Mamoru Miyano
Mamoru Miyano | |
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![]() Mamoru at the 2015 Tokyo International Film Festival
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Native name | 宮野 真守 |
Born | Saitama Prefecture, Japan |
June 8, 1983
Occupation | Voice actor, singer, actor |
Years active | 1990–present |
Notable credit(s) | Death Note as Light Yagami Mobile Suit Gundam 00 as Setsuna F. Seiei Vampire Knight as Zero Kiryuu Ouran High School Host Club as Tamaki Suoh Steins;Gate as Rintaro Ōkabe Free! as Rin Matsuoka Tokyo Ghoul as Shuu Tsukiyama |
Height | Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). |
Website | miyanomamoru |
Musical career | |
Genres | Rock, J-pop |
Instruments | Vocals |
Years active | 2007-present |
Labels | King, Mastersix Foundation |
Mamoru Miyano (宮野 真守 Miyano Mamoru?, born Wednesday, June 8, 1983) is a Japanese voice actor, actor, and singer from Saitama Prefecture.[1][2] He is best known for his roles on Ouran High School Host Club, Vampire Knight, Death Note, Soul Eater, Tokyo Ghoul, Free! , Mobile Suit Gundam 00, Kōtetsu Sangokushi, Steins;Gate, Nobunaga the Fool, and Uta no Prince-sama. At the 2007 Seiyu Awards he was nominated for two awards for his role as Light Yagami in Death Note, and in 2008, he won the "Best Voice Actor" award at the 2008 Tokyo International Anime Fair. At the 2008 Seiyu Awards, Miyano won "Best Lead Actor Award" for his role as Setsuna F Seiei in Mobile Suit Gundam 00, and as Hakugen Rikuson in Kōtetsu Sangokushi.
Miyano began his career as a musician in 2007. He released his debut single, "Kuon" (久遠?, lit. Eternity), in May on the King Records label.[3] In March 2009, his debut album Break was released. His latest tour "Wakening" was in May this year[when?] travelling around Japan.
Contents
Acting career
Miyano started his acting career in 1990 and provides the voice of Riku in the Japanese version of the PlayStation 2 video game Kingdom Hearts.[4] He then voiced Kiba, the main character of anime series Wolf's Rain. He returned as the voice for Riku in the 2004 Game Boy Advance game Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories,[4] as well as Kingdom Hearts II in 2005, and in Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories in 2007.[5][6]
In 2006, Miyano voiced Light Yagami for the anime version of the manga Death Note.[7] In 2007, for his role as Light Yagami, he was nominated for two awards at the first Seiyu Awards: "Best Lead Actor Award" and "Best New Actor Awards".[8][9] Also in 2007, Miyano went on to provide the voice of Setsuna F Seiei, the main character of Mobile Suit Gundam 00. He won his first award, "Best Voice Actor", at the 2008 Tokyo International Anime Fair for his portrayal of Light Yagami and Setsuna F Seiei.[10] In 2008, Miyano took on the role as Setsuna F Seiei again for the second season of Mobile Suit Gundam 00. He won his first Seiyu award for the roles of Setsuna F Seiei and of Hakugen Rikuson in Kōtetsu Sangokushi.[11] He has also voiced Zero Kiryu from the series Vampire Knight and Vampire Knight Guilty, as well as Death The Kid in the anime Soul Eater. He also provided the voice of Tamaki Suoh in the anime version of Ouran High School Host Club, Okabe Rintarō from Steins;Gate, Ling Yao from Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood, Oda Nobunaga from Nobunaga the Fool, and Rin Matsuoka from Free! Iwatobi Swim Club and Free! Eternal Summer.
In addition to voice acting, Miyano has also appeared on camera. His first acting job was in 1992 in Tokusou Exceedraft, where he appeared in a flashback as a child in a yakuza member's past.[4] In 2003, Miyano joined the cast of The Prince of Tennis Musical playing Tetsu Ishida (石田 鉄 Ishida Tetsu?). He made his film debut in 2006's The Prince of Tennis.[4] He also made a guest appearance in the drama The Quiz Show in 2008. In 2009, he has voiced Ultraman Zero from the new movie, Mega Monster Battle: Ultra Galaxy Legend The Movie.
