Kazuo Umezz
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is a Japanese
manga artist A is a comic artist who writes and/or illustrates manga. As of 2006, about 3,000 professional manga artists were working in Japan. Most manga artists study at an art college or manga school or take on an apprenticeship with another artist be ...
, musician and actor. He is among the most famous authors of
horror manga Horror comics are comic books, graphic novels, black-and-white comics magazines, and manga focusing on horror fiction. In the US market, horror comic books reached a peak in the late 1940s through the mid-1950s, when concern over content and the ...
and has been vital for its development since the 1960s.


Life

Umezu was born in Kōya, Wakayama Prefecture, but raised in the mountainous Gojō, Nara Prefecture. His mother motivated him to draw when he was seven years old. His father would tell him local legends about ghost and snake women before going to bed. He was inspired to start drawing manga by reading
Osamu Tezuka Osamu Tezuka (, born , ''Tezuka Osamu''; – 9 February 1989) was a Japanese manga artist, cartoonist, and animator. Born in Osaka Prefecture, his prolific output, pioneering techniques, and innovative redefinitions of genres earned him such ...
's '' Shin Takarajima'' in fifth grade. He was part of a drawing circle with others called "Kaiman Club". In 1955, he published his first manga at the age of 18 with ''Mori no Kyōdai'' based on the fairytale Hansel and Gretel with the kashihon publisher Tomo Book. He would soon shift towards the gekiga movement and publish manga in the kashi-hon industry in Osaka of the time, which would allow him more freedom than serializing his manga in magazines. His specialty was to include paranormal elements in his stories. At the same time, he also started working on shōjo manga; he published in the magazine '' Shōjo Book'' and the kashi-hon anthology ''Niji''. After moving to Tokyo in 1963 due to the decline of the kashihon industry, he developed his specific style, which blended the aesthetics of shōjo manga with grotesque horror visuals. Horror manga like '' Nekome no Shōjo'' and '' Reptilia'' became a hit in the magazine ''
Shōjo Friend was a shōjo manga magazine formerly published by Kodansha, beginning in 1962. Kodansha used the knowledge gained from publishing magazines aimed at young girls, including ''Nakayoshi'' and '' Shōjo Club'', as well as the experience from publi ...
''. In the late 1960s, he also started publishing in shōnen manga magazines and he switched publishing houses, from
Kodansha is a Japanese privately-held publishing company headquartered in Bunkyō, Tokyo. Kodansha is the largest Japanese publishing company, and it produces the manga magazines ''Nakayoshi'', ''Afternoon'', ''Evening'', ''Weekly Shōnen Magazine'' an ...
to Shogakukan, when a new editor asked him to draw something other than horror manga. He became a well established author and was at times working at up to five serials at the same time. In 1974 he won the 20th Shogakukan Manga Award for his series '' The Drifting Classroom'' about a school including its schoolchildren and teachers being teleported into an alternate post-apocalyptic universe. In 1975, Umezu started becoming a public figure also apart from creating manga. He recorded songs based on his horror manga and released them as the solo album ''Yami no Album''. His comedy manga '' Makoto-chan'', which he published from 1976 to 1981 in '' Weekly Shōnen Sunday'', became a hit. The hand gesture "Gwash" from the manga became Umezu's own trademark hand gesture as well in public. In the 1980s and 1990s, he focused on science fiction manga depicting a near future like '' Watashi wa Shingo'' and ''Fourteen''. In 1995, he had to retire from regular publishing due to tendinitis after finishing ''Fourteen''. He then became even more of a public figure, appearing regularly on TV in a red and white striped shirt. He was also famous for the architecture of his candy-striped home in
Kichijōji __NOTOC__ is a neighborhood in the city of Musashino in Western Tokyo, Japan. It is centered on a compact but popular commercial area to the north and south of Kichijoji Station, with a full range of shops, restaurants, bars, and coffee house ...
, inspired by his ''Makoto-chan'' series. In 2011, he released a second music album with his songs. In 2018 he was awarded the Prize for Inheritance at the Angoulême International Comics Festival for the French translation of ''Watashi wa Shingo''. This was the second prize awarded him throughout his career and Umezu had previously been unhappy about the amount of recognition he had gotten for his work. The award motivated him to start working again and he produced a series of 101 paintings based on ''Watashi wa Shingo'', which were exhibited for the first time in 2022 and were his first new work in 27 years.


