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'''Tadayoshi Yamamuro''' (山室直儀; born in 1960), sometime incorrectly translated as '''Naoyoshi Yamamuro''', is a Japanese animator and character designer. He was the ''[[Dragon Ball Z]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball GT]]'', and ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' character designer. He is known for his straight style, as opposed to [[Minoru Maeda]]'s more rounded style, and he is recognized as the best animator and illustrator of the [[Dragon Ball (franchise)|''Dragon Ball'' franchise]].
 
'''Tadayoshi Yamamuro''' (山室直儀; born in 1960), sometime incorrectly translated as '''Naoyoshi Yamamuro''', is a Japanese animator and character designer. He was the ''[[Dragon Ball Z]]'', ''[[Dragon Ball GT]]'', and ''[[Dragon Ball Heroes]]'' character designer. He is known for his straight style, as opposed to [[Minoru Maeda]]'s more rounded style, and he is recognized as the best animator and illustrator of the [[Dragon Ball (franchise)|''Dragon Ball'' franchise]].
   

Revision as of 12:43, 21 July 2015

TadayoshiYamamuro2(OKStars)

Tadayoshi Yamamuro in March 2013

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Tadayoshi Yamamuro (山室直儀; born in 1960), sometime incorrectly translated as Naoyoshi Yamamuro, is a Japanese animator and character designer. He was the Dragon Ball Z, Dragon Ball GT, and Dragon Ball Heroes character designer. He is known for his straight style, as opposed to Minoru Maeda's more rounded style, and he is recognized as the best animator and illustrator of the Dragon Ball franchise.

Biography

KatsuyoshiNakatsuru

Tadayoshi Yamamuro at work, in the 1990s

At a young age, Tadayoshi Yamamuro began learning martial arts in a Shaolin Temple. Years later, in 1984, he was hired in Mitsuo Shindō's production company and began working as an in-between animator for the TV adaptation of Akira Toriyama's Dr. Slump manga, Dr. Slump and Arale-chan (from 1986 to 1981). Tadayoshi Yamamuro gain fame working on animated movies such as Angel's Egg (1985) and Laputa: Castle in the Sky (1986). He then worked as an in-between animator and key animator for Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. He became a main character designer for Dragon Ball Z after Minoru Maeda left Toei Animation in November 1992, at the end of the Perfect Cell Saga, a role that he shared with Katsuyoshi Nakatsuru until the end of Dragon Ball GT in November 1997. Yamamuro was animation director for the Dragon Ball Z episodes 122, 127, 133, 137, 143, 147, 152, 157, 162, 168, 173, 185, 200, 206, 232, 242, 249, 255, and 285. For the Dragon Ball GT episodes 13, 19, 25, 31, 40, 42, 48, 52, and 59. And for the new animation produced for Dragon Ball Kai and Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Tenkaichi.

TadayoshiYamamuro

Yamamuro in the 1990s

Tadayoshi Yamamuro worked on the movies Dragon Ball: Mystical Adventure and Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might, and he was the character designer for the Dragon Ball Z movies Broly - The Legendary Super Saiyan, Bojack Unbound, Broly - Second Coming, Bio-Broly, Fusion Reborn, Wrath of the Dragon, The Path to Power, Yo! Son Goku and His Friends Return!!, Plan to Eradicate the Super Saiyans, Episode of Bardock, and Battle of Gods. He also drew cover arts for the movie Dragon Boxes and for video games.

DBKaiPosterArt3

Dragon Ball Kai poster, by Yamamuro

Outside of the anime adaptations of Toriyama's manga series, Tadayoshi Yamamuro worked on Beet the Vandel Buster, Casshern Sins, Digimon, One Piece Film Strong World, Superflat Monogram, and Toriko (since 2011). He is the character designer and chief animation director of the 2008 GeGeGe no Kitaro anime adaptation.

Trivia

  • Tadayoshi Yamamuro once said that his favorite character among those that he designed is Janemba.

Gallery

External links