Satoshi Dezaki
Satoshi Dezaki | |
---|---|
Born | June 26, 1940 |
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation | Anime director, producer, screenwriter |
Satoshi Dezaki (出﨑 哲, Dezaki Satoshi, born June 26, 1940) is an anime director, producer, and screenwriter. After graduating from Tokyo Metropolitan North High School, he attended Hosei University. His younger brother was the late anime director Osamu Dezaki.[1]
Brief history[]
Dezaki was born in Tokyo, Japan. After graduating from high school, he took a position at Toshiba while studying in the department of literature at Hosei University. While doing both of these, he continued to work on his dream job of working on movie production. He acted as the coach for the nine-member volleyball team at Toshiba. Dezaki also began pulling together an anime production team.
Dezaki resigned after working for seven years at Toshiba, leaving Hosei University in the middle of a term as well. He began working for Gisaburō Sugii's company , working alongside his younger brother Osamu. His first works included writing the script for Attack No. 1 and storyboarding Star of the Giants.
In 1969, Dezaki became a freelancer, doing scripting, production and direction work for Tokyo Movie Shinsha, Tatsunoko Production, and Sunrise. In 1977, he founded Magic Bus and produced and animated Shin Kyojin no Hoshi.
Works[]
- Aterui
- Attack No. 1 (screenplay)
- Big Wars (producer)
- Captain (Director)
- Carol (anime) (director)
- (director)
- (director)
- (director)
- Grey: Digital Target (director, continuity)
- Kyojin no Hoshi (storyboards)
- La Seine no Hoshi (assistant director, episode director and storyboards)
- Mad Bull 34 (director)
- Mahjong Hishō-den: Naki no Ryū (director)
- Mighty Orbots (storyboards)
- Play Ball (chief director)
- The Rose of Versailles (director (eps.6, 8))
- Shin Kyojin no Hoshi (producer, animator)
- Sword for Truth (producer)
- New Tetsujin-28 (episode director)
- They Were Eleven (director, storyboards)
- Tobira o Akete (screenplay)
- Urusei Yatsura Kanketsuhen (director)
- Urusei Yatsura: Inaba the Dreammaker (director)
References[]
- ^ "Anime Director Osamu Dezaki Passes Away". Anime News Network. 2011-04-17. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
External links[]
- Satoshi Dezaki at IMDb
- Satoshi Dezaki at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- 1940 births
- Anime directors
- Japanese animators
- Japanese film producers
- Japanese animated film directors
- Japanese animated film producers
- Living people
- People from Tokyo