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・ Masanaga Kageyama
・ Masanagudi Mannadiyar Speaking
・ Masanao
・ Masanao Goto
・ Masanao Hanihara
・ Masanao Ozaki
・ Masanao Sasaki
・ Masanari Mochida
・ Masanari Nihei
・ Masand
・ Masandan
・ Masandare
・ Masane Tsukayama
・ Masang Mayoso
・ Masako Usui
Masako Watanabe
・ Masako Yanagi
・ Masako, Crown Princess of Japan
・ Masakre
・ Masakuni
・ Masakuni Yamamoto
・ Masal
・ Masal Bugduv
・ Masal County
・ Masal Rural District
・ Masal, Mazandaran
・ Masala
・ Masala (2012 film)
・ Masala (2013 film)
・ Masala chai


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Masako Watanabe : ウィキペディア英語版
Masako Watanabe
(born 16 May 1929, in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist. She began her professional career as an illustrator of books in 1949. She switched to creating manga after reading Osamu Tezuka's works, debuting in 1952 with ''Namida no Sanbika''. She quickly became the most popular female manga artist of her time.
She was noted in the 1960s for using pastel colors instead of the bright primary colors common at the time, and for pioneering both ''shōjo'' (written for teenage girls) horror stories with ''Blue Foxfire'' and ''shōjo'' mystery stories with ''Glass no Shiro'' (''Glass Castle'').〔 In 1971, she received the Shogakukan Manga Award for ''Glass no Shiro'' and ''Santa Rosalindo''. In the 1980s, she turned from ''shōjo'' to sexually explicit ''redisu-josei'' (written for adult women) with such series as ''Kinpeibai'', which is based on a 19th-century Chinese erotic novel.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Masako Watanabe」の詳細全文を読む



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