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{{nihongo|'''Takeshi Shudo'''|首藤 剛志|Shudō Takeshi|August 18, 1949 – October 29, 2010}}<ref>[https://kotaku.com/pokemon-writer-61-dies-5676457 Pokémon Writer, 61, Dies], at [[Kotaku]]; by Brian Ashcraft; published October 29, 2010; retrieved October 29, 2013</ref> was a Japanese scriptwriter and novelist. His major works include anime ''[[Space Warrior Baldios]]'', the ''[[Magical Princess Minky Momo]]'' series, and ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pocket Monsters]]''. He had a reputation for his witty dialogue and was known for the unusual next episode previews in the series he served as chief writer for. In ''Pokémon'', he coined Team Rocket's iconic motto.
{{nihongo|'''Takeshi Shudo'''|首藤 剛志|Shudō Takeshi|August 18, 1949 – October 29, 2010}}<ref>[https://kotaku.com/pokemon-writer-61-dies-5676457 Pokémon Writer, 61, Dies], at [[Kotaku]]; by Brian Ashcraft; published October 29, 2010; retrieved October 29, 2013</ref> was a Japanese scriptwriter and novelist. His major works include anime ''[[Space Warrior Baldios]]'', the ''[[Magical Princess Minky Momo]]'' series, and ''[[Pokémon (anime)|Pocket Monsters]]''. He had a reputation for his witty dialogue and was known for the unusual next episode previews in the series he served as chief writer for. In ''Pokémon'', he coined Team Rocket's iconic motto.


When there were disagreements between him and then-Pokémon Chief Director Kunihiko Yuyama about the endless direction the Pokémon Anime Series was heading in, he resigned from writing the Series. In his own personal blog after his retirement, he revealed the different ideas he had for the Series such as a Pokémon Revolution against Humans and more. In his blog he also urged the Staff to finish Ash Ketchum's Story after Diamond & Pearl and replace him with a new Protagonist, predicting that the Anime would decline in popularity. He was also a member of the Writers Guild of Japan.
When there were disagreements between him and then-Pokémon Chief Director Kunihiko Yuyama about the endless direction the Pokémon Anime Series was heading in, he resigned from writing the Series. In his own personal blog after his retirement, he revealed the different ideas he had for the Series such as a Pokémon Revolution against Humans and more. In his blog he also urged the Staff to finish Ash Ketchum's Story after Diamond & Pearl and replace him with a new Protagonist, predicting that the Anime would decline in popularity if they didn't. He also revealed in his blog that he had taken drugs to cope with constant stress of writing the Unending Pokémon Series. He was also a member of the Writers Guild of Japan.


His father, {{nihongo|Takashi Shudō|首藤 堯|Shudō Takashi}}, served as Fukuoka Prefecture's lieutenant governor, local vice-minister and chairman of the local finance association.
His father, {{nihongo|Takashi Shudō|首藤 堯|Shudō Takashi}}, served as Fukuoka Prefecture's lieutenant governor, local vice-minister and chairman of the local finance association.

Revision as of 16:42, 27 November 2020

Takeshi Shudo
Native name
首藤 剛志
Born(1949-08-18)August 18, 1949
Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan
DiedOctober 29, 2010(2010-10-29) (aged 61)
Nara, Nara, Japan
OccupationScreenwriter, novelist
GenreAnime TV series
Years active1970–2010
RelativesTakashi Shudō (father)

Takeshi Shudo (首藤 剛志, Shudō Takeshi, August 18, 1949 – October 29, 2010)[1] was a Japanese scriptwriter and novelist. His major works include anime Space Warrior Baldios, the Magical Princess Minky Momo series, and Pocket Monsters. He had a reputation for his witty dialogue and was known for the unusual next episode previews in the series he served as chief writer for. In Pokémon, he coined Team Rocket's iconic motto.

