| Floral Magician Mary Bell | |
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![]() Mary Bell, Tambourine, and fairies |
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| 花の魔法使いマリーベル (Hana no Mahōtsukai Mary Bell) |
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| Genre | Magical girl |
| TV anime | |
| Director | Tetsuya Endo |
| Studio | Ashi Productions with Studio Giants |
| Licensor | |
| Network | |
| Original run | February 3, 1992 – January 18, 1993 |
| Episodes | 50 |
| Anime film | |
| The Key of Phoenix | |
| Director | Tetsuya Endo |
| Studio | Shochiku |
| Released | August 8, 1992 |
| Runtime | 43 minutes 23 seconds |
| Anime film | |
| Mary Bell's Traffic Safety (educational film) |
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| Director | Tetsuya Endo |
| Studio | Toei Animation |
| Released | February 15, 1993 |
| Runtime | 13 minutes 31 seconds |
| Anime film | |
| Mary Bell's Fire Prevention: What to Do When an Earthquake Occurs (educational film) |
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| Director | Tetsuya Endo |
| Studio | Toei Animation |
| Released | February 15, 1993 |
| Runtime | 11 minutes 24 seconds |
Floral Magician Mary Bell (花の魔法使いマリーベル Hana no Mahōtsukai Mary Bell), also known as Flower Witch Mary Bell or Mary Bell for short, is the fourth and last magical girl anime by Ashi Productions. The 50-episode series first aired in Japan from 1992 until 1993. It has also been broadcast in Hong Kong, South Korea, Italy, Taiwan, China, Poland, Thailand, and in most Arab countries. The series was adapted as a theatrical movie and two educational films. The DVD version was released on March 20, 2004.
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Many other magical girls are primary-schoolers or middle-schoolers, but Mary Bell only looks like a preschooler (although she is actually about 500,000 years old). She is a "native" magical girl just like Minky Momo and Sweet Mint, other magical girls by Ashi Productions from the same period. However, she is not a princess. The operatic approach is notable, each main character has his or her own leitmotif, and they sometimes sing instead of speaking, like a musical.
Mary Bell, a magical girl who looks around five years old, comes to the Human World from a magical world called the "Flower Magic World." Using her Flower Magic she helps and encourages people.
The story starts with two children, Yuuri and Ken, who are reading a fairy tale about Mary Bell finding two children who are lost in the woods, and helps them find home. Yuuri and Ken love the story of Mary Bell so much that their parents have named their flower shop after the fairy.
But the flower shop isn't doing well, and everyone is worried. Yuuri and Ken wish that Mary Bell would appear and help them. Both are surprised when she sprouts from a flower. She tells them she has learned of their plight, and will help them. After creating a potion to grow her house, she uses her magic to help the flower shop and people in town.
Mary Bell is the central characters of the show, but actually she just helps children or others when they are trying to do something. A little girl, Yuuri, her younger brother, Ken, and Ribbon, a puppy, are the ones who first met Mary Bell. Other three children, Vivian, Bongo, and Tap, frequently appear too.
Floral Magician Mary Bell is influenced by Mary Poppins or Mary Poppins (film), or both.[citation needed] The protagonists of Mary Bell Picture Book are Jane and Michael, the same names that appear in Mary Poppins.
The TV series was planned and produced by TV Setouchi, Big West, and Ashi Productions. It was directed by Tetsuya Endo, with series composition by Takao Koyama and Hideki Mitsui (both from Brother Noppo).[1][2] The animation directors include Masashi Hirota, Kōichirō (新羽高一浪), Yuriko Chiba, and Kouji Fukazawa. These four supervised about 80% of the 50 episodes.[3] The true identity of "Kōichirō" is unknown and people do not even know how to read his family name, but it is widely believed in Japan that "Kōichirō" is a pseudonym of Takeshi Ito, who later worked as assistant animation director on Cowboy Bebop: The Movie and Tactical Roar.[4][5]
Fifty episodes were broadcast from 1992-02-03 to 1993-01-18.
The soundtrack album, Mary Bell to Utaō! ("Let's Sing with Mary Bell") was released on July 17, 1992.
Floral Magician Mary Bell has been released in some other countries and areas, as:
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