Naoki Urasawa

Manga artist

Birthday January 2, 1960

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Fuchū, Tokyo, Japan

Age 64 years old

Nationality Japan

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Naoki Urasawa (浦沢 直樹) is a Japanese manga artist and musician.

He has been drawing manga since he was four years old, and for most of his professional career has created two series simultaneously.

The stories to many of these were co-written in collaboration with his former editor, Takashi Nagasaki.

Urasawa has been called one of the artists that changed the history of manga and has won numerous awards, including the Shogakukan Manga Award three times, the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize twice, and the Kodansha Manga Award once.

South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho called him "the greatest storyteller of our time", while Dominican-American writer Junot Díaz proclaimed Urasawa to be a national treasure in Japan.

By December 2021, his various works had over 140 million copies in circulation worldwide, making him one of the best-selling authors of all time.

1982

He ended up submitting manga for their 1982 New Manga Artist Award, which his unpublished work "Return" won.

It was only then that he thought about becoming a professional manga artist.

It was a year after winning the award that Urasawa met Takashi Nagasaki, who would become his longtime editor and collaborator.

1983

After working as an assistant, Urasawa made his professional debut in 1983 with "Beta!", which was published in a special issue of Golgo 13.

He then created the short serialized work Dancing Policeman the following year.

1985

Urasawa's first major work was illustrating the action series Pineapple Army (1985–1988), which was written by Kazuya Kudo.

Urasawa began his first major serialized work, Pineapple Army, in 1985 in the semimonthly Big Comic Original.

He was the illustrator of the series, while Kazuya Kudo was its writer.

1986

The first serial that he wrote and illustrated himself, and his first major success, was the sports manga Yawara! (1986–1993).

While working on Pineapple Army, Urasawa began Yawara! in the weekly Big Comic Spirits in 1986 which he wrote and illustrated himself.

1988

He then illustrated the adventure series Master Keaton (1988–1994), which was written by Hokusei Katsushika and Nagasaki, and created the sports manga Happy! (1993–1999).

It ended in 1988 and was collected into eight tankōbon volumes.

When Pineapple Army ended, Urasawa began Master Keaton for Big Comic Original in November 1988.

He illustrated it, while Hokusei Katsushika wrote it.

1989

It earned him the 1989 Shogakukan Manga Award in the General category.

That same year it was adapted into a live-action film and an anime television series.

1993

It ended in 1993 and was collected into 29 volumes.

Happy! ran from 1993 until 1999 and was collected into 23 volumes.

1994

The thriller Monster (1994–2001) was his first to receive international acclaim and success, which continued with the science fiction mystery 20th Century Boys (1999–2006).

It ended in August 1994 and was collected into 18 volumes.

Following Master Keaton's end, Urasawa began Monster in Big Comic Original in December 1994.

1998

An anime television adaptation began in 1998, before finishing as an original video animation in 2000.

Likewise when Yawara! ended, Urasawa began another solo series in Big Comic Spirits.

2003

Following the acclaimed Pluto (2003–2009), which is a re-imagining of Astro Boy by Osamu Tezuka, one of Urasawa's biggest influences, he and Nagasaki created the mystery series Billy Bat (2008–2016).

2006

It was adapted into two live-action television films in 2006.

2018

After two short series, a sequel to Master Keaton with Nagasaki and Mujirushi: The Sign of Dreams, Urasawa began his currently ongoing Asadora! in 2018.

Urasawa cited Osamu Tezuka as one of his heroes, being particularly fond of his manga Phoenix.

"The Greatest Robot on Earth" and "The Artificial Sun" arcs of Tezuka's Astro Boy were his first experiences with manga at four or five years old.

Around that same age is when he started to draw manga, and at eight he created his first complete story.

Even at a young age, Urasawa saw the gulf between his work and that of a "real manga artist."

He said that he could also identify manga that was "commercialized" and made just for the money, something he did not want to do.

Thus he never thought of becoming a professional manga artist, and graduated from Meisei University with a degree in economics.

When Urasawa visited Shogakukan to apply for a business job, he decided to bring some manga he had drawn out of curiosity.

An editor from Weekly Shōnen Sunday did not give him the time of day, but the head editor of Big Comic Original happened to walk by and felt the work was better suited for Big Comic Spirits, and took Urasawa to their editorial department.