Yumiko Aoyagi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Zoeydahling (talk | contribs) at 00:43, 4 November 2012 (Reverted 1 edit by 2602:306:CF06:8CB0:CABC:C8FF:FEB9:6AD (talk) identified as vandalism to last revision by Bender235. ([[WP...). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Yumiko Aoyagi (born 1969 in Yokohama, Kanagawa) is a Japanese television writer, who worked briefly in 2007 on the United States Web show lonelygirl15 as a writer, director, and producer.[1] Aoyagi is an award winning[citation needed] writer whose work covers television, publishing and cinema. One of the most prolific and Japanese screenwriters of the last decade, she has written 16 network television series (receiving a NHK CEO Special Award), two telefilms, two feature films, 15 novels, one collection of essays and three translations of Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath, The last great Whandoodle and Mandy by Julie Andrews.[citation needed]

She has written 300 essays and articles for popular magazines on subject matter as diverse as screenwriting, love, family, travel and education. She lectures at Tokyo’s top universities and film schools and is the trusted interviewer of many Hollywood film stars and producers during their promotional tours of Japan. She has appeared on many nationally syndicated talk shows and variety shows.[citation needed]

After graduating cum laude from Sophia University (Jyochi University) with a BA in Comparative Literature in 1995, her writing career began for Fuji TV with her groundbreaking work on, KAIKI CLUB (“Horror Club”) a horror series similar to The Twilight Zone. She was one of the original writers. In 1996 her career took off after writing for a feature film, TOMOKO NO BAAI (“In case of Tomoko”), which was nominated for the Blue Ribbon Award in Japan. In the same year, her two hour telefilm, SAIGO NO KAZOKU RYOKO (Family Affair) for Tokyo Broadcast System won the monthly Galaxy Award of the month.[citation needed] Her work includes, MANHATTAN DIARIES(2006), KEKKONN NO KATACHI (2004), PRETTY GIRL (2002), KOI NO KAMISAMA (2000), MOONLIGHT EXPRESS(1998), YAMADAKE NO SHINBOU(1999) SWEET SEASON (1998), RISOU NO KEKKON (1997), ICHIBAN TAISETSUNA HITO (1995), HITORIGURASHI (1996), HEN (1996), OKKUMANCHOJYA TO KEKKON SURU HOHO, KOKORO (2003), SEIZON (2002), TADAIMA (2000) and a telefilm GAMOUTEI JIKEN (1998) .[citation needed]

In 2003, she became the youngest writer to spearhead NHK’s ASANO TEREBI DORAMA SHOUSETSU (Morning Drama Series), the nation’s highest rated slot. Her show KOKORO, a 156 episode series, received NHK Chairman awards and had been novelized. Her first Hong Kong film ‘MOON LIGHT EXPRESS’ starring Lesile Chang was shown at 1,000 theaters across Asia.

She speaks Japanese, English, German, Cantonese and Spanish and was raised in Japan and lived in the United States and Europe for several years.

Her latest project is $5.2 million, the world biggest Internet show, "The Scary City"[1] that launched on September 15, 2008. It expanded to Korea, France, U.K., Israel for the following three years.

References

Template:Persondata