Masako Nozawa | |
---|---|
野沢 雅子 | |
Born | |
Other names | Masako Tsukada (塚田 雅子) |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1939–present[1] |
Agent | Aoni Production |
Notable work |
|
Height | 153 cm (5 ft 0 in)[2] |
Spouse | Masaaki Tsukada |
Masako Nozawa (野沢 雅子, Nozawa Masako, born October 25, 1936) is a Japanese actress and narrator. Throughout her life, she has been affiliated with Production Baobab, 81 Produce and self-owned Office Nozawa; she is also affiliated with Aoni Production. Her late husband, Masaaki Tsukada, was also a voice actor.
Nozawa is the voice of Son Goku, Son Gohan, & Son Goten in the popular anime franchise Dragon Ball. She has also voiced Tetsurō Hoshino (Galaxy Express 999) and Kitarō (GeGeGe no Kitarō, first and second series and Hakaba Kitarō). In addition, she has also voiced two separate characters named "Hiroshi"; a character in Dokonjō Gaeru, and the characters known in the U.S. as "Pidge" and "Haggar" in Beast King GoLion. She also voiced Doraemon in the 1973 anime, replacing Kōsei Tomita, who voiced the character in the first 26 episodes. In the 1979 anime, she was replaced by Nobuyo Ōyama, however, Nozawa voiced Doraemon again in a 1988 special entitled Early English with Doraemon.
Career
Throughout her career as a voice actress, she has performed many male roles (most notably as all the male members of Son Goku's family in every piece of Japanese Dragon Ball media, with the exception of Raditz), leading Japanese fans to give her the nickname "The Eternal Boy". These days, however, she prefers the roles of elderly woman characters, although she continues to perform other roles (including young boys) occasionally. On April 1, 2006, she resigned from 81 Produce to establish office Nozawa. In 2012, Nozawa closed her Talent Agency. A number of voice actors who were affiliated with her agency went on to affiliate with Media Force. In 2017, it was revealed she had achieved two Guinness World Records; both of which were related to voicing the character Son Goku in Dragon Ball video games for 23 years and 218 days.[3]
Nozawa's first career to play main characters was Kitarō for Gegege no Kitarō. [4] Although Nozawa was disappointed that she couldn't reprise her role of Kitarō for the 1985 anime adaptation due to a rule that voice actors can't play more than one of main characters within the same television station at the same time, she noted that this eventually resulted in her casting of Son Goku for Dragon Ball series.[5]
She has been noted for the Longest video game voice acting career and Voice actor who voiced the same character in a video game for the longest period, holding two Guinness World Records.[6]
Filmography
Anime television series
- 1960s
- Tetsuwan Atom (1963)
- Obake no Q-tarō (1965) (Shin'ichi Ōhara)
- Sally, the Witch (1966) (Tonkichi Hanamura)
- Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro (1968) (Kitaro)
- Star of the Giants (1968) (Baseball boy)
- Cyborg 009 (1968)
- Sabu to Ichi Torimono Hikae (1968)
- Attack No.1 (1969) (Tonan high school captain Higaki)
- Tiger Mask (1969) (Kenta)
- Marine Boy (1969)
- 1970s
- Inakappe Taishō (1970) (Daizaemon Kaze)
- Andersen Stories (1971) (Marco)
- Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro (1971) (Kitaro)
- Dokonjō Gaeru (1972) (Hiroshi)
- Casshan (1973) (Māru)
- Dororon Enma-kun (1973) (Enma-kun)
- Doraemon (1973) (Doraemon, Botako)