In 2010, he began voicing Dent in the popular Pokémon anime series. In the same year he starred with fashion model and actress Ayumi Uehara and fellow voice actors Tomokazu Sugita, Tomokazu Seki, Rikiya Koyama, Yuka Hirata, Showtaro Morikubo and Yūko Kaida in the film, Wonderful World, directed by Daisuke Namikawa.[12] Later, he voiced Ultraman Zero again in the movie, Ultraman Zero: The Revenge of Belial. In 2012, he continued to voice Ultraman Zero in Ultraman Saga, in 2015 in Ultraman Ginga S: Showdown! Ultra 10 Warriors!!, as well as in the new movie, Ultraman X: Here It Comes! Our Ultraman in 2016.
Musical career
On May 28, 2007 on the King Records label, Miyano debuted as a singer with the single "Kuon" (久遠?, Eternity). "Kuon" debuted at number 47 on the Oricon charts and was used as the ending theme song for anime series Kōtetsu Sangokushi.[13] On June 13, 2007, with fellow voice actress Romi Park, the duo released a collaboration single titled "Fight", which debuted on the Oricon chart at number 73.[14] On June 4, 2008 he released his second single, "Discovery", which was the intro song for PlayStation 2 video game Fushigi Yūgi: Suzaku Ibun.[15] The song debuted at number 24 on the chart.[16]
In August 2008, Miyano released the character single "Soup/Hakosora", under the name Mamoru Miyano comes across Setsuna F Seiei (宮野真守 come across 刹那・F・セイエイ?); it debuted at number 18.[17] In December he released his third single, "...Kimi e" (…君へ?, ...To You), which also debuted at number 18.[18] On March 11, 2009 Miyano released his debut album, Break, which debuted at number 20.[19] On April 11, 2009, a month after the release of his album, Miyano went on his first tour, 1st Live Tour 2009: Breaking.[3]
In 2010, Miyano released his second album, Wonder. The album charted at number 20 on the Oricon Weekly Albums chart. Following the album's release, Miyano went on his second tour, Mamoru Miyano Live Tour 2010: Wondering. In April 2012, Miyano released his third album, Fantasista. The album charted at number 4 on the Oricon Weekly Albums chart.
In 2013, Miyano made his first appearance in on NHK's music variety show Music Japan.
In May 2014, Miyano went on his 6th live tour ~Wakening!~ where he traveled around Japan. The DVD was released January 28, 2015.
Personal life
Miyano married in late 2008. He and his wife have a son together.[20]
Discography
Albums
Title | Album details | Peak chart[21] | Sales |
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Break |
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20 | 8,518 |
Wonder |
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20 | 8,217 |
Fantasista |
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4 | 18,602 |
Passage |
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2 | 21,578 |
Frontier |
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3 | - |
Singles
# | Year | Release Date |
Title | Catalog No | Chart positions | Album |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oricon Singles Charts [22] |
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pre-1st | 2007 | 05/23 | "Kuon" | GBCM-24 | 47 | Break |
1st | 2008 | 06/04 | "Discovery" | KICM-1236 | 24 | |
2st | 12/03 | "...Kimi e" | KICM-1257 | 18 | ||
3st | 2009 | 07/29 | "JS" | KICM-1283 | 24 | Wonder |
4st | 10/21 | "Refrain" | KICM-1293 | 22 | ||
5st | 2010 | 12/08 | "Hikari, Hikaru" | KICM-1324 | 20 | Fantasista |
6st | 2011 | 07/13 | "Orpheus" | KICM-1344 | 10 | |
7st | 11/16 | "Dream Fighter" | KICM-1369 | 15 | ||
8st | 2012 | 11/14 | "Ultra Fly" | KICM-1416 | 13 | Passage |
9st | 2013 | 04/10 | "Kanon" | KICM-1439 | 3 | |
10st | 2014 | 02/19 | "New Order" | KICM-1495 | 12 | Frontier |
11st | 11/12 | "Break It" | KICM-1547 | 12 | ||
12st | 2015 | 04/15 | "Shine" | KICM-1584 | 3[23] | |
13st | 2016 | 01/27 | "How Close You Are" | KICM-1648 | 7 | |
14st | 05/11 | "Shout" | KICM-1666 | 12 |
Promotional singles
Year | Title | Chart positions | Album |
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Oricon Singles Charts [22] |
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2006 | "Make my way" | – | Non-album single |
2008 | "Soup/Hakosora" | 18 | |
"Soul Eater Character Song 3" ("Sore ga Bokura no Michishirube") | – | ||
"Prisoner" | – | ||
2009 | "Bara-iro Real Face" | 107 | |
