAV) as Meyrin Hawke
Naruto Shippūden (movie) as Miroku
Natsuiro no Sunadokei (OAV) as Ligene
NieA_7 (TV) as Chiaki Komatsu
Nishi no Yoki Majo - Astraea Testament (TV) as Firiel Dee
Nodame Cantabile (TV) as Yuiko Miyoshi
One Piece (TV) as Miss Valentine
Onmyou Taisenki (TV) as Madoka (ep 35)
Overman King Gainer (TV) as Karin Boone
Pani Poni Dash! (TV) as Himeko Katagiri
Petite Princess Yucie (TV) as Beth
Pokemon Heroes - Latias & Latios (movie) as Kanon
RahXephon (TV) as Kim Hotaru
Rahxephon: Pluralitas Concentio (movie) as Kim Hotaru
Restol, The Special Rescue Squad (Korean TV) as Mia
Rune Soldier (TV) as Ceresia
SaiKano (TV) as Chise
SaiKano: Another Love Song (OAV) as Chise
Saint Seiya: The Hades Chapter - Inferno (OAV) as Saori Kido / Athena
Samurai 7 (TV) as Kirara Mikumari
Scrapped Princess (TV) as Pacifica Casull; Celia
Shinshaku Sengoku Eiyuu Densetsu Sanada Jyuu Yuushi The Animation (special) as Kaede
Shinshaku Sengoku Eiyuu Densetsu Sanada Jyuu Yuushi The Animation (TV) as Kaede
Shonen Onmyouji (TV) as Kazane (風音)
Space Pirate Captain Herlock The Endless Odyssey (OAV) as Nana
Star Ocean EX (TV) as Westa
Stellvia (TV) as Yayoi Fujisawa
Stratos 4 (OAV) as Karin Kikuhara
Stratos 4 (TV) as Karin Kikuhara
Stratos 4 Advance (OAV) as Karin Kikuhara
Stratos 4 Advance Kanketsuhen (OAV) as Karin Kikuhara
Strawberry Eggs (TV) as Seiko Kasuganomichi
Strawberry Marshmallow (TV) as Miu Matsuoka
The Skull Man (TV) as Maya Kuroshio
Tokko (TV) as Sakura Rokujo
Tokyo Mew Mew (TV) as Iruka (ep 19)
True Love Story (OAV) as Yako Mukai
Tsukihime, Lunar Legend (TV) as Ciel
Turn A Gundam (TV) as Dona (eps 40, 46)
Ultimate Muscle (TV) as Rinko Nikaidou
Vandread (TV) as Meia Gisborn
Vandread Taidouhen (OAV) as Meia Gisborn
Vandread Turbulence (OAV) as Meia Gisborn
Vandread: The Second Stage (TV) as Meia Gisborn
When They Cry - Higurashi (TV) as Rumiko Chie
You're Under Arrest Second Season (TV) as Sena Nakajima
Zatch Bell (TV) as Sheree
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