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{{short description|Japanese artist group}}
{{nihongo|'''Be-Papas'''|ビーパパス|Bīpapasu|alternatley '''Bepapas''' and stylized as '''Be-PaPas'''}} was a production group founded by [[anime]] director [[Kunihiko Ikuhara]]. Its membership consisted of Ikuhara, manga artist [[Chiho Saito]], animator and character designer {{ill|Shinya Hasegawa|ja|長谷川眞也}}, scriptwriter [[Yōji Enokido]], and planner {{ill|Yūichirō Oguro|ja|小黒祐一郎}}.<ref name="Animage"/> Ikuhara founded Be-Papas in 1996 to create ''[[Revolutionary Girl Utena]]'', an original anime he conceived following his departure from [[Toei Animation]], where he worked as a director on the anime series ''[[Sailor Moon]]''. The group also created ''Revolutionary Girl Utena''{{'}}s 1999 film sequel ''[[Adolescence of Utena]]''.<ref name="Akadot"/>
{{nihongo|'''Be-Papas'''|ビーパパス|Bīpapasu|alternately '''Bepapas''' and stylized as '''Be-PaPas'''}} was a production group founded by [[anime]] director [[Kunihiko Ikuhara]]. Its membership consisted of Ikuhara, manga artist [[Chiho Saito]], animator and character designer [[Shinya Hasegawa]], scriptwriter [[Yōji Enokido]], and planner [[Yūichirō Oguro]].<ref name="Animage"/> Ikuhara founded Be-Papas in 1996 to create ''[[Revolutionary Girl Utena]]'', an original anime he conceived following his departure from [[Toei Animation]], where he worked as a director on the anime series ''[[Sailor Moon]]''. The group also created ''Revolutionary Girl Utena''{{'}}s 1999 film sequel ''[[Adolescence of Utena]]''.<ref name="Akadot"/>


Be-Papas disbanded following the release of ''Adolescence of Utena'', but remained in existence as a corporate entity until at least 2001 to publish several of its member's subsequent projects, specifically Ikuhara and [[Mamoru Nagano]]'s 1999 novel series ''[[Schell Bullet]]'', Hasegawa and Enokido's 1999 serialized [[light novel]] ''Shounen Ou'', and Ikuhara and Saito's 2001 manga series ''[[World of the S&M]]'' (released in English as ''The World Exists for Me'').<ref name="Akadot"/><ref name="SM"/>
Be-Papas disbanded following the release of ''Adolescence of Utena'', but remained in existence as a corporate entity until at least 2001 to publish several projects created by its former members, specifically Ikuhara and [[Mamoru Nagano]]'s 1999 novel series ''[[Schell Bullet]]'', Hasegawa and Enokido's 1999 serialized [[light novel]] ''Shounen Ou'', and Ikuhara and Saito's 2001 manga series ''[[World of the S&M]]'' (released in English as ''The World Exists for Me'').<ref name="Akadot"/><ref name="SM"/>


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
*{{ann|people|4293|Be-Papas}}
*{{ann|people|4293|Be-Papas}}

{{Revolutionary Girl Utena}}


[[Category:1996 establishments in Japan]]
[[Category:1996 establishments in Japan]]
[[Category:Japanese artist groups and collectives]]
[[Category:Japanese artist groups and collectives]]
[[Category:Revolutionary Girl Utena]]


{{manga-stub}}
{{manga-stub}}

Latest revision as of 16:54, 12 November 2024

Be-Papas (ビーパパス, Bīpapasu, alternately Bepapas and stylized as Be-PaPas) was a production group founded by anime director Kunihiko Ikuhara. Its membership consisted of Ikuhara, manga artist Chiho Saito, animator and character designer Shinya Hasegawa, scriptwriter Yōji Enokido, and planner Yūichirō Oguro.[1] Ikuhara founded Be-Papas in 1996 to create Revolutionary Girl Utena, an original anime he conceived following his departure from Toei Animation, where he worked as a director on the anime series Sailor Moon. The group also created Revolutionary Girl Utena's 1999 film sequel Adolescence of Utena.[2]

Be-Papas disbanded following the release of Adolescence of Utena, but remained in existence as a corporate entity until at least 2001 to publish several projects created by its former members, specifically Ikuhara and Mamoru Nagano's 1999 novel series Schell Bullet, Hasegawa and Enokido's 1999 serialized light novel Shounen Ou, and Ikuhara and Saito's 2001 manga series World of the S&M (released in English as The World Exists for Me).[2][3]

References

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  1. ^ Animage Editorial Department (June 1997b). "ウテナ白書" [Utena Dossier]. Animage Extra (in Japanese). 6: 5.
  2. ^ a b Yamashita, Shizuki (2001). "Kunihiko Ikuhara Discusses "Utena," the Future, and Moving to Los Angeles". Akadot.
  3. ^ "New Manga from Utena Colaborator [sic]". Anime News Network. August 15, 2001. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
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