Toshio Maeda Explained

Birth Date:September 17, 1953
Birth Place:Osaka, Japan
Nationality:Japanese
Area:Manga artist

is an erotic manga artist who was prolific in the 1980s and '90s. Several of Maeda's works have been used as a basis for original video animations (OVA) including La Blue Girl, Adventure Kid, Demon Beast Invasion, Demon Warrior Koji and his most notorious work, Urotsukidōji (Legend of the Overfiend). An interviewer commented that Urotsukidōji "firmly placed him in the history books—in Japan and abroad—as the pioneer of the genre known as hentai, or "perverted".[1]

Early career

Toshio Maeda began reading manga when he was 5 or 6 years old, as well as American comics such as Mighty Mouse, Spider-Man and Batman. He was also a reader of all genres of literature and has said that he read more than 10,000 books before he was 20 years old.[1]

Career

At 16 Maeda left Osaka to go to Tokyo as an assistant to a professional cartoonist. He became interested in manga for adults to avoid all the sexual, political and religious restrictions that were placed on manga for children.[1]

Early in his career, with the likes of Evil Spirit Island and Ashita-e Kick Off, he only provided the illustrations while someone else wrote the text for the manga. He worked as an assistant to fellow manga artist, Kenji Nanba, who himself was a disciple of Takao Saito and helped mentor Maeda into becoming a mangaka.

Maeda is credited with the proliferation of the tentacle rape genre. Maeda's first usage of tentacles in his manga was in 1976, in an experimental short story published in the magazine Special Young Comic titled SEX Tearing. The reason for drawing tentacles in the story was that Maeda was not allowed to draw male genitals.[2]

Maeda's best known series, Urotsukidōji, came out in 1986 and gained popularity abroad. The Erotic Anime Movie Guide (1998) claimed that "No other title apart from Akira has been so influential in the English-language market".[3] Maeda was working for an adult magazine at the time and wanted to create something different in terms of erotica.[1]

Maeda has mentioned that since portraying genitals was illegal in Japan, artists would use any trick they could to get by the censors and he could say that a creature's tentacle was not a penis.[1] Maeda has embraced his role in popularizing the genre and in a blog interview stated that he would like "Tentacle Master" inscribed on his tombstone.[4]

In 1999, Maeda collaborated with Phoenix Entertainment (who previously adapted one of Maeda's works, Gedou Gakuen (or Nightmare Campus, as it is called overseas)) as an executive producer to work on a three episode OVA series, known as Kairaku Satsujin Chōsakan Koji (Sex Murder investigator Koji), also known in the west as Demon Warrior Koji.

Maeda was a Guest of Honor at the Big Apple Anime Fest (BAAF) held in New York City in October 2001. An ANN writer covering the story praised him as "the most influential erotic manga artist in Japan" and called Urotsukidoji "the foundation for the entire 'erotic-grotesque' genre of Japanese anime". Maeda was the Keynote Speaker at the BAAF Symposium and introduced a retrospective of his work.[5] [6]

A motorbike accident in 2001 left Maeda with limited ability in his drawing hand but he continued to use his computer to create characters and write scripts.[3] In 2003, he planned contributions to a Japanese woman's hentai magazine and strove to look at eroticism from a woman's point of view.[1]

In addition to erotic horror, Maeda has done manga in other genres, including sex comedy, BDSM-themed genres, and books targeted at younger readers. He also sometimes draws mecha. As of September 2010, Toshio Maeda has opened his official website, the Tentacle club, where users can sign up and view his full length manga for a small monthly fee of 500 yen. Maeda has also made the opportunity available to the public to come stay at his apartment and have the opportunity to discuss manga, anime and Japan in general with him over a beer for a small fee, together with a tour of Akihabara and various otaku hot spots in Tokyo.[7]

In 2016 Toshio Maeda appeared in the British horror film Spidarlings directed by Selene Kapsaski.[8] [9] In late 2016, he would appear on Portland, Oregon on Thursday, December 8, 2016 from 6 to 9 pm, at Floating World Comics to coincide Fakku's release of Urotsukidoji manga.[10]

Bibliography

Sources

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Manga Artist Interview Series (Part I) Toshio Maeda. Sake-Drenched Postcards. 2010-05-20. January 2003.
  2. Book: Kimi, Rito. The History of Hentai Manga: An Expressionist Examination of Eromanga. FAKKU. 2021. 978-1-63442-253-6. 146.
  3. Web site: Hentai manga to take the world. Tokyo Reporter. 2010-05-20. November 19, 2008.
  4. News: Sexy Beast: The Mysteries of the Giant Pacific Octopus. Kiley. Brendan. The Stranger. 2010-05-20. September 10, 2009.
  5. Web site: BAAF: New Guests of Honor. Anime News Network. 2010-05-20. August 7, 2001.
  6. Web site: BAAF Wrap-up PR. Anime News Network. 2010-05-20. November 14, 2001.
  7. Web site: Maeda. Toshio. Toshio Maeda Official Website. 2017-08-22.
  8. Web site: Collinson. Gary. Troma's LGBT horror musical Spidarlings to premiere in July. Flickering Myth. 2017-08-22. June 14, 2017.
  9. Web site: Spidarlings – Upcoming Horror Musical by Salem Kapsaski. The Independent Voice Ezine. 2017-08-22. May 2015.
  10. Web site: Toshio Maeda to Appear in Portland, Autograph Urotsukidoji Manga to Benefit CBLDF. Anime News Network. December 11, 2020. December 7, 2016.