- Calimero (1974) (Buta)
- Hoshi no Ko Poron (1974) (All Roles)
- Gamba no Bōken (1975) (Gamba)
- La Seine no Hoshi (1975) (Danton)
- Maya the Bee (1975) (Willy)
- Combattler V (1976) (Ropet, Oreana, Kinta Ichinoki)
- Piccolino no Bōken (1976) (Pinocchio)
- Araiguma Rascal (1977) (Rascal)
- Ore wa Teppei (1977) (Teppei Uesugi)
- Galaxy Express 999 (1978) (Tetsurō Hoshino)
- 1980s
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1980) (Tom Sawyer)
- Kaibutsu-kun (1980) (Tarō Kaibutsu)
- Tsurikichi Sampei (1980) (Sampei)
- Urusei Yatsura (1981) (Kintarō)
- Miss Machiko (1981) (Kenta Ikegami)
- Golion/Voltron (1981) (Hiroshi Suzuishi/Pidge, Honerva/Haggar)
- The Mysterious Cities of Gold (1982) (Esteban)
- Ginga Hyōryū Vifam series (1983) (Kentsu Norton)
- Igano Kabamaru (1983) (Sū Matsuno, young Kabamaru Igano)
- Bumpety Boo (1986) (Bumbo)
- Dragon Ball (1986) (Son Goku)
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1986) (Princess Ozma)
- Ai Shōjo Pollyanna Monogatari (1986) (Polly Harrington)
- Kamen no Ninja Akakage (1987) (Aokage)
- Aoi Blink (1989) (Kakeru)
- Dash! Yonkuro (1989) (Yonkuro Hinomaru)
- Dragon Ball Z (1989) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Bardock, Son Goten, Gotenks, Vegetto)
- 1990s
- Jungle Emperor (1990) (Gibo)
- Dragon Ball Z: Bardock – The Father of Goku (1990) (Bardock, Son Goku)
- Honō no Tōkyūji: Dodge Danpei (1991) (Chin'nen Kobotoke)
- Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks (1993) (Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball GT (1996) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gogeta, Son Goku Jr.)
- Dual! Parallel Trouble Adventure (1999) (Urara Nanjōin)
- Alice SOS (1999)
- 2000s
- Hamtaro (2000) (Ohamuba-san [Auntie Viv], Roko-chan's ["Laura"'s] Grandma)
- Love Hina (2000) (Hina Urashima)
- Kindaichi Case Files (2000) (Tomoyo Konta)
- One Piece (2001) (Doctor Kureha)
- Digimon Tamers (2001) (Guilmon, Dukemon, Narrator)
- A Little Snow Fairy Sugar (2001) (Regina Bergman)
- Case Closed (2001) (Furuyo Senma)
- Rockman EXE Beast+ (2002) (Electel Mama)
- Mirmo! (2003) (Kinta)
- Digital Monster X-Evolution (2005) (Dukemon)
- Pokémon: Advanced (2005) (Masamune)
- Tsubasa Chronicle (2005) (Kaigyo)
- Kirarin Revolution (2006) (Grandmother)
- Love Get Chu (2006) (Takemiya-sensei)
- Naruto (2006) (Old Woman) episode 187–188, (Garrod Ran) OVA
- Digimon Savers (2007) (Dukemon)
- Hatara Kizzu Maihamu Gumi (2007) (Gaudi)
- Hakaba Kitaro (2008) (Kitaro)
- Cross Game (2009) (Nomo)
- Dragon Ball Kai (2009) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Bardock, Son Goten, Gotenks, Vegetto)
- Marie & Gali (2009) (Marie Curie)
- Shugo Chara! Shugo Chara!! Doki- Episode 75 (2009) (Maruyama Haruki)
- 2010s
- Yumeiro Patissiere (2010) (French Chairwoman)
- Keroro Gunso (2011) (Orara)
- Nichijou (2011) (Frill-necked lizard in episode 10)
- Tanken Driland (2012) (Bonny)
- One Piece (2013) (Goku, Gohan, Goten)
- Toriko (2013) (Goku, Gohan, Goten)
- Ping Pong (2014) (Obaba)
- Dragon Ball Super (2015) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gotenks, Goku Black, Vegetto)
- Seiyu's Life! (2015) (Herself)
- Rage of Bahamut (TV series) (2017) (Ryuuzoku Zokuchou)
- Overlord (2018) Rigrit - Episode 01 - Season 2
- GeGeGe no Kitarō (2018) (Medama-oyaji)
- Mr. Tonegawa: Middle Management Blues (2018) Zawa Voice (001) - Episode 24
- Dragon Ball Super: Broly (2018) Son Goku.
