Takao Saito | |
Birth Date: | 3 November 1936 |
Birth Place: | Wakayama Prefecture, Japan |
Occupation: | Manga artist |
Years Active: | 1955–2021 |
Known For: | Golgo 13 |
was a Japanese manga artist,[1] although he rejected the term and considered his work gekiga.[2] He was best known for Golgo 13, which has been serialized in Big Comic since 1968, making it the oldest manga still in publication.[3] [4] Golgo 13 holds the Guinness World Record for "Most volumes published for a single manga series" and, in accordance with Saito's wishes, it continues to be serialized following his death from pancreatic cancer in September 2021. Saito won several awards in his 66-year career, including the Shogakukan Manga Award twice, and received the Medal with Purple Ribbon and Order of the Rising Sun from the Japanese government for his contributions to the arts.
Born in Nishiwasa city (now Wakayama city), Saito's family moved to Osaka soon after and opened a barbershop.[5] He did not know he was born in Nishiwasa until he was 43 years old.[6] After his father left the family to become a photographer, his mother raised Saito and his four siblings alone while working as a hairdresser.[5] After graduating from junior high school in 1950, Saito worked at the family barbershop and took it over in 1952.[5]
Having always been known as a skilled artist, Saito drew in his spare time and created his first manga Baron Air in 1955.[6] [5] After having him spend a year rewriting it, rental-manga magazine publisher Hinomaru Bunko released it in 1956. That same year, Saito quit the family business to focus on manga, an act that angered his mother so much, that she never picked up one of his works for the rest of her life.[5] Under the guidance of manga artist Masami Kuroda, he moved to Tokyo in 1958. In 1959, Saito co-founded the in Tokyo with seven other artists, including Yoshihiro Tatsumi and Masahiko Matsumoto, in order to spread gekiga.[7] Since April 1960, he has run Saito Production, a company with currently 19 employees.
Saito entered the mainstream manga industry in 1963 with 007, an adaptation of Ian Fleming's James Bond novels for Shogakukan's Boy's Life magazine.[5] He started Golgo 13 in Shogakukan's Big Comic magazine in 1968 and serialized it continuously until his death. With the publication of volume 201 in July 2021, it was certified as holding the Guinness World Record for "Most volumes published for a single manga series."[8] In 2013, Saito said "The manga has continued so long that it is no longer the property of the author; it belongs to the readers."[9] It has been adapted into two live-action films, one animated film, an OVA, an anime TV series, and several video games. In 1971 Saito also started to give courses in drawing manga.
Saito illustrated an adaptation of Shōtarō Ikenami's Onihei Hankachō novel series that has been continuously serialized in Leed Publishing's Comic Ran magazine since 1993, although a mistake by the editorial department resulted in the September 2019 issue becoming the first in 25 years to not include a chapter.[10] He initially created it based on scripts by Sentarō Kubota (volumes 1–40), then on scripts by Kusumi Ohara from volume 40 until 53, when Ohara was joined by Kaori Moriyama.
JManga released digital English versions of several of Saito's series, including Onihei Hankachō, Barom-1, Japan Sinks and Doll: The Hotel Detective.[11] [12]
Saito said he suffered retinal detachment at the age of 28 and was diagnosed as diabetic at 48.[13] He was a close friend of fellow manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori.
Saito died of pancreatic cancer at 84 on September 24, 2021.[14] His death was announced five days later by Shogakukan, along with his wish that Golgo 13 continue on without him. The Saito Production group of manga creators continues its publication with the assistance of the Big Comic editorial department.[14] Leed Publishing later announced that Onihei Hankachō will also continue per Saito's wishes.[15]
Saito was a director at, a publishing company spun-off from his Saito Production.[16] It was founded in November 1974 and Saito's older brother was its president and CEO until his death in 2016. Following his brother's death, his brother's eldest son took over.[17] In addition to many other products, Leed jointly publishes the Golgo 13 tankōbon volumes with Shogakukan.
In 1976, Saito won the 21st Shogakukan Manga Award in the General category for Golgo 13.[18]
In 2002, he and Golgo 13 won the Grand Prize at the Japan Cartoonists Association Awards.[19]
In 2003, the Japanese government gave Saito the Medal with Purple Ribbon for his contributions to the arts.[20]
In 2005, Golgo 13 was one of two winners of the Special Judges Award at the 50th Shogakukan Manga Awards.[18]
In 2009, Saito was among the 158 manga artists invited to celebrate the 50th anniversary of both Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday magazine and Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine at the Tokyo Imperial Hotel.[21] [22]
In 2010, the Japanese government gave Saito the Order of the Rising Sun, 4th Class, Gold Rays with Rosette.[23]
In 2013, over 300 people attended an event at the Tokyo Imperial Hotel to celebrate 45 years of Golgo 13, including Deputy Prime Minister of Japan Tarō Asō.[24]
In 2017, Saito received the Iwate Hometown Special Manga Award at the 7th Iwate Manga Awards for having a residence in Hanamaki, Iwate and including a character from the prefecture in Golgo 13.[25]
In January 2018, he received the Wakayama Prefecture Cultural Award from his birth prefecture.[6]
In 2019, Saito was honored by the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly for his contributions to the arts as a meritorious resident of Tokyo.[26] That year he was also awarded the Special Prize from the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize committee for his contributions to manga over the decades.[27]
On October 6, 2021, the Japanese government decided to confer the Senior Sixth Rank to Saito posthumously.[28]
The Saito Takao Gekiga Cultural Foundation established the in 2017 for "outstanding works" created using the division of labor system Saito employed of separating the writing and illustrating of manga.[29] First awarded in January 2018, it is given to the scenario writer, illustrating artist, and editor/editorial department of the winning manga. The prize given is called the "Golgo 13 Trophy," and winners in the writer and artist categories also receive 500,000 yen (about US$4,530). Only professional manga editors can submit nominations. Nominated manga must target adult readers and be completely original works, not adaptations.[30] In addition to Takao Saito (until his death), Ryoichi Ikegami, Jūzō Yamasaki and writer Masaru Sato have served on every final selection committee. Takashi Nagasaki has been on each committee following his winning the first year under the pen name Richard Woo. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan, the fourth Saito Takao Awards presented a Special Award to Buronson for his 48 years in manga and announced that works nominated for that year would instead be treated as nominees for the following year.[31]
Year | Title | Writer | Illustrator | Editor(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Abracadabra ~Ryōki Hanzai Tokusōshitsu~ | Nakayama, Hirai (Big Comic Original) | [32] | ||
2019 | Issak | Shinji Makari | Double-S | Hitoshi Arai | [33] |
2020 | Reiri | Daisuke Muroi | Takafumi Sawa | [34] | |
2021 | Not awarded due to COVID-19 pandemic; Buronson was awarded a "Special Award". | ||||
2022 | Shrink ~Seishinkai Yowai~ | Jin Nanami | Tsukiko | Naohiro Yamasato | [35] |
2023 | Kēki no Kirenai Hikō Shōnen-tachi | Koji Miyaguchi | Suzuki Masakazu | Tomoaki Iwasaka | [36] |
2024 | Abura | Number 8 | Sakuzo Baku | Sho Kobayashi, Shinpei Wada | [37] |