Rikako Aikawa
This biography of a living person includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (October 2015) |
Rikako Aikawa | |
---|---|
愛河 里花子 | |
Born | Nahomi Kawazoe October 7, 1967 |
Other names | Nahomi Iwata (岩田 菜穂美, Iwata Nahomi) |
Occupation | Voice actress |
Years active | 1974-present |
Agent | Atomic Monkey |
Spouse | Mitsuo Iwata |
Rikako Aikawa (愛河 里花子, Aikawa Rikako, born October 7, 1967) is a Japanese voice actress affiliated with Atomic Monkey. She was born in Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. She was originally a child actor. Her real name after she married Mitsuo Iwata, a Japanese voice actor, is Nahomi Iwata (岩田 菜穂美, Iwata Nahomi).
She appears in the Japanese and English-language versions of the Pokémon anime, voicing Ash's Caterpie, Metapod and Butterfree and his Krabby. She had a main role in the Orange League series where she voiced Ash's Lapras in both versions. She also appeared in the second Pokémon movie as the legendary Fire Pokémon, Moltres. She had a recurring role in the Johto series as Charla, Liza's Charizard, a Pokémon who lives at the Charicific Valley and who eventually developed a romantic relationship with Ash's Charizard. She also played Madame Muchmoney's Granbull.
She is also known as a specialist of tongue-twisters in the Japanese language.
Filmography
Anime
Television
1990s
- Tomatoman (1992) – Tomatoman
- Wakakusa Monogatari Nan to Jou Sensei (1993) – Ned
- Akachan to Boku (1996) – 6-year-old boy B
- Pokémon (1997) – Butterfree, Caterpie, Krabby, Psyduck, Lapras, Vulpix, Squirtle, Theme Song Performance (ED)
- Chou Mashin Eiyuuden Wataru (1997) – Dodo
- El Hazard: The Alternative World (1998) – Nahato
- The Legend of Black Heaven (1999) – Gen Tanaka
- Seraphim Call (1999) – Misaki (ep 10)
- Infinite Ryvius (1999) – Faina S Shinozaki, Nicks Chaiplapat
- Wild Arms: Twilight Venom (1999) – Jiruja
2000s
- Gate Keepers (2000) – Megumi Kurogane, Mieko Ikusawa
- Hamtaro (2000) – Koushi-kun, Don-chan, Theme Song Performance (Hamu Chanzu)
- Brigadoon (2000) – Moto Asagi, Sumire Hanazono
- Clockwork Fighters Hiwou's War (2000) – Shishi
- Haré+Guu (2001) – Hale
- Steel Angel Kurumi 2 (2001) – Kyanwan (Can-1)
- Mirmo Zibang! (2002) – Nezumi / Rat (Golden Edition characters)
- Jing: King of Bandits (2002) – Rum (ep 5)
- Pokémon Advanced (2002) – May's Combusken (ep. 139 & 141), Jessie's Dustox (ep. 139), Ash's Squirtle (ep. 188 & 189)
- Rumiko Takahashi Anthology (2003) – Fuwa's neighbor (ep 5)
- Planetes (2003) – Serie
- Kaiketsu Zorori (2004) – Ishishi, (+ unlisted credits)[1]
- Mars Daybreak (2004) – Bon
- MÄR (2005) – Bumoru, Halloween (young)
- Wan Wan Serebu Soreyuke! Tetsunoshin (2006) – Mika
- D.Gray-man (2006) – Cloud-shaped Akuma (ep 42)
- Pururun! Shizuku-chan (2006) – Hababi-kun
- KenIchi the Mightiest Disciple (2006) – No. 20
- Pururun! Shizuku-chan Aha (2007) – Hanaji-kun
- Elec-king The Animation (2007)
- To Love-Ru (2008) – Stella (ep 10)
- Penguin no Mondai (2008) – Charlotte Takahashi
- Live On Cardliver Kakeru (2008) – Hajime Kuroboshi, Sarusalsa
2010s
- Nichijou (2011) – "Sweet grande white chocolate mocha frapuccino with a short single-shot, caramel sauce, hazelnut syrup, chocolate chip, extra-whip espresso" (episode 18)
- Yondemasuyo, Azazel-san (2011) – Principal
- PriPara (2015) - Toriko
Films
- Pikachu's Summer Vacation (1998) – Psyduck, Vulpix, Squirtle
- Pokémon: The First Movie (1998) – Psyduck, Vulpix, Squirtle
- Pikachu's Rescue Adventure (1999) – Squirtle and Psyduck
- Pokémon: The Movie 2000 (1999) – Moltres and Squirtle
- Pikachu and Pichu (2000) – Psyduck, Vulpix
- Metropolis (2001) – Fifi
- A Tree of Palme (2001) – Barron
- Doraemon: Ganbare! Gian!! (2001)
- Tottoko Hamutaro: Hamu Hamu Land Daibouken (2001) – Koushi-kun
- Pikachu's PikaBoo (2001) – Psyduck
- Doraemon: Nobita in the Robot Kingdom (2002) – Onabe
- Case Closed: The Phantom of Baker Street (2002) – Noboru Emori
- Camp Pikachu (2002) – Psyduck
- Tottoko Hamutaro: Ham Ham Ham~Jya! Maboroshi no Princess (2002) – Koushi-kun
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Strange Wind Rider (2003) – Temjin
- Tottoko Hamutaro: Ham Ham Paradi-chu! Hamutaro to Fushigi no Oni no Ehonto (2004) – Koushi-kun
- Paprika (2006) – Nobue Kakimoto
- Astro Boy (2009) – Freezer[2]
- Doraemon: Nobita and the Island of Miracles—Animal Adventure (2012) – Sky
- Doraemon: Nobita no Himitsu Dōgu Museum (2013) – Poppon
Original video animations
- Pocket Monsters: Pikachu no Fuyuyasumi 2001 (2000) – Aipom, Psyduck
- Princess Minerva (1995) – K2
- El Hazard: The Magnificent World (1995) – Nahato
- Sakura Wars 2 (1999) – Tsuwako Tamazusa (ep 3)
- Pocket Monsters: Pikachu no Fuyuyasumi 2000 (1999) – Psyduck, Vulpix, Squirtle
- Haré+Guu Deluxe (2002) – Hale
- Jungle Wa Itsumo Hale Nochi Guu Final (2003) – Hale, Theme Song Performance
- Mobile Suit Gundam Seed MSV Astray (2004 Promo) – 8 (RED FRAME)
- Natsuiro no Sunadokei (2004) – Kawamura Mana
Film
- Kamen Rider J (1994 TV special) – Berry (voice)
Video games
- Dark Chronicle (2002) – Shigū
- Hourglass of Summer (2002) – Mana Kawamura
- Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008) – Squirtle - Zenigame in Japan
Dubbing roles
Television
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2013) – Photo Finish
Films
- The Fifth Element (1997) – Leeloo
References
- ^ "Megumi Hayashibara Stars in Kaiketsu Zorori Trailer". Anime News Network. August 6, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
- ^ "Yamato, Japanese Atom, Battle Spirits 2 Promos Posted". Anime News Network. September 1, 2009. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
External links
- Rikako Aikawa at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Rikako Aikawa at GamePlaza-Haruka Voice Acting Database Template:Ja icon
- Rikako Aikawa at Hitoshi Doi's Seiyuu Database