Megumi Hayashibara
林原 めぐみ |
| Born |
March 30, 1967 (1967-03-30) (age 41)
Kita, Tokyo, Japan |
| Other name(s) |
MEGUMI |
| Occupation |
Seiyū, Singer, Songwriter |
| megumi HOUSE Official website] |
Megumi Hayashibara (林原 めぐみ, Hayashibara Megumi?), born March 30, 1967 in Kita, Tokyo, Japan) is a popular Japanese seiyū, lyricist, Dj and singer. She is married and has one daughter.
Career
Hayashibara began her voice acting career with training at the Arts Vision voice acting school/talent agency, while at the same time studying to be a registered nurse, her original career choice. Her debut as a seiyū came in 1986, playing minor roles in the anime series Maison Ikkoku. She has since gone on to play many of anime's most beloved characters, including Hello Kitty, Faye Valentine in Cowboy Bebop, Lime from the Saber Marionette series, Anna Kyoyama from Shaman King, Haruka Urashima from Love Hina, Rei Ayanami of Neon Genesis Evangelion, Musashi (Jessie) of Team Rocket from the Pokémon anime series, Lina Inverse from the Slayers series, Canal Volphied in Lost Universe, Piyoko in the Di Gi Charat series, the female Ranma Saotome in the Ranma 1/2 series, and the female lead in all three anime series derived from the works of Yuzo Takada, namely 3×3 Eyes (as Pai), Blue Seed (as Momiji Fujimiya), All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku (as Atsuko Natsume)
According to the Anime News Network Encyclopedia, as of April 2007, Hayashibara is the most prolific female seiyū with 236 credits to her name. [1] She is arguably the best known seiyū outside Japan, and is considered by some anime fans to be the "queen" of the seiyū, likely due to the large number of major roles she has performed, as well as the personal relationship she has cultivated with her fans through her radio shows and her writing.
As one of the pioneers of the "Third Seiyū Boom", Hayashibara is among the most prolific seiyū-turned-singers in history. Since her musical debut in 1989, she has sung the theme songs for numerous anime series, including all the Slayers TV series, movies, and OVAs, Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi, Lost Universe, Sorcerer Hunters, most of the Saber Marionette series, Love Hina, the themes "Oversoul", "Trust You", "Northern Lights", "Brave Heart" and "Omokage" for Shaman King, and most recently the opening and ending themes of Gakuen Utopia Manabi Straight!. In addition, she has released several solo musical albums, and she has also sung as part of the bands DoCo and Ties, and as a guest vocalist for Hinata Girls. Hayashibara has written lyrics for many of the songs she has performed using only her first name, MEGUMI (in all-caps letters).
Hayashibara is not well known in the music industry outside of Japan, however within Japan, her albums sell strongly, routinely debuting in the top 10 on Japan's Oricon pop music charts. Additionally, she hosts two radio shows, Tokyo Boogie Night and Heartful Station, which frequently showcase her songs, as well as those sung by other seiyū.
Hayashibara has also written several books, including two collections of essays, two volumes compiling her former magazine column, Aitakute Aitakute, an autobiographical manga, Ashita ga aru sa, and the Pokémon children's book Jigglypuff's Magic Lullaby. She currently writes an advice column appearing monthly in Newtype magazine.
