Sayo Yamamoto (山本 沙代, Yamamoto Sayo, born April 13, 1977) is a Japanese anime director and storyboard artist. She is known for directing the critically acclaimed anime series Michiko & Hatchin, Yuri!!! on Ice, and Lupin the Third: The Woman Called Fujiko Mine. After graduating from the College of Art and Design in Tokyo, she began work at Studio Madhouse, where she had her directing debut at age 25.[1][2]

Sayo Yamamoto
Born (1977-04-13) April 13, 1977 (age 47)
Tokyo, Japan
Occupation(s)Director, animator

Fujiko Mine was awarded the "New Face" award from the Japan Media Arts Festival in 2012.[3]

Career

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Education and early work

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During her time at the College of Art and Design, Yamamoto focused her attention on animation, as she felt less interested in the other things she was being taught. Her student project was an animation about samurai using actor, and frequent Akira Kurosawa collaborator, Toshiro Mifune as an inspiration.[4] While in the process of looking for a job after graduation, she showed this work to director Satoshi Kon. Enthusiastic about her potential, Kon intended to hire her to work on his second feature Millennium Actress, but studio politics eventually caused her to leave the project.[4]

She had her debut at Studio Madhouse working as storyboarder on the X television series headed by Madhouse director Yoshiaki Kawajiri. Soon after, she would have her first collaboration with directors Takeshi Koike and Katsuhito Ishii on the original video animation Trava: Fist Planet. Yamamoto had her directing debut in three episodes of the series Dragon Drive. It was during her time at Madhouse that she began her work on anime opening and ending animations, which she would go on to direct for many other projects.[5]

Yamamoto has stated that it was during her work on Samurai Champloo where she felt she was first able to truly express herself.[4] Samurai Champloo also marks the first time she worked with frequent collaborators, director Shinichirō Watanabe and writer Dai Satō.

Michiko & Hatchin

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During her time working on Samurai Champloo at Studio Manglobe, she was offered the chance to direct a project with full creative control. At the time, she was busy with work on Champloo, so she thought about what kind of project she wanted to direct for about a year. During that time, she took a trip to Brazil where she found the inspiration for her first series Michiko & Hatchin. The series, about an ex-convict and a young girl in search of the girl's father, was released in 2008.

At the press conference where Yamamoto unveiled the series, she said she wanted women especially to watch the series. "Our time slot was late at night, so office ladies would be returning home, and worn out from the day, they could have a beer and watch it."

The Woman Called Fujiko Mine

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After a few years of working on storyboards and art for other projects, including movies Redline and Evangelion: 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance, she was approached by a producer to create a new Lupin III series, with full creative control. It was Yamamoto's own idea to have the series take place before the start of the 1971 Lupin series, directed by Masaaki Ōsumi, and to have character Fujiko Mine in the starring role.

Notable works

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TV productions

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Series Director

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Episode Director

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Other

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Films

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Shorts

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  • Endless Night (2015, 2016; creator and director)[13]
  • Toruru's Adventure (2014; director of Crazy Consumption short)[12]

Music Videos

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  • Yasuyuki Okamura: Viva Namida (2013; director)

All Works

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[2]

Title Media Position Year Start Year End Department # of Episodes Episodes
Arakawa Under the Bridge[9] TV Series storyboard artist: opening animation 2010 n/a Art Department 13 1-13
Arakawa Under the Bridge x Bridge[10] TV Series storyboard artist: opening animation 2010 n/a Art Department 12 1-9, 11-13
Attack on Titan[11] TV Series episode director / unit director 2013 n/a 13 1-13
Attack on Titan[11] TV Series storyboard: ending animation 2013 n/a Art Department 13 1-13
Death Note[8] TV Series Continuity 2007 n/a Art Department 18 20-37
Endless Night[13] Short Director 2015 n/a n/a
Ergo Proxy[2] TV Series Director 2006 n/a
Ergo Proxy[2] TV Series storyboard artist 2006 n/a Art Department
Eureka Seven[7] TV Series episode director / unit director 2005 n/a 1 16
Eureka Seven[7] TV Series storyboard artist 2005 n/a Art Department 2 16, 36
Evangelion: 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance[2] Movie storyboard artist 2009 n/a Art Department n/a
Gunslinger Girl[2] TV Series storyboard artist 2004 n/a Art Department
Gunslinger Girl[2] TV Series unit director 2004 n/a Additional Crew
Highschool of the Dead[2] TV Series storyboard artist 2010 n/a Art Department
Lupin the Third: The Woman Called Fujiko Mine[2] TV Mini Series series director 2012 n/a 13
Michiko to Hatchin[2] TV Series series director 2008 2009 22
Redline[2] Movie assistant storyboard artist 2009 n/a Art Department n/a
Samurai Champloo[2] TV Series Director 2004 2005
Samurai Champloo[2] TV Series storyboard artist 2004 2005 Art Department
The Animatrix: World Record[2] OVA costume design, original art 2003 n/a n/a
Toruru's Adventure: Crazy Consumption[12] Short Director 2014 n/a n/a
Yuri!!! On Ice[6] TV Mini Series series director 2016 2017 13
Yuri!!! On Ice[6] TV Mini Series composition, creator, draft, etc. 2016 2017 13

References

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  1. ^ "AnimeFest 2012 Sayo Yamamoto". AnimeFest. Retrieved January 4, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Sayo Yamamoto | AnimeFest 2012". AnimeFest. January 11, 2025. Archived from the original on November 25, 2023. Retrieved January 11, 2025.
  3. ^ "Otomo's 'Combustible' Anime Short Wins Media Arts Award". Anime News Network. Retrieved December 29, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "AnimeFest 2012: Sayo Yamamoto Panel Report". The Fandom Post. October 2, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  5. ^ "FEATURE: A look at Sayo Yamamoto, director of "Yuri!! On Ice"". Crunchyroll.
  6. ^ a b c "Yuri!!! on Ice TV Anime's 1st Teaser Reveals Staff, Cast". Anime News Network. March 27, 2016. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c Eureka Seven's episode 16 & 36 ending credits
  8. ^ a b Death Note's episode 20-37 ending credits
  9. ^ a b Arakawa Under the Bridge's Blu-ray episode 1-13 ending credits
  10. ^ a b Arakawa Under the Bridge x Bridge's Blu-ray episode 1-9 & 11-13 ending credits
  11. ^ a b c Attack on Titan's episode 1-13 ending credits
  12. ^ a b c "Toruru's Adventure - nouvel omnibus du Studio 4°C (via PES Next Generation / Toyota) - News | Catsuka". Catsuka (in French). Retrieved January 11, 2025.
  13. ^ a b "Japan Animator Expo Streams Sayo Yamamoto's 'Endless Night' Short". Anime News Network. January 11, 2025. Retrieved January 11, 2025.
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