From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nine (ナイン, Nain
?) is a baseball manga series by Mitsuru Adachi. It was serialized in
Monthly
Shōnen Sunday Zōkan from the October 1978 through May 1979
issues.[1]
The series was adapted into three television anime movies[2]
and a live-action
television drama.[3]
An altered version of the first anime was released in theaters,
with new and altered new music.[4][5]
The story is about two friends who were star athletes in junior high school who decide, on entering
high school, to join
the struggling baseball club so they can have a challenge. The
title comes from the nine members of a baseball team.
Plot
summary
Just before entering Seishū High School, track star Katsuya
Niimi and judo champion Susumu
Karasawa see a girl crying as the school loses a baseball game. The
boys decide to join the team and improve it in order to make her
smile. The girl turns out to be Yuri Nakao, daughter of the
baseball coach, and they learn the baseball team will be shut down
if it doesn't start winning. The series follows the three, as well
as pitcher Eiji Kurahashi, as Niimi and Karasawa learn about
baseball and what it means to be one of nine players on a team, as
they work together through high school make it to Kōshien.[6]
Characters
Character voices listed are for the anime releases only.
- Katsuya Niimi (新見 克也
?)
- Voiced by: Toru
Furuya
- Center
fielder on the Seishū High School baseball club, in love with
Yuri. In junior high, he held the national records for the
100 meter and 200 m races for his age group. His favorite
food is gomokuzushi. He wears the number 8 on his
jersey.
- Yuri Nakao (中尾 百合
?)
- Voiced by: Mariko
Ishihara (TV movie 1), Mariko Kurata (TV movie 2), Narumi Yasuda (TV
movie 3)
- The manager of the Seishū High School
baseball club and daughter of the baseball coach. There is a
growing romance between Yuri and Katsuya.
- Susumu Karasawa (唐沢 進
?)
- Voiced by: Kei
Tomiyama
- Right
fielder on the Seishū High School baseball club. In junior
high, he was the prefectural champion in judo. He wears the number 9.
- Eiji Kurahashi (倉橋 永二
?)
- Voiced by: Kaneto
Shiozawa
- Left-handed pitching ace on the Seishū High School baseball
club, and was one of the top pitchers in all of Japan in middle
school. Lives with his father, a truck driver.
- Yukimi Yasuda (安田 雪美
?)
- Voiced by: Chika
Sakamoto
- Star athlete of the Seishū High School track club, who has a
crush on Katsuya since Middle School. After transferring to Seishū
at the beginning of the school year, she begins pursuing him, much
to the annoyance of Yuri.
- Kentarō Yamanaka (山中 健太郎
?)
- Voiced by: Akira
Kamiya
- A childhood friend of Yuri, and ace pitcher at Bunan High
School where he has taken his team to victory at Kōshien. After an
unexpected reunion with Yuri, he becomes the romantic rival of
Katsuya.
- Jirō Yamanaka (山中 二郎
?)
- Voiced by: Yoshikazu
Hirano
- Kentarō's younger brother and a new member of the Seishū High
School baseball club, playing third base. He has a crush on Yukimi. He
wears the number 5.
- Chimi Yamanaka (山中 智美,
)
?)
- Younger sister of the Yamanaka brothers. She tries to mediate
the relationship between Yuri and Kentarō, who in turn uses her to
interfere with the developing romance between Yuri and
Katsuya.
- Coach Nakao
- Voiced by: Ichirō
Nagai (TV movies), Kōichi Kitamura (theatrical movie)
- The coach of the Seishū High School
baseball club. He is in jeopardy of losing his job for not having
won a single game, which he does with the addition of Eiji
Kurahashi to the team. He formerly coached Kentarō for a short time
when he was younger, and they were neighbours.
- Kazuya Niimi's father
- Voiced by: Tatsuyuki
Jinnai
- A former baseball player who helps Eiji join the baseball team
after talking to his father, with whom he formed the winning
battery at the invitational Kōshien tournament of
20-odd years prior to the events of the manga.
- Kazuya Niimi's mother
- Voiced by: Kazuko
Makino
- Appears in the theatrical movie.
- Eiji Kurashashi's father
- Voiced by: Takeshi
Aono
- Appears in the theatrical movie.
- Yukimi Yasuda's mother
- Voiced by: Miyoko
Asō
- Appears in the theatrical movie.
Sources:[3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
TV movies
Nine
The first Nine TV movie aired on 1983-05-04 on Fuji TV's
Nissei Family Special program.
