Buronson
Yoshiyuki Okamura | |
---|---|
Born |
Saku, Nagano, Japan | 16 June 1947
Nationality | Japanese |
Other names |
Buronson Sho Fumimura |
Occupation | Manga artist |
Years active | 1972–present |
Known for |
Fist of the North Star Heat Lord |
Buronson (武論尊), real name Yoshiyuki Okamura (岡村 善行 Okamura Yoshiyuki), also known as Sho Fumimura (史村 翔 Fumimura Shō), is a Japanese manga artist, most known for creating Fist of the North Star. In 2002, he shared the Shogakukan Manga Award for general manga for Heat with Ryoichi Ikegami.[1]
Early life and career
Buronson was born on June 16, 1947 in Saku, Nagano. He graduated from the Japan Air Self-Defense Forces Training School in 1967 and served as an Air Force radar mechanic. In 1969 he was discharged from the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force and was soon hired by Hiroshi Motomiya as a manga assistant. He started his manga writing career when he wrote the script of Pink Punch: Miyabi in 1972, drawn by Goro Sakai. In 1975 Buronson wrote his first big hit The Doberman Detective, drawn by Shinji Hiramatsu. The famous Hokuto no Ken made its debut as Buronson's greatest hit in 1983, drawn by Tetsuo Hara. In 1989 his story Ourou was released as a manga serialized in Animal Magazine, drawn by Kentarō Miura, and in 1990 a sequel entitled Ourou Den was released by the same manga artist. Okamura also collaborated with the manga artist Ryoichi Ikegami in many works as Strain, Odyssey and the famous Sanctuary. Among his other major works are Phantom Burai, with art by Kaoru Shintani.
Influences
Buronson was mainly influenced by movies such as Mad Max, and those of Bruce Lee and Sergio Leone.
The pen name Buronson is a tribute to the American actor Charles Bronson, whose mustache Buronson imitated.
Works
As Buronson
- Pink Punch Miyabi (1974, art by Gorō Sakai)
- Doberman Detective (1975, 18 volumes, art by Shinji Hiramatsu)
- Holdup (1982, art by Hikaru Yuzuki)
- Fist of the North Star (1983–88, 27 volumes, art by Tetsuo Hara)
- Mammoth (1985-1988, art by Takaki Konari)
- Maji da yo!! (1987-1988, art by Hikaru Yuzuki)
- Ourou (1989, art by Kentaro Miura)
- Ourou Den (1990, art by Kentaro Miura)
- Japan (1992, 1 volume, art by Kentaro Miura)
- Mushimushi Korokoro (1993–96, 11 volumes, art by Tsuyoshi Adachi)
- Strain (1997–98, 5 volumes, art by Ryoichi Ikegami)
- Heat (1999-2004, 17 volumes, art by Ryoichi Ikegami)
- Go For Break (2000, 3 volumes, art by Tsuyoshi Adachi)
- Fist of the Blue Sky (2001 to 2010, 22 volumes, Story and art by Tetsuo Hara) (Advisor only.)
- Rising Sun (2002, 3 volumes, art by Tokihiko Matsuura)
- G -Gokudo Girl- (2003–04, 5 volumes, art by Hidenori Hara)
- Lord (2004–11, 22 volumes, art by Ryoichi Ikegami)
As Sho Fumimura
- Gorō-kun Tōjō (1972, art by Yō Hasebe)
- Phantom Burai (1978–84, art by Kaoru Shintani)
- Ring no Takaō (1979, art by Jiro Kuwata)
- Oh! Takarajika (1981–83, art by Shinji Ono)
- Wild Way (1982, art by Daisuke Inoue)
- Ten made Agare (1982, art by Tatsuo Kanai)
- Mad Dog (1983, art by Kei Takazawa)
- Chu-high LEMON (1983–88, art by Tsutomu Shinohara)
- Dr. Kumahige (1988, art by Takumi Nagayasu)
- Shogun (1988–91, art by Jūzō Tokoro)
- Migi-muke Hidari (1989–91, art by Shinichi Sugimura)
- Odyssey (1995-96, art by Ryoichi Ikegami)
- Sanctuary (1990–95, 12 volumes, art by Ryoichi Ikegami)
References
- ↑ 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
External links
- 原作者・武論尊、もしくは史村翔 (Japanese) – Interview with Buranson
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