- Dragon Ball Heroes (2018) (Son Goku, Son Goku (xeno), tbd)[7]
- Shinya! Tensai Bakabon (2018) Herself - Episode 01
- 2020s
- Digimon Adventure (2020) (Narrator, YukimiBotamon)
- The Foolish Angel Dances with the Devil (2024) (Joe)[8]
Original video animation (OVA)
- Early English with Doraemon (1988) (Doraemon)
- The Hakkenden (1990) (Kamezasa)
- Plan to Eradicate the Saiyans (1990) (Goku, Gohan, Turles)
- Iczer Girl Iczelion (1995) (Iczel)
- Dragon Ball: Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!! (2008) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gotenks)
- Plan to Eradicate the Super Saiyans (2010) (Goku, Gohan, Turles)
- Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock (2011) (Bardock)
Original net animation (ONA)
- Star Wars: Visions - T0-B1 (2021) (T0-B1)
Theatrical animation
- Flying Phantom Ship (1969) (Hayato)
- 30,000 Miles Under the Sea (1970) (Isamu)
- Galaxy Express 999 (1979) (Tetsurō Hoshino)
- Dragon Ball: Curse of the Blood Rubies (1986) (Son Goku)
- Dragon Ball: Sleeping Princess in Devil's Castle (1987) (Son Goku)
- Dragon Ball: Mystical Adventure (1988) (Son Goku)
- Hare Tokidoki Buta (1988) (Yamada-san)
- Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone (1989) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Kiki's Delivery Service (1989) (Tombo's friend with pink shirt and red jacket)
- Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest (1990) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might (1990) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Tullece)
- Kim's Cross (1990) (Kim Sae-Fan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug (1991) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Cooler's Revenge (1991) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Bardock)
- Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler (1992) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13! (1992) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Broly – The Legendary Super Saiyan (1993) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound (1993) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Dragon Ball Z: Broly – Second Coming (1994) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten)
- Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly (1994) (Son Goku, Son Goten)
- Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn (1995) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gogeta, Gotenks)
- Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon (1995) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gotenks)
- Dragon Ball: The Path to Power (1996) (Son Goku)
- Doraemon: Nobita Drifts in the Universe (1999) (Rogu)
- Ojarumaru (2000) (Semira)
- Digimon Tamers: Battle of Adventurers (2001) (Guilmon)
- Digimon Tamers: Runaway Locomon (2002) (Guilmon)
- Doraemon: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom (2002) (Kururimpa)
- Oshare Majo Love and Berry: Shiawase no Mahou (2007) (Headmistress Izabera)
- Asura (2012) (Asura)
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Island of Miracles—Animal Adventure (2012) (Nobisuke)
- Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods (2013) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gotenks)
- Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection 'F' (2015) (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- GAMBA (2015) (Tsuburi)
- Kaze no Yō ni (2016) (Sanpei)
- Kimi no Koe wo Todoketai (2017) (Nagisa's grandmother)
- Yo-kai Watch Shadowside: Oni-ō no Fukkatsu (2017) (Kitaro)
- Pokémon the Movie: Everyone's Story (2018) (Hisui)
- Dragon Ball Super: Broly (2018) (Son Goku, Son Goten, Gogeta, Bardock)
- Weathering with You (2019) (Fortune-teller)
- Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero (2022) (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Son Goten, Gotenks)
- Kitarō Tanjō: Gegege no Nazo (2023) (Medama-oyaji)
Computer and video games
- Battle Stadium D.O.N (Son Goku, Son Gohan)
- Super Robot Wars series (Oreana, Ropet, Cyclaminos)
- Digimon Park (Guilmon)
- Digimon Tamers Battle Evolution (Guilmon)
- Digimon Racing (Guilmon)
- Digimon Battle Chronicle (Guilmon)
- Dragon Ball series (Son Goku, Son Gohan, Bardock, Son Goten, Turles, Vegetto, Gotenks, Gogeta, Goku Black)
- Egg Monster Hero 4 (Four-Dimensional Empress)
- Final Fantasy Type-0 (Commissar, Eumgyeong)
- Kingdom Hearts series (Merryweather)
- League of Legends (Wukong)
- The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (Old Woman)
- PoPoRoGue (Gilda)
- J-Stars Victory VS (Son Goku)
- Jump Force (Son Goku)
Puppet shows
- Nobi Nobi Non-chan (1990–1996) (Tame-kun, Ana-chan's mother, Kitsune's granny)
- Zawa Zawa Mori no Ganko-chan (1996–) (Kero-chan)
Dubbing roles
Live-action
- Babe (2002 NTV edition) (Esmé Hoggett (Magda Szubanski))
- Babe: Pig in the City (2004 NTV edition) (Esmé Hoggett (Magda Szubanski))
- End of Days (2001 TV Asahi edition) (Mabel (Miriam Margolyes))
- The Goonies (1988 TBS edition) (Clark, a.k.a., "Mouth" (Corey Feldman))[9]
- Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (Short Round (Ke Huy Quan))[10]
- Last Action Hero (1996 Fuji TV edition) (Danny Madigan (Austin O'Brien))[11]
- Little Fockers (Dina Byrnes (Blythe Danner))[12]
- Meet the Fockers (Dina Byrnes (Blythe Danner))
- Meet the Parents (Dina Byrnes (Blythe Danner))[13]
- Ordinary People (Beth Jarrett (Mary Tyler Moore))
- The Poseidon Adventure (Robin Shelby (Eric Shea))
- Richie Rich (Richie (Macaulay Culkin))
- Switch (Maggie Philbin (Sharon Gless))
- To Kill a Mockingbird (1972 NET edition) (Jem Finch (Phillip Alford))
- Vanishing on 7th Street (James Leary (Jacob Latimore))[14]
Animation
- Sleeping Beauty (1995 Buena Vista edition) (Merryweather)[15]
- Maya the Bee (Willy) (2014 movie)[16]
- Maya the Bee: The Honey Games (Willy)
- The Croods (Gran Crood)[17]
- The Croods: A New Age (Gran Crood)[18]
- Migration (Erin)[19]
Live-action
- Onward Towards Our Noble Deaths (2007, TV) (Kitarō's voice)
- Super Voice World: Yume to Jiyū to Happening (????, DVD)
- Sono Koe no Anata e (2022, Film) (Herself)[20]
- Let's Talk About the Old Times (2022, Film) (Herself)[21]
Tokusatsu
- Ambassador Magma (1967) (Gam's voice in episodes 41 and 42)
- Robot 110-Ban (1977) (Gan-chan's voice)
- Ultraman Story (1984) (young Ultraman Taro's voice)
Radio
- Seishun Adventure: Fūshin Engi (NHK-FM) (Nataku)
CD
- CD Theater: Dragon Quest (Merusera)
- Doraemon Ondō (King Records cover)
Others
- Law of Ueki commercial for Shōnen Sunday (Kousuke Ueki)
- Naruhodo! The World (narration)
- NHK Kyōiku: Kagaku Daisukishi you Jaku (narration)
- Toriko, One Piece and Dragon Ball Z Collaboration Special (Goku, Gohan and Goten)
- Wakasa Seikatsu commercial (narration)
- The Wide Friday Ranking (narration)
Awards
Year | Award | Category | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | 2nd Animation Kobe | Special Award | Won | |
2013 | 7th Seiyu Awards | Achievement Award | Won | |
2017 | Guinness World Records | World Record (Longest time voicing a character in Video Games) | Won | [22] |
26th Japanese Movie Critics Awards | Best Voice Actor | Won | ||
2022 | 45th Japan Academy Film Prize | Distinguished Service Award | Won | [23] |
2023 | 71st Kikuchi Kan Prize | Won | [24] | |
References
- ↑ "野沢雅子、『日本アカデミー賞』会長功労賞受賞「お年玉のような賞をいただいた」". Oricon. Archived from the original on July 28, 2022. Retrieved July 29, 2022.
