Tales of Little Women
Tales of Little Women, also simply known as Little Women, is a Japanese animated television series adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's 1868-69 two-volume novel Little Women, produced by Nippon Animation. It was first aired in 1987 by the Fuji TV network.
A sequel series, , premiered in 1993.
Plot
The animated series is loosely derived from the book and introduces new material and characters. The series begins with the introduction of the March family happily living near Gettysburg, until one day during a picnic, Mr. March notices Confederate scouts at a riverbank. As an officer of the Union Army on leave with a broken arm, Mr. March hesitantly leaves his family to inform his superiors and to prepare for the upcoming battle. Meanwhile, his family endures the Confederate occupation and even helps an escaped slave named John from being forcibly recruited to fight for the Confederacy.Eventually, Union forces arrive and in the ensuing battle the March family home is destroyed and their investment stolen. With no other options, the family leaves Gettysburg to Newcord, where they hope to be taken by an estranged aunt of father. Upon arriving in Newcord, they are coldly received by the old woman and even less so by David, an egotistical nephew who constantly asks for loans and antagonizes the family. Despite the reception, Aunt March allows the family to stay at home until they can get back on their feet.
Determined to have a sense of normalcy and persevere their hardship, Meg finds work as a Governess while Jo alternates between being a companion to Aunt March and Author. During a sales pitch to sell a short story to a local newspaper, her work and her character are presumptuously criticized by Anthony, a local reporter. Upset and resolute, Jo throws herself into her writing ultimately earning the respect of Anthony and forms an amicable relationship.
In time, the March family moves into a new home and the events that follow begin to reference the plot of the original novel: The 18th episode is based on Chapter 3 and follows the first part of the book. The storyline from Chapter 1 begins in episode 21.
Characters
For more information on the main characters, including the March sisters, Laurie, and Mary, see Little Women.- Eiko Yamada as Josephine "Jo" March
- Keiko Han as Margaret "Meg" March
- Mayumi Shou as Elizabeth "Beth" March
- Rei Sakuma as Amy March
- Nobuo Tobita as Theodore "Laurie" Lawrence
- Taeko Nakanishi as Mary March
- Osamu Saka as Frederic March
- Hisako Okata as Hannah, the March family's servant
- Kazuyuki Sogabe as Anthony Boone
- Ranko Mizuki as Martha March
- Kohei Miyauchi as James Lawrence
- Toshihiko Kojima as John Brooke
- Kozo Shioya as David Fowlet
- Ryuji Saikachi as Henry Murdoch
- Miyoko Aoba as Annie Moffatt
- Maria Kawamura as Sallie Gardiner
- Toshihiko Seki as John, the runaway slave
- Rumiko Ukai as Esther, Aunt March's maid
- Asami Mukaidono as Dorothy, Aunt March's cook
- Masashi Hirose as Ben, Aunt March's coachman
- Fushigi Yamada as Polly, Aunt March's pet bird
- Anthony Boone is a Newcord reporter and friend of Jo's. He and Jo get off to a bad start when he criticizes her writing, but eventually become close friends, and Anthony helps her family find a new house in Newcord. He also encourages Jo to keep writing and improve. He leaves for New York in the second-to-last episode, and inspires Jo to do the same. In some episodes he appears to have feelings for Jo, who, in her single-minded quest to become a great writer, does not reciprocate or even seem to notice.
- Henry Murdoch is the owner and publisher of The Newcord Times, and Anthony's boss. He has a high opinion of Jo's talents and reassures her whenever she is discouraged by Anthony's criticisms.
- David Fowlet is Aunt March's nephew, a money-grubbing gambler and ne'er-do-well who appears only to care for his aunt because she loans him money. He antagonizes the March family, and Jo in particular, out of fear that he will lose his place as her sole heir.
- John Marty is a runaway slave. In an early episode, the March family hide him in their house from Confederate soldiers. In a later episode, he returns and gets a job at the Newcord newspaper.
- Milky Ann is the March family's pet kitten. She first appears in episode two, when Beth discovers the abandoned kitten half-drowned and nearly frozen to death in the rain. Beth and her sisters nurse the kitten back to health, and Milky Ann becomes a treasured member of the family.
