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Tamako Market is a 2013 anime television series produced by Kyoto Animation and directed by Naoko Yamada. The series revolved around Tamako Kitashirakawa, the elder daughter of a mochi shop owner in the Usagiyama Shopping District, who one day encounters a talking bird named Dera. The series aired in Japan between January 10 and March 28, 2013.
Tamako Kitashirakawa (北白川 たまこ, Kitashirakawa Tamako) Voiced by: Aya Suzaki (Japanese); Margaret McDonald (English) [3] The title character and the main protagonist of the series, Tamako is a kind, cheerful and somewhat clumsy first-year in high school whose family runs a mochi shop in their town's shopping district called Tama-ya.
Listeners - Funimation [a] (only the first same-day simuldub episode was streamed on time) & Hulu; Major 2nd Season 2 - Crunchyroll (delayed after episode 4) MASHIN HERO WATARU THE SEVEN SPIRITS OF RYUJINMARU - YouTube (delayed after episode 2) The Millionaire Detective Balance: Unlimited - Funimation [b] (postponed after episode 2)
Tamako Love Story [a] is a 2014 Japanese anime romantic comedy film directed by Naoko Yamada. It is a sequel of the 2013 TV series Tamako Market produced by Kyoto Animation . The film was released in Japan on April 26, 2014, and has been licensed by Sentai Filmworks in North America.
Naoko Yamada (pronunciation ⓘ) (山田 尚子, Yamada Naoko) is a Japanese animator and director. Working at Kyoto Animation, she directed the anime series K-On! (2009–2010) and Tamako Market (2013), and the anime films A Silent Voice (2016), Liz and the Blue Bird (2018) and The Colors Within (2024).
She has also worked on anime such as K-ON! and Tamako Market. In 2007, she illustrated her first light novel, and since then, she continued to do it for many works on the market. Horiguchi's last credited work at Kyoto Animation was as the character designer and animation director on Tamako Market in 2013.
The channel primarily aired anime series and films dubbed in Hindi and, for a period, English, as well as with subtitles. It was the only channel in India to simulcast anime series on the same day as Japan. On 18 April 2017, Animax ceased broadcasting in India. The channel would be succeeded by Animax's Asian feed.
In an interview with Anime News Network, Yamada stated in response to the question of if she'd describe Liz and the Blue Bird as a "gay love story": "On Liz and the Blue Bird, as well as Tamako Love Story, a lot of people read into that as a gay love story, as you have mentioned. But that wasn't so much the intention.