"Uta no Prince-sama Audition Song 1" ("Hoshikuzu☆shall we dance") | – | ||
"Theme of Ling Yao" ("Number Ou" and "Hikari Sasu Basho e") | – | ||
"Uta no Prince-sama Audition Song 2" ("Believe☆My Voice") | – | ||
"True Fortune Vol. 6" ("Infinity") | – | ||
2011 | "Sacred Rider Xechs Dramatic Character CD" ("Nana-juu Okubun Ichi no Kanojo") | 216 | |
"Uta no Prince-sama – Maji Love 1,000% – Idol Song Tokiya Ichinose" ("Nana-iro no Compass" and "My Little Little Girl") | 7 |
Video releases
- Mamoru Miyano Live Tour 2009: Smile & Break (2010)
- Mamoru Miyano Live Tour 2010: Wondering (2011)
- Mamoru Miyano Live 2011–12: Fight & Stand (2012)
- Mamoru Miyano Live 2012–13: Beginning (2013)
- Mamoru Miyano Special Live 2013: Traveling! (2014)
- Mamoru Miyano Live 2014: WAKENING! (2015)
- Mamoru Miyano Live 2015: AMAZING (2015)
- Mamoru Miyano Live 2015–16: GENERATING (2016)
Filmography
Television anime
Tokusatsu
- Special Rescue Exceedraft (1992) – Child
- Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger (2013) – Ferocious Knight D
- Ultraman Retsuden (2011) - Ultraman Zero (Voice), Singer (Ep. 72 cameo; actor)
- New Ultraman Retsuden (2013) Ultraman Zero
- Ultraman X (2015) - Ultraman Zero (Ep.5)
Original video animation (OVA)
Year | Series | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2004 | Wolf's Rain | Kiba | |
2004 | Fafner in the Azure: Right of Left | Ryou Masaoka | |
2008 | Tsubasa Tokyo Revelations | Kamui | |
2010 | Tono to Issho | Asakura Yoshikage | |
2011 | Fate/Prototype | Rider/Perseus |
Films
Video games
Dubbing
Live-action
- Caitlin's Way (Griffen Lowe (Jeremy Foley))
- Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Willy Wonka (Johnny Depp))
- Halloweentown High (Dylan Cromwell (Joey Zimmerman))
- Hannah Montana: The Movie (Travis Brody (Lucas Till))
- Harry Potter film series (Percy Weasley (Chris Rankin))
- The Musketeers (d'Artagnan (Luke Pasqualino))
- Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson (Logan Lerman))
- Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters (Percy Jackson (Logan Lerman))
- The Spy Next Door (Larry (Lucas Till))
- Upside Down (Adam Kirk (Jim Sturgess))
Animation
- Bionicle: Mask of Light (Takua Takanuva)
- Despicable Me 2 (Antonio Pérez)
- The Lorax (Ted Wiggins)
- Minions (Herb)
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (Shining Armor)
- The Secret Life of Pets (Tiberius)
- X-Men Origins: Wolverine (Scott Summers)
Drama CD
- Dolls (Seiju Shikibu)
- Free! (Rin Matsuoka)
- Karneval (Yogi)
- Mobile Suit Gundam 00 (Setsuna F Seiei)
- Ouran High School Host Club (Tamaki Suoh)
- Soul Eater (Death the Kid)
- Starry Sky (Shiki Kagurazaka)
- Steins;Gate (Rintaro Okabe)
- Uta no Prince-sama (Tokiya Ichinose)
- Vampire Knight (Zero Ichiryuu)
- Fate/Stay Night: Garden of Avalon- glorious afterimage (Bedivere)
Comics
- Strobe Edge (Ren Ichinose)
References
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External links
- Official website (Japanese)
- Official blog (Japanese)
- Official music site (Japanese)
- Mamoru Miyano at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Mamoru Miyano at the Internet Movie Database
- Mamoru MiyanoLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). discography at MusicBrainz
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- ↑ "Namikawa Directs 1st Film: Live-Action Wonderful World". Anime News Network. December 8, 2009. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
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- ↑ Mamoru Miyano Album Chart History. Oricon Style Japan. Retrieved on November 7, 2012
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- ↑ http://www.oricon.co.jp/prof/319473/products/1116297/1/
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- ↑ http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2014-08-26/mamoru-miyano-voices-character-in-cardfight-vanguard-film/.78044
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Vague or ambiguous time from May 2016
- Official website not in Wikidata
- Articles with Japanese-language external links
- Articles with MusicBrainz artist links
- Good articles
- 1983 births
- Japanese male singers
- Japanese male video game actors
- Japanese male voice actors
- Living people
- People from Saitama Prefecture
- Best Actor Seiyu Award winners
- King Records (Japan) artists