NEW YORK, NY.- Noriko Ohara, the Japanese voice actress who for decades played the role of Nobita in the beloved childrens show Doraemon, giving life to a main character in one of the countrys longest-running television shows, has died. She was 88.
Her agency, 81 Produce, said in a statement Tuesday that she died July 12 after unsuccessful treatment for an unspecified illness. The statement did not list the place of death or mention surviving family members.
Doraemon, the animated series in which the titular robot cat befriends Nobita, a 10-year-old boy struggling at school, is considered a staple among people in Japan. Oharas voice became widely recognizable to many in Japan as she played Nobita from the 1970s to the early 2000s.
She also starred in other popular anime, like Yatterman, Future Boy Conan and Heidi, Girl of the Alps, as well as Japanese-dubbed versions of Western films. Her work won her multiple awards in Japan, including in the Anime Grand Prix and the Seiyu Awards, given to anime voice actors.
She began voicing Nobita, which she described as an intense task, in 1979. The show was broadcast Mondays through Saturdays, and she was frequently required to record seven or eight episodes at a time, she said in a 2017 interview with Cinema Today, a Japanese news site.
Working on Doraemon was like being an athlete, she said. I had to build up my stamina.
She played Nobita until 2005.
Noriko Tobe was born in Tokyo on Oct. 2, 1935, according to her agency. As a child, according to her website, she grew up listening to her parents read or tell her stories. She also dreamed of becoming a writer like Jo March, a character in Louisa May Alcotts novel Little Women, after seeing a movie adaptation.
In middle school, she said, she decided to become an actress, like June Allyson, who played Jo in the 1949 adaptation. As an adult, Ohara voiced the character in a Japanese version of the movie.
Fifty years later, I became a voice actress and played the role of Jo, she wrote. Dreams come true!
She began her career at a childrens theater company, working in puppet shows and dramas, she said in the 2017 interview. She then worked on dubbing foreign films and television dramas, many from the United States, at a time when Japan was just starting to get introduced to dubbed media.
I saw things Id never seen in Japan, like garage doors opening with the flick of a remote control, or freezers and huge vacuum cleaners, she said in the interview. I was enjoying American culture, which is said to be 50 years ahead of Japan.
While dubbing foreign films, she mostly voiced mature, elegant female characters, represented by such actresses as Jane Fonda, Shirley MacLaine and Catherine Deneuve. But in anime, Ohara often played boys. In Doraemon, it was a lazy and carefree schoolboy.
Outside of her job as a voice actress, she wrote on her website, performed poetry readings at universities, recorded fairy tales and offered classes to voice acting students.
Information on survivors was not immediately available.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.