- Aunt March had several additional servants introduced in this anime in addition to Esther the maid, including Ben the coachman and Dorothy the cook. Also, in addition to her bird, Polly, Aunt March has a dog, a poodle named "Harry".
Name and character changes
Broadcast
Little Women aired on Fuji Television from 11 January 1987 to 27 December 1987 as part of Nippon Animation's World Masterpiece Theater. The series features contributions from several well-known Studio Ghibli staffers, including co-character designer Yoshifumi Kondo and animation director Atsuko Otani. The chief director was Nippon Animation/WMT veteran Fumio Kurokawa with storyboard duties handled by various other directors, and Akira Miyazaki is credited with scripting all 48 episodes. Kurokawa, Otani, and character designer and chief animation director Toshiki Yamazaki had all been involved in the previous WMT series Princess Sarah, as had Jo's voice actress, Eiko Yamada.The series was broadcast aired across Asia by the anime satellite television network, Animax.
Little Women was first dubbed into English by Saban Entertainment and was broadcast across the United States by HBO in 1988 under the title Tales of Little Women, making it one of only three WMT serials to have been broadcast on television in the United States. From August 3, 2009 to July 31, 2017, the series aired in the United States on Smile of a Child and in the Philippines on DZOZ-TV. Unusual for a Saban Entertainment dub of an anime series, the English dub version of Ai no Wakakusa Monogatari kept the original Japanese musical score by Kazuo Otani, although the theme songs were replaced with a new one by Haim Saban and Shuki Levy, who also composed some additional music for the series itself. The series has not yet been released on DVD in English, although a compilation of two episodes was released on VHS in the United States in 1992 as Little Women's Christmas Story. The full series was released in 2017 on Amazon Prime under the title .
The series has also achieved a high level of popularity in Europe and Latin America.
Staff
- Original work: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
- Executive producer: Koichi Motohashi
- Producer: Junzo Nakajima, Taihei Ishikawa
- Planning: Shoji Sato, Eiichi Kubota
- Director: Fumio Kurokawa
- Script: Akira Miyazaki
- Storyboards: Yoshio Kuroda, Fumio Kurokawa, Norio Yazawa, Shinichi Tsuji, Kozo Kuzuha, Hiromi Sugimura, Shinichi Matsumi, Takeshi Yamaguchi, Eiji Okabe, Shigeo Koshi, Takao Yotsuji, Shin Namioka, Fumio Ikeno
- Character design: Yoshifumi Kondo, Toshiki Yamazaki
- Animation director: Toshiki Yamazaki, Takumi Koyama, Atsuko Onuki
- Art director: Masamichi Takano
- Color coordination: Akiko Koyama
- Editing: Hidetoshi Kadono, Shinichi Natori, Yoshihiro Kasahara
- Layout: Shohei Kawamoto
- Director of photography: Toshiaki Morita
- Recording director: Etsuji Yamada
- Music: Kazuo Otani
- Production desk: Shunichi Kosao
- Production manager: Mitsuru Takakuwa
- Sound effects: Akihiko Matsuda
- Special effects: Masao Yoshiyama
- Production: Nippon Animation, Fuji TV
Themes
- Invitation of the Young Grass by Eri Nitta
- Someday, for Sure by Keiko Han, Eiko Yamada, Mayumi Shō, Rei Sakuma
- Sunset and Wind and Melody by Eri Nitta
- A Lullaby for Father by Satoko Shimonari
Episode list
All episodes are written by Akira Miyazaki.
All episodes are directed by Fumio Kurokawa, who also drew storyboards for episodes 2, 3, and 48. Other storyboard artists included:
- Yoshio Kuroda
- Norio Yazawa
- Shinichi Tsuji
- Kozo Kuzuha
- Hiromi Sugimura
- Shinichi Matsumi
- Takeshi Yamaguchi
- Eiji Okabe
- Shigeo Koshi
- Shin Namioka
- Takao Yotsuji
- Fumio Ikeno