Thumbelina: A Magical Story | |
Ja Kanji: | おやゆび姫物語 |
Ja Romaji: | Oyayubi Hime Monogatari |
Genre: | Adventure, fantasy |
Type: | TV Series |
Director: | Hiromitsu Morita |
Producer: | Ippei Onimaru |
Music: | Kouji Murakami |
Studio: | Nippon Animation |
Network: | TV Tokyo |
First: | September 30, 1992 |
Last: | March 31, 1993 |
Episodes: | 26 |
Episode List: |
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is a Japanese anime series produced by Enoki Films and adapted from the original 1835 Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale "Thumbelina" by Akiyoshi Sakai. It premiered in Japan on TV Tokyo on September 30, 1992, and ran for twenty-six episodes until its conclusion on March 31, 1993.
The series was edited into an eighty-minute film and released in North America on VHS by Starmaker Entertainment in 1993. In 2006, Digiview Entertainment re-released the Starmaker film to DVD.
Unable to control her mischievous tomboyish young daughter Maya, an exhausted mother seeks the guidance of an old witch living on the edge of town. The witch gives this mother a magical copy of the fairy tale "Thumbelina" and tells her to read this to Maya.
Later, when her mother falls asleep, Maya shrinks and is pulled inside the world of the book. A good witch appears and tells her that she is in her mother's dream world and that in order to return to normal, she must find a way to wake up her mother. To do this, she must travel to a faraway southern land meet to the Crystal Prince, who will help her reach home.
During her journey Maya faces many trials and hardships; along the way she befriends members of the dream world, who band together to help her reach the land of the South.
Character | Original | English (uncredited) |
---|---|---|
Mika Kanai | Patricia Parris | |
Yōko Asagami | Mona Marshall | |
Fushigi Yamada | ||
Mami Matsui | Barbara Goodson | |
Noriko Uemura | ||
Toshiya Ueda | Jan Rabson | |
Satoko Munakata | Mona Marshall | |
Yōko Asagami | ||
Eiko Yamada | ||
Yokoo Mari | Barbara Goodson | |
Masako Nozawa | ||
Hikaru Midorikawa | Doug Stone | |
Issei Futamata | ||
Katsumi Suzuki | ||
Crystal Prince | Akira Ishida | Jan Rabson |
Shadow Prince | Nobutoshi Hayashi | |
Narrator | Yōko Asagami |
Produced by Enoki Films and adapted from the original Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale Thumbelina by Akiyoshi Sakai, it premiered in Japan on TV Tokyo on September 30, 1992, and ran for twenty-six episodes until its conclusion on March 31, 1993.
The series was licensed for release in North America by Starmaker Entertainment, which released the series to VHS format under the name Thumbelina on December 16, 1993. The Starmaker release was heavily edited, with director Jim Terry reducing the series to an eighty-minute film.[1] [2] On May 9, 2006, Digiview Entertainment re-released the Starmaker version to Region 1 DVD as Thumbelina: A Magical Story. The full series is also licensed for regional language releases in Colombia by Centauro Comunicaciones and in Italy by Italia 1 which broadcast the Italian dub on its channel.
The series uses two pieces of theme music, one opening and one ending theme, both performed by Yuki Matsura. The opening theme is while the ending theme is .
Title | Original Airdate |
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. Jonathan Clements . Helen McCarthy . The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917 . limited . 2001-09-01 . Stone Bridge Press . Berkeley, California . 1-880656-64-7 . 47255331 . 399 . 1st . Helen McCarthy .