Magical Princess Minky Momo


Magical Princess Minky Momo is a Japanese magical-girl anime franchise by Ashi Productions. The original series ran between 1982 and 1983 on TV Tokyo and inspired three OVAs between 1985 and 1987. A second television series, titled
Magical Princess Minky Momo: Hold on to Your Dreams, ran on NTV between 1991 and 1992, and like the original, it spawned home video follow-ups. A third Momo series began in 2004, this time as a manga known as Miracle Dream Minky Momo in Shogakukan's Shōgaku Ninensei magazine.
In 2006, series writer Takeshi Shudo expressed interest in making a third Momo anime series. In 2009, Reed announced a new Momo production, but it has not yet surfaced, likely due to Shudo's passing in 2010.

Media

First Anime

Magical Princess Minky Momo is a Japanese anime television series produced by Ashi Productions that premiered on March 18, 1982 and concluded on May 26, 1983 on TV Tokyo after 63 episodes. The series inspired a crossover short film with Studio Pierrot's Creamy Mami, the Magic Angel called Long Goodbye: Magical Angel Creamy Mami VS Magical Princess Minky Momo Decisive Theatrical Battle that was released on June 15, 1985, attached to the latter's theatrical film. The following month, a Peter Pan themed OVA named Magical Princess Minky Momo La Ronde in my Dream was released in Japan. On January 21, 1987 Ashi released the Magical Princess Minky Momo Hitomi no Seiza Minky Momo SONG Special animated music video.

Plot

Momo is a princess of Fenarinarsa, "the land of dreams in the sky". Fenarinarsa is a dwelling place for fairy tale characters. It was in danger of leaving Earth's orbit and disappearing, because people on the planet lost their dreams and hopes. The king and queen of Fenarinarsa sent their daughter Momo to Earth to help the people regain them. Momo became the daughter of a young childless couple, accompanied by three followers with the appearance of a dog, a monkey and a bird. On Earth, Momo takes the appearance of a teenage girl. To help the planet regain its hopes and dreams, Momo transforms into an adult version of herself, with an occupation tailored to fit the situation. Each time Momo succeeds in bringing happiness to the person affected, the Fenarinarsa crown shines. When it shines four times, a jewel appears in the crown. Once twelve jewels appear, Fenarinarsa will return to Earth.
Later in the series, however, the task is left incomplete as she loses her magical powers and soon gets killed by an incoming truck. She is reincarnated as a baby, the real daughter of the couple on Earth. Now she has her own dream to realize. She also has a pink lizard named Kadzilla who helps her and her allies defeat an evil shadow who had been the source of the troubles of the people she had helped.

International Releases

In 1984, Harmony Gold acquired the rights to the original Minky Momo series and repackaged it into the 52-episode The Magical World of Gigi. The English dubbed version was broadcast in Australia on Network Ten, Malaysia on RTM2, Singapore, Kuwait, Zimbabwe, Trinidad and Tobago, Indonesia, Kenya, Brunei and Israel. Gigi branded productions also aired in Brazil, China, the Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, Mexico, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Russia and the Philippines, in local languages.
Despite international distribution, North American audiences initially only received the 1985 OVA, Yume no naka no Rondo. The English dubbed release was produced by Harmony Gold and distributed on VHS by Celebrity Home Entertainment in 1987, titled Gigi and the Fountain of Youth. Rebecca Forstadt played Gigi in this dub. Jehan Agrama sang the title song in the English and Italian versions. Like most English language anime during its time, it was heavily edited, with an altered plot, rewritten dialogue, and a changed soundtrack. In 2015, William Winckler Productions released Harmony Gold's English dub of the original series in 13 compilation films through Amazon Instant Video.

Second Anime

A second television series, produced by Ashi Productions and sharing the same title as the original, premiered on NTV on October 2, 1991. After 38 episodes, the series title changed to Magical Princess Minky Momo: Hold on to Your Dreams and concluded on December 23, 1992 after a total of 62 episodes. Three additional episodes were later released on home video. This series inspired the 1993 OVA Minky Momo in The Bridge Over Dreams, and its followup the year after, Minky Momo in The Station of Your Memories. The two starred an older Momo who was no longer a magical girl.

Plot

The second series follows a similar story structure to the first, but stars a new cast. This Momo came from "Marinarsa", the "land of dreams in the bottom of the sea." She's accompanied by Cookbook, Lupipi, and Charmo and enjoyed a happy life on the ground. Similar to the previous series, she is adopted by a young childless couple who became her parents on the ground and she used her magic to bring happiness to many people.
Later on, Momo and her family become refugees. She understands that people have few hopes and dreams now. She eventually meets the Momo character from the first series and ultimately decides to save all the remaining hopes and dreams, using her magic against many social issues. Despite her efforts, all magic and fairy tale characters begin to disappear. The King and Queen of Marināsa decide to escape from the Earth. Momo stays behind to fulfill her parents' dream of having a child, believing that hopes and dreams are never really lost.

Impact and influence

While aimed at young girls with the goal of selling toys, the original series attracted a considerable number of older male fans and alongside Creamy Mami, the Magic Angel, is credited as one of the originators of the lolicon otaku subculture. Though this unintended audience allegedly disgusted Production Reed founder Sato Toshihiko, it helped the show gain a strong 10% viewer share, leading to its run being extended from 50 episodes to 63.
Episode 46 of the original series has become infamous due to its depiction of Momo dying after being hit by a truck carrying toys. In an issue of Japanese anime magazine OUT, series writer Takeshi Shudo explained that this was retaliation from the production staff after toy sponsor Popy had pulled funding due to poor merchandise sales, despite strong ratings. While the character's death was only temporary, the sequence was seen as a trailblazer that allowed later magical-girl productions to deal with darker themes. The episode, alongside the last, later inspired a Japanese urban legend linking the series to natural disasters.
In 1993, Hiroshi Takada won JASRAC's International Award for his work on the first TV series.
The original series ranked 70th in TV Asahi's 2005 poll of the most popular anime.

Soundtracks

Singles

;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Yume no Naka no Rondo
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Yumemiru Heart
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Yume wo Dakishimete
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: LOVE CALL

Albums

;Magical Princess Minky Momo: Yume no Naka no Rondo Ongakuhen
;Magical Princess Minky Momo: Fenarinarsa Song Festival
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: DaBaDaBa DaBaDa
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Yuki ga Yandara
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Utau Fairy Tale!
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: LOVE STAGE
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Yume ni Kakeru Hashi
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Someday My Prince Will Come
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Tabidachi no Eki
;Mahou no Princess Minky Momo: Someday My Prince Will Come TV/OVA
;Dendō Twin Series Magical Princess Minky Momo TV-ban OVA-ban

Compilations

These albums have songs from multiple shows. The applicable tracks are in bold.
;Emotion 20th Anniversary Theme Collection - OVA & Movie