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Rumiko Takahashi – Biography, Husband, Net Worth, Other Facts

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Rumiko Takahashi is an accomplished manga artist with a background in writing new manga tours. For the sake of clarity, the term manga is a style of comics that originated in Japan at the end of the 19th century. To date, the art has become popular around the world, with many people carving out a niche for themselves in mainstream comics. Over the years, the manga industry has traditionally been male-dominated. Nonetheless, it boasts of outstanding female artists such as Mina Petrovic, Alexa Pásztor, Jessica Prando, Jodie Snow, and others who have taken the fantasy genre and put their own positive spin on it.

Biography of Rumiko Takahashi

Rumiko Takahashi is from Niigata, Japan, where she was born on October 10, 1957. She developed a strong interest in manga at a young age, while attending Niigata Chūō High School, where she founded a club manga and was also the editor of her own comic in the newsletter of the club she founded.

Although she had a thing for art at the time, Rumiko focused primarily on her academics. After graduating from high school, she went to Japan Women’s University to study history. It was while she was in the establishment that she decided to enroll in evening classes at the Japanese manga school of famous artist Kazuo Koike, Gekiga Sonjuku. Even though no Japanese women were creating manga at the time, Rumiko managed to gain popularity through the manga she published between 1976 and 1977 through her university’s manga club.

The entertainer eventually published his first professional story in the boy’s magazine, Shonen Sunday, titled Katte na Yatsura, meaning “Those Selfish Strangers.” The story won him the magazine’s New Comedy Artist Award in 1978. It was also the same year that she created her first serialized story (a comic science fiction story called Urusei Yatsura) in the weekly magazine Shōnen Sunday. the Golden Gods of Poverty, Shake Your Buddha, and Time Warp Trouble.

The professional comic book writer started his second major series, Maison Ikkoku (a romantic comedy), in the 80s in Big Comic Spirits magazine. She eventually concluded the series with Urusei Yatsura in 1987, with Maison Ikkoku ending at 15 volumes and Urusei Yatsura at 34. His third major Ranma ½ series , which features a genre twist, began in 1987. It was completed in 1996 in 38 volumes while his fourth major work, Inuyasha, began during the latter half of the 1990s.

Besides English, many of his works are also available in other European languages. Canadian Bryan Lee O’Malley, American Colleen Coover, Japanese Chihiro Tamaki and American Matt Bozon are some of the artists who have cited Rumiko and her work as a major influence.

Who is Mari?

The manga artist could be single. However, some unverified sources claim that the comic’s author is married to Yu-gi-oh creator Kazuki Takahashi, but it seems the report is false as there are no reports elsewhere suggesting that Rumiko Takahashi is currently married to a man.

His net worth

Rumiko Takahashi holds the record for Japan’s richest, most successful, and highest paid professional manga artist. She has come a long way in the industry and has a dazzling net worth estimated at around $76 million. Some sites reported that she rakes in $11 million a year and also owns a car park and more than one mansion.

Other facts to know

1. His trainer Kazuo Koike is the author of the critically acclaimed works, Crying Freeman and Lone Wolf and Cub. It was under his guidance that she created and published her early dōjinshi works such as Star of Futile Dust (1975) and Bye-Bye Road (1975)

2. While running his first serialized story (Urusei Yatsura), Takahashi lived in a small apartment with two assistants. She would often have slept in a closet for lack of space. Her second major series, Maison Ikkoku, was created based on her experience living in the apartment complex.

3. In 2017, the Japanese manga star was inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame as part of the 2016 batch.

4. Takahashi has worked with notable figures during her burgeoning career, including Mitsuru Adachi, a Maebashi-educated manga artist in Gunma Prefecture, with whom she released a one-shot titled My Sweet Sunday on March 16, 2009.

5. Takahashi’s Stories Fire Tripper, Maris the Chojo, and Laughing Target were adapted into original video animations (OVAs) in the 1980s. One-Book Gospel, a work she completed in 2007 after her chapters were released sporadically in 1998, 2001 and 2006, was also adapted into a live-action television drama.

6. His fourth work Inuyasha, which was serialized from 1996 to 2008 in Weekly Shōnen Sunday, is considered his longest to date.

7. All of the major works of the comic book author (Ikkoku House, Inuyasha manga, Urusei Yatsura, Ranma ½) have all been published by Viz Comics in the United States in the English language.

  1. 8. After winning the Grand Prix de la ville d’Angoulême at the Angoulême International Comics Festival in January 2019, Rumiko Takahashi became the second manga artist and woman to return home with the prestigious prize. Besides the Seiun Award (which she won in 1987 and 1989), other envious awards she won include the Shogakukan Manga Award (1980, 2001) and the Inkpot Award (1994).
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