Keiko Nanba (難波 啓子, Nanba Keiko, born 2 September 1952 in Niigata, Japan), better known by the stage name Keiko Yokozawa (よこざわけい子, Yokozawa Keiko), is a Japanese voice actress. She is most known for the roles of Dorami (Doraemon), Mami Sakura (Esper Mami), Benio Hanamura (Haikara-san ga Tōru), and Sheeta (Castle in the Sky).
Keiko Yokozawa | |
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よこざわけい子 | |
Born | 横沢 啓子(Keiko Yokozawa) September 2, 1952 Niigata, Niigata, Japan |
Other names | 難波 啓子 (Keiko Nanba,married name) |
Occupation | Voice actress |
Years active | 1972–present 1979–2005 (Doraemon) |
Agent | YU-RIN Pro (CEO) |
Filmography
editAnime
edit- Doraemon (1973) (Mii-chan)
- 3000 Leagues in Search of Mother (Fana)
- Ashita e Attack (Sumie Nishi)
- Ashita e Free Kick]' (Sumie Nishi)
- Ashita no Joe 2 (Jun Shioya)
- Astro Boy (1980) (Libyan)
- Aura Battler Dunbine (Silky Mau)
- Bannertail: The Story of Gray Squirrel (Suu)
- Blue Seed (Yaobikuni)
- Castle in the Sky (Sheeta)
- Charlotte of the Young Grass (Charlotte)
- Cho Kosoku Galvion (Kei)
- City Hunter (Kumi)
- Dokaben (Kyoko Asahina)
- Dragon Ball (1989) (Annin)
- Esper Mami (Mami Sakura)
- Esper Mami: Hoshizora no Dancing Doll (Mami Sakura)
- Gauche the Cellist (Child mouse, girl with viola)
- Haikara-san ga Tōru (Benio Hanamura)
- Hokkyoku no Muushika Miishika (Yuuri)
- Ideon (Rin)
- Ippatsu Kanta-kun (Itsuko, Motsuko)
- Karuizawa Syndrome (Yukari Kuno)
- Koguma no Misha (Misha)
- Lady Lady!! (TV & movie) (Misuzu Midorikawa)
- Legend of Lemnear (Lian)
- Lupin III: Part II (Eri Zadora (ep.103))
- Meiken Jolie (Angelina)
- Miyuki (Koharu (ep. 19))
- Nichijou (Nano's Key (ep. 25))
- Mirai Keisatsu Urashiman (Sophia)
- Obake no Q-Taro (0-Jirou)
- Obake no Q-Taro 2 (0-Jirou)
- Oyoneko Boonyan (Uzura Yudeta)
- Patlabor (Takeo Kumagami)
- Paul no Miracle Daisakusen (Miina)
- Plastic Little (May)
- Seton Doubutsuki: Kuma no Ko Jacky (Jill)
- Shin Don Chuck Monogatari (Lala)
- Spoon Obasan (Jin, Little Bon, Lou)
- Sue Cat (Maria)
- The Ideon: A Contact (Lin Formosa)
- The Ideon: Be Invoked (Lin Formosa)
- The Kabocha Wine (Eru, Natsumi Asaoka)
- The Wonderful Adventures of Nils (Mats)
- Three-Eyed One - Prince in the Devile Island (Pandra)
- Time Bokan series
- Time Bokan (Junko (ep.34-36))
- Yatterman
- Zenderman
- Tobé! Kujira no Peek (Maira)
- Urusei Yatsura (Ten's mother)
Anime: Doraemon (1979-2005)
edit- Doraemon (1979): (Dorami, Fuuko, Michiko Minamoto (1st voice), Mami Sakura, additional roles)[1]
- Doraemon: Nobita's Dinosaur (1980): (Piisuke)
- Doraemon: Nobita's Great Adventure into the Underworld (1984): (Dorami)
- Doraemon: The Record of Nobita's Parallel Visit to the West (1988): (Dorami)
- Dorami-chan: Mini-Dora SOS!! (short film) (1989): (Dorami)
- Dorami-chan: Wow, The Kid Gang of Bandits (short film) (1991): (Dorami)
- Dorami-chan: Hello, Dynosis Kids!! (short film) (1993): (Dorami)
- Dorami-chan: A Blue Straw Hat (short film) (1994): (Dorami)
- 2112: The Birth of Doraemon (short film) (1995): (Dorami)
- Dorami & Doraemons: Robot School's Seven Mysteries (short film) (1996): (Dorami)
- Doraemon: Nobita in the Spiral City (1997): (Wicky)
- It's Christmas! Doraemon & Doraemons Super Special (1997): (Dorami)
- Doraemon Comes Back (short film) (1998): (Dorami)
- Dorami & Doraemons: Space Land's Critical Event (short film) (2001): (Dorami)
Video games
edit- Namco × Capcom (Roll Casket)
- Rockman DASH series (Mega Man Legends series) (Roll Casket)
Dubbing roles
editLive-action
edit- The Passage (Leah Bergson (Kay Lenz))[2]
- The Sound of Music (Liesl von Trapp (Charmian Carr))[3]
Animation
edit- Fun and Fancy Free (Singing Harp)[4]
- PB&J Otter (Connie Crane)
Miscellaneous
edit- Gasshin Sentai Mechander Robo (Mika Shikishima)
- Doraemon (1979) (theme song performance (ED))
- Gatapishi (theme song performance (ED))
- The Kabocha Wine (theme song performance (ED2))
References
edit- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20030104214838/http://www.tv-asahi.co.jp/doraemon/contents/staff/index.html
- ^ "ザ・パッセージ/ピレネー突破口<HDニューマスター版>". Zeque Productions. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
- ^ "サウンド・オブ・ミュージック". The Cinema. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
- ^ "ファン・アンド・ファンシー・フリー". The Cinema. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
External links
edit- Keiko Yokozawa at Anime News Network's encyclopedia