Music
- Opening theme
- "Love - Innocent" (LOVE·イノセント, Rabu Inosento
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota
- Lyrics: Masao
Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Insert songs
- "Invited Desires" (つのる思い, Tsunoru
Omoi
?)
- "Goodbye to Sadness" (悲しみにサヨナラ, Kanashimi ni Sayonara
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Ending theme
- "Midsummer Runner" (真夏のランナー, Mannatsu
no Runner
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
|
|
Sources:[7]
Nine 2: Sweetheart
Declaration
The second Nine TV movie, Nine 2: Sweetheart
Declaration (ナイン2
恋人宣言, Nain Tsū Koibito Sengen
?), aired on 1983-12-18 on Fuji TV's
Nissei Family Special program.
Music
- Opening theme
- "Sweetheart Declaration" (恋人宣言, Koibito Sengen
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota
- Lyrics: Mariko Ryū
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Insert songs
- "Blue Sky Feelings" (青空気分, Aozora
Kibun
?)
- "My Young Boy" (私のYoung
Boy, Watashi no Yangu Bōi
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Mariko Ryū
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Ending theme
- "Midsummer Runner"
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
|
Staff
- Director: Gisaburō Sugii
- Teleplay: Shin'ichi Shirayama
- Animation Director: Tsuneo Maeda
- Chief Animator: Minoru Maeda
- Art Director: Katsuyoshi Kanemura
- Music: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Audio Director: Atsushi Tashiro
- Production: Toho, Group TAC, Fuji TV
|
Sources:[7]
Nine 3:
Final
The third Nine TV movie, Nine 3: Final (ナイン 完結編, Nain Surī Kanketsuhen
?), aired on 1984-09-05 on Fuji TV's
Nissei Family Special program.
Music
- Opening theme
- "Endless Summer" (エンドレスサマー, Endoresu Samā
?)
- Vocals: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Insert songs
- "Around August" (八月のゆくえ,
Hachigatsu no Yukue
?)
- "Boys in Love" (Boys in
love, Bōisu in Rabu
?)
- Vocals: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Ending theme
- "Midsummer Runner"
- Vocals: Mariko Tsubota and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
|
Staff
- Director: Gisaburō Sugii
- Teleplay: Yumiko Takaboshi
- Animation Director: Tsuneo Maeda
- Key Animation Director: Minoru Maeda
- Art Director: Katsuyoshi Kanemura
- Music: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Audio Director: Atsushi Tashiro
- Production: Toho, Group TAC, Fuji TV
|
Sources:[7]
Theatrical
movie
The first Nine TV movie was remade into a theatrical
movie titled Nine the Original (ナイン オリジナル版, Nain
Orijinaruban
?), released on 1983-09-16 by Toho.
Modifications were made to the original TV movie to fix problems
with it, and some of the seiyū and background music were changed as well.
When the Nine movies are rebroadcast on TV, this movie is
shown in place of the original TV movie.
Music
- Theme songs
- "Amateur Photograph" (青いフォトグラフ, Aoi Fotogurafu
?)
- "Love Taking Flight" (愛を翼にして, Ai o
Tsubasa ni Shite
?)
- Vocals: Mariko Kurata
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
- Insert songs
- "Invited Desires"
- "Sentimental Season" (涙色の季節,
Namida-iro no Kisetsu
?)
- "Midsummer Runner"
- Vocals: Mariko Kurata and Hiroaki Serizawa
- Lyrics: Masao Urino
- Composer: Hiroaki Serizawa
|
Staff
- Director: Gisaburō Sugii
- Screenplay: Hiroichi Fuse
- Animation Director: Tsuneo Maeda
- Art Director: Hiroshi Ōno
- Music: Hiroaki Serizawa, Yasunori Tsuchida
- Audio Director: Atsushi Tashiro
- Producers: Yūkichi Ōhashi, Atsushi Tashiro
- Production: Toho, Group TAC, Fuji TV
|
Sources:[4][5]
TV live
action drama
A Nine live action TV drama special aired on
1987-01-05 on Fuji TV's Monday Dramaland (月曜ドラマランド, Getsuyō
Doramarando
?) program.
Cast
- Aki Asakura (Yuri Nakao)
- Kazuya Takahashi (Katsuya Niimi)
- Kōyō Maeda (Jirō Yamanaka)
- Mikio Ōsawa (Kentarō Yamanaka)
- Mami Ōtsuka (Yukimi Yasuda)
|
Staff
- Original Work: Mitsuru Adachi
- Director: Yoshiharu Ueki
- Teleplay: Fumiyo Asō
- Production: Fuji TV
|
Sources:[3]
See also
These are titles with a similar theme of baseball.
References
External
links