- ↑ "野沢雅子のプロフィール". ORICON NEWS. Oricon. October 17, 2018. Archived from the original on July 16, 2021. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
- ↑ "Goku Voice Actress Masako Nozawa Earns 2 Guinness World Records". Archived from the original on June 21, 2018. Retrieved December 16, 2017.
- ↑ Voice Actor Bible, 2004, p.27, Ohzora Publishing, ISBN 978-4776790211
- ↑ Nikkan Sports, 2013, "Sunday Heroes and Heroines 845", p.30, The Asahi Shimbun
- ↑ "ギネス世界記録 特別インタビュー:野沢雅子". Archived from the original on May 21, 2021. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- ↑ "Dragon Ball will be receiving a new anime this year for Super Dragon Ball Heroes". May 18, 2018. Archived from the original on May 22, 2018. Retrieved May 30, 2018.
- ↑ "The Foolish Angel Dances with the Devil Anime Unveils 2 New Cast, January 8 Premiere". Anime News Network. December 3, 2023. Retrieved December 3, 2023.
- ↑ "グーニーズ". Fukikaeru. Archived from the original on July 17, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
- ↑ "インディ・ジョーンズ 魔宮の伝説". Paramount Pictures. Archived from the original on April 13, 2021. Retrieved March 15, 2021.
- ↑ "Dubbed Western-style Theater Columbia 90th Anniversary "Last Action Hero" Deluxe Edition (First Press Limited Edition) (Blu-ray)". Amazon. January 28, 2015. Archived from the original on October 31, 2021. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
- ↑ "ミート・ザ・ペアレンツ3". Kadokawa. Archived from the original on October 28, 2021. Retrieved October 27, 2021.
- ↑ "ミート・ザ・ペアレンツ". Star Channel. Archived from the original on March 30, 2019. Retrieved July 6, 2019.
- ↑ "リセット[吹]". Star Channel. Archived from the original on September 24, 2020. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
- ↑ "眠れる森の美女". The Cinema. Archived from the original on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 30, 2023.
- ↑ "野沢雅子が40年ぶりのウィリー役!「みつばちマーヤの大冒険」長尺予告完成". eiga.com. Archived from the original on February 17, 2020. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
- ↑ "クルードさんちのはじめての冒険". Wowow. Archived from the original on December 6, 2021. Retrieved December 5, 2021.
- ↑ "クルードさんちのあたらしい冒険". NBCUniversal Entertainment Japan. Archived from the original on December 6, 2021. Retrieved December 5, 2021.
- ↑ "羽佐間道夫、野沢雅子、関智一、鈴村健一がイルミネーションの「FLY!」で吹替". Natalie. December 21, 2023. Retrieved December 22, 2023.
- ↑ "声優・内海賢二さんの偉業に追ったドキュメンタリー、9月公開 野沢雅子、神谷明、戸田恵子らが出演". eiga.com. Archived from the original on July 6, 2022. Retrieved July 7, 2022.
- ↑ "時には昔の話を 森山周一郎 声優と呼ばれた俳優". eiga.com. Archived from the original on October 22, 2022. Retrieved October 22, 2022.
- ↑ "野沢雅子:「ドラゴンボール」でギネス認定 「あと100年は続けるから、よろしくな!」". January 31, 2017. Archived from the original on November 18, 2018. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
- ↑ "日本アカデミー賞「孤狼の血2」が最多13の優秀賞、「ドライブ・マイ・カー」は8部門". Natalie. Archived from the original on January 18, 2022. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
- ↑ "『第71回菊池寛賞』東野圭吾、野沢雅子、栗山英樹ら【受賞一覧&受賞理由掲載】". Oricon. October 11, 2023. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
External links
- Official agency profile (in Japanese)
- Masako Nozawa at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Masako Nozawa at IMDb