ImperfectBlue said:
Yasuo Ootsuka (right) with Hayao Miyazaki
Animator
Yasuo Ootsuka died on Monday, March 15. He was 89 years old.
Studio Ghibli producer
Toshio Suzuki revealed the news on the same day at the 2021 Tokyo Anime Award Festival.
Ootsuka was born on July 11, 1931, in Shimane Prefecture, Japan, and joined
Toei Animation in 1956. His early contributions included animation for
Hakujaden (
The Great White Snake) and
Wanpaku Ouji no Orochi Taiji (
Orochi, the Eight-Headed Dragon), the latter of which he collaborated on with the late
Isao Takahata. He served as an animation director alongside Takahata (director) and
Hayao Miyazaki (layout design, key animation) on
Taiyou no Ouji: Horus no Daibouken (
The Little Norse Prince), and was a mentor to both in their early years at Toei Animation.
The three collaborated again at
Tokyo Movie Shinsha (now
TMS Entertainment) on
Lupin III, for which he was an animation director and character designer. Ootsuka continued to work on
Lupin III anime until finishing
Lupin III: Cagliostro no Shiro (
The Castle of Cagliostro) in 1979. He returned to the franchise for
Lupin III: Kiri no Elusive (
Lupin III: Elusiveness of the Fog) in 2007, which would be his final credit as an animator. His other notable projects as an animation director and character designer include
Mirai Shounen Conan (
Future Boy Conan) and
Jarinko Chie.
Ootsuka had a passion for automobiles—particularly military vehicles—and wrote and illustrated numerous books dedicated to them beginning in the 1980s. Genkousha published a collection of his vehicle illustrations from the
Lupin III series in 2020.
Studio Ghibli produced the documentary
Ootsuka Yasuo no Ugokasu Yorokobi (
Yasuo Ootsuka's Joy of Motion) in 2004, highlighting his work as an artist and animator. He was a lecturer at Yoyogi Animation Gakuin in his later years, and received the Special Award from the Association at the 42nd Japan Academy Prize—Japan's equivalent of the Academy Awards—in 2019. That year, comedian Akira Kawashima portrayed a character based loosely on Ootsuka in NHK's 100th Asadora,
Natsuzora, which was partially set at a fictionalized Toei Animation.
Source:
Animage Plus Rest in Peace, Yasuo ootsuka