When there were disagreements between him and then-Pokémon Chief Director Kunihiko Yuyama about the endless direction the Pokémon Anime Series was heading in, he resigned from writing the Series. In his own personal blog after his retirement, he revealed the different ideas he had for the Series such as a Pokémon Revolution against Humans and more. In his blog he also urged the Staff to finish Ash Ketchum's Story after Diamond & Pearl and replace him with a new Protagonist, predicting that the Anime would decline in popularity if they didn't. He also revealed in his blog that he had taken drugs to cope with constant stress of writing the Unending Pokémon Series. He was also a member of the Writers Guild of Japan.

His father, Takashi Shudō (首藤 堯, Shudō Takashi), served as Fukuoka Prefecture's lieutenant governor, local vice-minister and chairman of the local finance association.

Career

Shudo was born in Fukuoka Prefecture, but moved to Tokyo, Sapporo, and Nara Prefecture when he was a child because his father was a government official, and he attributes his dry, non-indigenous style to this experience. When he failed the college entrance exams, he read a specialized magazine that his younger sister had bought, Scenario, which led him to enroll in a screenplay institute with the funds he had saved up to go to prep school. He got recognized for the screenplays he had written there, and in 1969, at the age of 19, he made his debut as a scriptwriter in the 45th episode of the TV historical drama Ōedo Sōsamō. However, he got tired of fixing scripts that he did not agree with and stopped writing altogether, claiming he got fed up with penning human drama pieces, so he spent the rest of his time working as a salesman for educational equipment and various ceremonial occasions, while at the same time helping out with shōjo manga original stories and plots for TV dramas without taking credit for any of his work. Later, he roamed Europe with the money he had saved from his salesman job, and when he returned to Japan after running out, with the help of his acquaintance, screenwriter Fukiko Miyauchi, he returned to work as a scriptwriter in 1976 for an episode from Manga Sekai Mukashibanashi, an anime TV series produced by Dax International. Since then, he worked on Dax's several other serials, such as Paris no Isabelle and Manga Hajimete Monogatari.

In the early 1980s, he also worked on Tatsunoko Production's works, but it was Magical Princess Minky Momo and GoShogun, both of which were produced at Ashi Productions, where he was in charge of everything from the original idea to story editing, that revealed his talent as an author.[2] He worked with Kunihiko Yuyama, the main director of both works, in the 1990s on the sequel to Minky Momo and later Pocket Monsters.

In 1984, he won the Best Screenplay Award at the first Japan Anime Awards for Manga Hajimete Monogatari, Magical Princess Minky Momo, and Sasuga Sarutobi. He also worked as a novelist, with his best known work being the Eternal Filena series.

In his later years, he contributed articles to the website Anime Style and worked on feature films. The materials for the major works he was involved in, such as screenplays, have been donated to the Odawara Public Library in Odawara, Kanagawa Prefecture, where he once used to live. Some of the materials held by the library are on permanent display at the Odawara Museum of Literature.

On October 28, 2010, he collapsed after suffering a subarachnoid hemorrhage in a smoking room at JR-West Nara Station in Nara, Nara Prefecture, where he was visiting, and was rushed to the hospital. However, he died on the next day at the age of 61. In 2011, a memorial exhibition titled "In Memoriam of the Screenwriter Takeshi Shudo" was held at the Suginami Animation Museum in Suginami, Tokyo.

The 2017 anime movie, Pokémon the Movie: I Choose You!, credits Shudo as partial screenwriter in the staff roll, as he wrote the script for the first episode of the TV anime, which was used as the base for the early part of the film.

Works

TV Anime

  • Pokémon (1997–2002) (served as story editor until episode 158, resigned at episode 245)

Film

OVA

Novels

  • Eternal Filena
  • Pocket Monsters The Animation
    • Vol. 1: Departure
    • Vol. 2: Friends

References

  1. ^ Pokémon Writer, 61, Dies, at Kotaku; by Brian Ashcraft; published October 29, 2010; retrieved October 29, 2013
  2. ^ http://www.pelleas.net/aniTOP/index.php?title=title_59

External links