Akira Tsuburaya Explained

Akira Tsuburaya
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:12 February 1944
Birth Place:Tokyo, Japan[1]
Alma Mater:Tamagawa University
Occupation:Film and television producer
Years Active:1965–2006
Father:Eiji Tsuburaya
Mother:Masano Araki
Module:
Kanji:円谷 粲
Kana:つぶらや あきら
Romaji:Tsuburaya Akira

is a former Japanese film and television producer. The third son of special effects director Eiji Tsuburaya, he began his career at his father's company Tsuburaya Productions while at Tamagawa University in 1966. Tsuburaya had an extremely prolific five-decade career in film and television, during which he worked on over 80 productions.

Life and career

Akira Tsuburaya was born on February 12, 1944 in Tokyo.[1] He was the third son of special effects pioneer Eiji Tsuburaya and his wife Masano Araki as well as their first child to be baptized. While at Tamagawa University, Tsuburaya began his career working in film at his father's company Tsuburaya Productions on the domestically popular Ultra Q episode, "Kanegon's Cocoon" as an assistant director in 1965. He subsequently returned to work as an assistant director on the Ultra Q episode "Challenge From the Year 2020" and the following year worked in the same position on Ultraman (TV 1966-1967). He later served as the chief assistant director of special effects on Ultraseven (TV 1967) and was also an assistant director on Operation: Mystery! (1968).

Tsuburaya began working as a producer in 1970, receiving his first credit in that position on Chibira-kun in the same year.[1] He continued working at Tsuburaya Productions on productions such as Triple Fighter (1972), Fireman (1973) Army of the Apes, Pro-Wrestling Star Aztecaser Ultraman Leo (both 1974), Dinosaur War Izenborg (1977), and Star Wolf (1978) until leaving the company in June 1989.[1]

In July 1989, a month after leaving, he established Tsuburaya Eizo.[1] He would serve as executive producer for many television shows by his company, including Babel II: Beyond Infinity (2001) and Genma Wars: Eve of Mythology (2002).[2] In February 2002, he rejoined Tsuburaya Productions and became the head of the production department as vice president. In May 2005, however, he left Tsuburaya Productions once again and was appointed director of Tsuburaya Dream Factory that June.[1]

Filmography

YearTitlePositionNotes
1966Ultra QAssistant directorEpisodes "Kanegon's Cocoon" &<br>"Challenge From the Year 2020"
UltramanFour episodes
1967UltrasevenOf special effects
1968Operation: Mystery!
1970Chibira-kunProducer
1972Triple Fighter[3]
1973Fireman
1974Army of the Apes
Ultraman Leo
1976Star of Pro-Wrestling Aztecaser
Kyoryu Tankentai Born Free
1977Dinosaur War Izenborg
1978Dinosaur Corps Koseidon
Star WolfExecutive producer
1979White Hand, Beautiful Hand, Cursed Hand
1980Bizarre! Golden-eyed Girl
Vengeful Spirit! Sneering Doll
Bokura Yakyu Tanteidan
1981All Robots Who Can Feel Gather
1982Princess Sakurako, the Evil Spirit
Cute Demon
Midare Karakuri
1983In the Eye of the Devil
The Legendary Ghost Cat
Picture Book of Sweets
The Lost Honor of Natsuko Aizawa
Adventurous Trip to the End of the Universe
1984Cursed Mannequin Doll
Popular Kaiju Parade
Two Women
1985The Night I Died
Demon WithinProducer
1986The SamuraiExecutive producer
1987Fear of 3:00 AM
1988Sorry for the Wait! The Complete Works of Ultraman
Office Love
1989Pursue the 7 Mysteries of Ultraman!
Decision! Best Ten of Ultraman
1990Superman Detective Schwatch
Producer
1991Crystal Blue ShadowExecutive producer
Yōka Mandragora's Counterattack
Skyscraper HuntingPlanner
MikadroidProducer
1993Legendary Fairy Woman, Siren 1Planner
1994Legendary Fairy Woman, Siren 2
1995Corporate Warrior Yamazaki
Prisoner Maria: The MovieProducer
Female Prisoner Executioner Maria 2
White Coat of Amazoness
Legendary Fairy Woman, Siren 3
1996Heisei Shameless AcademyExecutive producer
Legendary Fairy Woman, Siren 4Planner
1997The Messiah from the Future
Devil SummonerExecutive producer
1998I Want to Play and Live for the Rest of My LifePlanner/Acting role
Kachiri the LocksmithExecutive producer
The Mysterious Transfer StudentPlanner
Neptune in Dotsuki Dotsukare
Women Who Slept with BubblesProducer
Informant (Chikuri) Maru Backstory InvestigationExecutive producer
1999Danger de mortPlanner
The Man Who Shot Don
2000Būba SenseiExecutive producer
ChinpiraProducer
2001STAR BOWSExecutive producer
Zombie SnakePlanner
2002Wild 7: anotherExecutive producer
Barom-1
Genma Wars: Eve of Mythology
Beast Fighter
Demon Lord Dante
Got Mars
Babel II
Submarine Super 99
Gun Frontier
Cosmo Warrior Zero
Fortune Dogs
2004Eko Eko AzarakProducer
Space Symphony Maetel
~Galaxy Express 999 Gaiden~
Mysterious Case Special Investigation Team
S.R.I Laughing Fire Daruma Man
Executive producer
2005Kazuo Umezu's Horror TheaterPlannerSix-part film
2006A Chain of Cursed Murders
Cat Eyed Boy[4]
2008Bringing Godzilla Down to SizeInterviewee[5]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 円谷夢工房. Profile Page. Tsuburaya Dream Factory. April 5, 2023. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20230405081950/http://www.tsuburaya-yume.co.jp/profile.html. April 5, 2023. Japanese.
  2. Web site: Akira Tsuburaya. Anime News Network. April 6, 2023.
  3. Web site: 円谷粲の主な作品リスト. List of major works by Akira Tsuburaya. Tsuburaya Dream Factory. April 5, 2023. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20230405081950/http://www.tsuburaya-yume.co.jp/profile.html. April 5, 2023.
  4. Web site: 猫目小僧. Cat Eyed Boy. Eiga.com. April 6, 2023. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20230406042304/https://eiga.com/movie/41678/. April 6, 2023.
  5. Web site: INTERVIEW: BRINGING GODZILLA DOWN TO SIZE- PART 1. SciFi Japan. April 6, 2023.