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The Fuccons (/ ˈ f uː ˌ k ɒ n s /), known as Oh! Mikey (オー!マイキー, Ō! Maikī) in Japan, is a Japanese sketch comedy series created by Yoshimasa Ishibashi.It features the Fuccons, a family of American expatriates living in Japan, with characters played by mannequins filmed at various locations in real-time.
The Quintessential Quintuplets Movie: movie 2022 Masato Jinbo: Bibury Animation Studios: Kaguya-sama: Love Is War: TV series 2019 Shinichi Omata: A-1 Pictures: Kaguya-sama: Love Is War – The First Kiss That Never Ends: movie 2022 Shinichi Omata: A-1 Pictures: Kotaro Lives Alone: ONA series 2022 Tomoe Makino Liden Films: Fruits Basket: Prelude ...
Many other comedy films include instances of humorous cross-dressing, but do not feature it as a central plot element. Movies in which cross-dressing plays a minor but important role include: Comic Costume Race (1896) – Men compete in running, wearing women's clothes.
Punch Line (Japanese: パンチライン, Hepburn: Panchi Rain) is a Japanese anime television series directed by Yutaka Uemura and produced by MAPPA with scripts by Kotaro Uchikoshi, music by Tetsuya Komuro, and character designs by Shōta Iwasaki.
"Rakugo Girls") is a Japanese comedy manga series written by Kōji Kumeta and illustrated by Yasu, telling the everyday lives of five young female rakugo comedians. It was serialised in Kodansha 's Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine from September 2009 to September 2013 and the chapters compiled into six tankōbon volumes.
Douglas Byng was the first female impersonator on UK television. His songs are full of sexual innuendo and double entendres. Byng-Ho! was a comedy sketch show with two episodes. Queue For Song was a variety show featuring comedy and music, with various performers. Byng was openly gay within his own theatrical world, but very discreet outside it.
Tittybangbang is a female-led BBC television sketch comedy show, featuring Lucy Montgomery and Debbie Chazen. It ran between 2005 and 2007 on BBC Three . The show was largely written by Bob Mortimer and Jill Parker and produced by their company Pett Productions .
[2] [3] Harry Benshoff and Sean Griffin write that animation has always "hint[ed] at the performative nature of gender" such as when Bugs Bunny puts on a wig and a dress, he is a rabbit in drag as a human male who is in drag as a female. [4] This was preceded by cross-dressing in motion pictures began in the early days of the silent films.