Voice roles
Television animation
Major roles are in bold
- Video Girl Ai (Ai)
- 3×3 Eyes (Pai)
- Alfred J. Kwak (Alfred J. Kwak)
- All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku (Atsuko Natsume)
- Blue Seed (Momiji Fujimiya)
- Detective Conan (Haibara Ai, Akako Koizumi)
- Cheeky Angel (Megumi Amatsuka)
- Christmas in January (Mizuki)
- Cowboy Bebop (Faye Valentine)
- Dragon Ball Z (Blind boy who meets Majin Buu)
- Esper Mami (Sanae Shimazu)
- Flanders no Inu, Boku no Patrasche (Nero)
- Floral Magician Mary Bell (Mory)
- Mobile Suit Gundam 0080: War in the Pocket (Christina Mackenzie)
- Kinkyū Hasshin Saver Kids (Seira)
- Lost Universe (Canal Vorfeed)
- Love Hina (Haruka Urashima)
- Madō King Granzort (Guriguri, Enuma)
- Magical Princess Minky Momo (Momo)
- Maison Ikkoku (voice-acting debut) (Kindergartener, Yōsuke Nanao, Atsuko, Koizumi, Tarō, daycare worker B, numerous others)
- Nekketsu Saikyō Go-Saurer (Hiromi Tachibana)
- Neon Genesis Evangelion (Rei Ayanami, Yui Ikari, Penpen)
- Osomatsu-kun (Todomatsu)
- Paprika (2006 film) (Doctor Atsuko "Paprika" Chiba)
- Patlabor: The TV Series (Momoko Sakurayama)
- Pokémon (Musashi (Jessie) of Team Rocket, Ash's Bulbasaur, Pidgeotto, Goldeen)
- Pokémon: Advanced Generation (Musashi (Jessie) of Team Rocket, Pokédex)
- Pokémon Chronicles (Musashi (Jessie) of Team Rocket)
- Pokémon: Diamond and Pearl (Musashi (Jessie) of Team Rocket, Ash's Chimchar)
- Ranma ½ (Ranma Saotome (female))
- Saber Marionette (Lime)
- Samurai Pizza Cats (Chomoranma #1/2)
- Sgt. Frog (Rei Ayanami) (EP 48)
- Shadow Skill (Elle Lagu)
- Shaman King (Anna Kyoyama, Opacho)
- Slayers (Lina Inverse)
- Sorcerer Hunters (Tira Misu)
- Tales of Eternia: The Animation (Marone Bluecarno)
- Tekkaman Blade (Aki)
- Tensai Bakabon (Bakabon)
- The Three Musketeers (Episode one guest)
- Tico of the Seven Seas (Nanami Simpson)
- Wataru (Himiko Shinobibe)
- YuYu Hakusho (Fukumen, Genkai (young))
- Zettai Muteki Raijin-Oh (Yū Izumi, Ruruko Himeki, Faruzebu, Kozue Yamaguchi, Hichō's mother, Yoppā's mother)
Theater animation
Dubbing roles
Drama CD
- Akihabara Dennou Gumi as Tsubame
- Bakuretsu Hunt as Tira Misu
- Bannou Bunka Nekomusume as Natsume Atsuko
- Dancing Whispers as Miifa
- GS Mikami Gokuraku Daisakusen!! as DJ
- Jungle de Ikou as Ongo
- Kodomotachi ha Yoru no Juunin as Yumi
- Lamune & 40 DX as Mountain Dew Gold
- Lips the Agent as Yuu and Winter Fairy
- Love Hina as Urashima Haruka
- Mujintou Monogatari as Kurashima Saori
- Neon Genesis Evangelion as Ayanami Rei
- PopFul Mail Paradise 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 as Mail
- Popful Mail The Next Generation as Mail
- RG Veda as Ashura
- Shadow Skill as El Lag
- Slayers Extra as Lina Inverse
- Slayers Nextra as Lina Inverse
- Slayers Premium as Lina Inverse
- Slayers vs. Orphen as Lina Inverse
- SM Girls Saber Marionette J/R as Lime
- Starship Girl Yamamoto Yohko as Madoka Midou
- Tokyo Juliette as Ayase Minori
As of August 2006, she is known to have sung a total of at least 332 unique songs (457 songs, including remixes and edited versions), most of which have been related to anime series, drama CDs, or video games. As of that date, she had appeared on at least 562 known CD releases, 325 of which include singing performances. However, no official canonical list of her CD releases has been compiled, and it is possible that the true totals exceed these figures to some degree.
Solo CD Albums
All are King Records releases unless otherwise noted
- Half and, half (KICS-100, 1991)
- WHATEVER (KICS-176, 1992)
- Perfume (KICS-215, 1992)
- SHAMROCK (KICS-345, 1993)
- SpHERE (KICS-430, 1994)
- Enfleurage (KICS-475, 1995)
- bertemu (KICS-590, 1996)
- Iráváti (KICS-640, 1997)
- FUWARI (ふわり) (KICS-755, 1999)
- VINTAGE S (KICS-790, 2000)
- VINTAGE A (KICS-810, 2000)
- feel well (KICS-955, 2002)
- center color (KICS-1070, 2004)
- Plain (KICS-1303, 2007)
- Tanoshii Douyou (KICG-53~55, 2007)
- Slayers MEGUMIX (KICA-916~918, 2008)
Radio shows
Hayashibara has/had hosted the following radio shows:
- Tokyo Boogie Night
- Haoujuku
- Heartful Station
- Muboujuku
Anime America 1993[2] and 1995[3]
Video games
Hebereke series (Hebereke)
Lunar 2: Eternal Blue Complete (Lemina Ausa)
Macross VF-X2 (Suzie Newtlet)
External links
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