Themes

Many of his manga feature
intergenerational conflict Intergenerationality is interaction between members of different generations.Klimczuk, Andrzej, ''Intergenerationality, Intergenerational Justice, Intergenerational Policies'', n:S. Thompson (ed.), ''Encyclopedia of Diversity and Social Justice'', ...
between children and adults. The children of the deserted school in ''The Drifting Classroom'' are immediately betrayed by their teachers and need to fight for their own survival. In ''Watashi wa Shingo'', children are the only ones able to communicate and have an emotional connection with an AI computer. Umezu explained that he himself finds the world of children more relatable, as children are much more open to illogical and adaptable in their thinking: "I’m writing about myself in a way. I don’t want to become an adult and 'grow up.'"


Reception and legacy

His works inspired a new generation of horror manga artists. Junji Ito and Toru Yamazaki cite him as one of their biggest influences and Kanako Inuki got her career start in a magazine compiled by him. His reputation gave him the nickname "god of horror manga" (ホラーまんがの神様) in Japanese media. Umezu regularly received complaint letters from parents in the beginning of his career due to his horror visuals and also editors of magazines would ask him to scale down the violence in his imagery. He remarks in an interview: "I was protested but never boycotted. I considered such criticism to be a form of praise." He was critical of watering down horror elements: "Old Japanese folk stories and fairy tales could be unflinchingly brutal. They come from a time when tragedy and carnage was an everyday part of life. Now we have people calling to water them down, which essentially whitewashes history. It’s insulting to the memory of those who suffered to bring us these stories." Academic Tomoko Yamada counts Umezu as one of the shōjo manga artists in the 1950s who contributed to the development of ballet manga with his series ''Haha Yobu Koe'' (1958) and ''Maboroshi Shōjo'' (1959).


Works


Manga


Paintings

* ''Zoku-Shingo Chiisa na Robotto Shingo Bijutsukan'' (ZOKU-SHINGO 小さなロボット シンゴ美術館; 2022)


Films

*''Nekome Kozo'' (anime television series) *''Drifting Classroom'' (movie) *''Blood Baptism'' (movie) *''
Drifting School is a Japanese horror manga series written and illustrated by Kazuo Umezu. It was serialized in the manga magazine ''Weekly Shōnen Sunday'' from 1972 to 1974, and published as collected ''tankōbon'' volumes by Shogakukan. The series follow ...
'' (movie) *'' Long Love Letter: Drifting Classroom'' (TV drama) *''Kazuo Umezu's Horror Theater'' (6-part TV anthology) *''
The Snake Girl and the Silver-Haired Witch is a 1968 Japanese horror film directed by Noriaki Yuasa. The film is about a young girl named Sayuri who is reunited with her estranged family after years in an orphanage, but discovers that her homelife involves an amnesiac mother, her sister ...
'' ("Hebimusume to hakuhatsuma", ) (1968) (Daiei/Kadokawa Pictures) *'' Tamami: The Baby's Curse'' (film) *'' Mother'' (film) (director)


Albums

* ''Yami no Album'' (闇のアルバム; 1975) * ''Yami no Album 2'' (闇のアルバム・2; 2011)


Musicals

In 2016, his manga ''My Name is Shingo'' was adapted into a musical. It stars Mitsuki Takahata and Mugi Kadowaki as the lead characters and is directed and
choreographed Choreography is the art or practice of designing sequences of movements of physical bodies (or their depictions) in which motion or form or both are specified. ''Choreography'' may also refer to the design itself. A choreographer is one who cr ...
by Philippe Decouflé.


Assistants

* Noboru Takahashi *
Robin Nishi Robin may refer to: Animals * Australasian robins, red-breasted songbirds of the family Petroicidae * Many members of the subfamily Saxicolinae (Old World chats), including: **European robin (''Erithacus rubecula'') **Bush-robin **Forest rob ...
* Rumiko Takahashi


References


External links

* (Japanese/English/German) *
Profile
at The Ultimate Manga Page

at The
Lambiek Galerie Lambiek is a Dutch comic book store and art gallery in Amsterdam, founded on November 8, 1968 by Kees Kousemaker (, – Bussum, ), though since 2007, his son Boris Kousemaker is the current owner. From 1968 to 2015, it was located ...
Comiclopedia
''My Name is Shingo''
the Musical {{DEFAULTSORT:Umezu, Kazuo 1936 births Living people Japanese horror writers Manga artists from Nara Prefecture People from Wakayama Prefecture