Magical DoReMi (lost Singaporean English dub of anime series; 2004): Difference between revisions

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'''''Magical DoReMi''''', also known as ''Ojamajo Doremi'', is a magical-girl anime series by Toei Animation that ran for 51 episodes on TV Asahi in Japan between February 1999 to January 2000. The show later inspired three followup seasons, two theatrical films, a direct-to-video series, as well as manga and light novels. In 2003, the New York-based 4Kids Entertainment licensed the first entry.<ref>[https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/3713/4kids-acquires-magical-doremi 4KIDS ACQUIRES MAGICAL DOREMI] Retrieved Retrieved 22 Nov '17.</ref> The company produced an English dub that had a shortlived run on their 4KidsTV FOX Saturday morning block between 2005 and 2006 before being ultimately finished as a web-exclusive.<ref>[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2005-08-09/magical-doremi-airdate  Magical Doremi Airdate] Retrieved 22 Nov '17.</ref><ref>[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-04-18/magical-doremi-to-re-air-on-the-cw4kids-on-saturdays  Magical DoReMi to Re-Air on The CW4Kids on Saturdays] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref>
'''''Magical DoReMi''''', also known as ''Ojamajo Doremi'', is a magical-girl anime series by Toei Animation that ran for 51 episodes on TV Asahi in Japan between February 1999 to January 2000. The show later inspired three followup seasons, two theatrical films, a direct-to-video series, as well as manga and light novels. In 2003, the New York-based 4Kids Entertainment licensed the first entry.<ref>[https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/3713/4kids-acquires-magical-doremi 4KIDS ACQUIRES MAGICAL DOREMI] Retrieved Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref> The company produced an English dub that had a short-lived run on their 4KidsTV FOX Saturday morning block between 2005 and 2006 before being ultimately finished as a web-exclusive.<ref>[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2005-08-09/magical-doremi-airdate  Magical Doremi Airdate] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref><ref>[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-04-18/magical-doremi-to-re-air-on-the-cw4kids-on-saturdays  Magical DoReMi to Re-Air on The CW4Kids on Saturdays] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref>


An earlier English dub was produced for the Asian market. It debuted in June 2004, on Channel i in Singapore.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20040615185308/http://www.sphmediaworks.com:80/chi/ SPH MediaWorks Limited] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref><ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070409015204/http://www.kidscentral.sg:80/tv/tvguide/kids_list_daily.asp Welcome to the Kids Central!] Retrieved 20 Nov '17</ref> The dub was recorded locally at Voiceovers Unlimited and starred Denise Tan.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20110308170951/http://www.creativefuzion.net/web/portfolio.aspx?page=2 Creative Fuzion] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref><ref>[http://radio.toggle.sg/en/gold-905-fm/djs/denise-tan-5524556 Denise Tan] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref> It's not known if the company produced a dub for just the original series or the entire franchise.
An earlier English dub was produced for the Asian market. It debuted in June 2004, on Channel i in Singapore.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20040615185308/http://www.sphmediaworks.com:80/chi/ SPH MediaWorks Limited] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref><ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20070409015204/http://www.kidscentral.sg:80/tv/tvguide/kids_list_daily.asp Welcome to the Kids Central!] Retrieved 20 Nov '17</ref> However, it had disappeared from the schedule by October 22 of that same year, along with most of the other anime that aired on the channel. <ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20041022001712/http://www.sphmediaworks.com/chi/ Channel i's schedule, October 22, 2004] Retrieved 2 May '20</ref> On January 1, 2005, Channel i ceased transmission altogether due to low viewership as well as SPH MediaWorks' merger with MediaCorp. <ref>[https://corporate.sph.com.sg/media_releases/163 Channel i to close on 1 January 2005 Channel U and Channel 8 to have complementary programming] Retrieved 2 May '20</ref> The dub was recorded locally at Voiceovers Unlimited and starred Denise Tan.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20110308170951/http://www.creativefuzion.net/web/portfolio.aspx?page=2 Creative Fuzion] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref><ref>[http://radio.toggle.sg/en/gold-905-fm/djs/denise-tan-5524556 Denise Tan] Retrieved 22 Nov '17</ref> It's not known if the company produced a dub for just the original series or the entire franchise, but considering its short run it is likely the former. Voiceovers Unlimited itself folded in 2007.


No home video releases are known to exist, though given the time frame a VCD release in South East Asia is possible. No footage from this dub has surfaced online.
No home video releases are known to exist, though given the time frame a VCD release in South East Asia is possible, but unlikely. No footage from this dub has surfaced online, and any changes such as name or song changes are unknown.


==See Also==
==See Also==
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==References==
==References==
<references/>
{{reflist}}


[[Category: Lost audio]]
[[Category: Lost audio]]
[[Category: Lost TV]]
[[Category: Lost TV]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]

Revision as of 16:06, 11 September 2020

Magical doremi2.jpg

Promotional art.

Status: Lost

Magical DoReMi, also known as Ojamajo Doremi, is a magical-girl anime series by Toei Animation that ran for 51 episodes on TV Asahi in Japan between February 1999 to January 2000. The show later inspired three followup seasons, two theatrical films, a direct-to-video series, as well as manga and light novels. In 2003, the New York-based 4Kids Entertainment licensed the first entry.[1] The company produced an English dub that had a short-lived run on their 4KidsTV FOX Saturday morning block between 2005 and 2006 before being ultimately finished as a web-exclusive.[2][3]

An earlier English dub was produced for the Asian market. It debuted in June 2004, on Channel i in Singapore.[4][5] However, it had disappeared from the schedule by October 22 of that same year, along with most of the other anime that aired on the channel. [6] On January 1, 2005, Channel i ceased transmission altogether due to low viewership as well as SPH MediaWorks' merger with MediaCorp. [7] The dub was recorded locally at Voiceovers Unlimited and starred Denise Tan.[8][9] It's not known if the company produced a dub for just the original series or the entire franchise, but considering its short run it is likely the former. Voiceovers Unlimited itself folded in 2007.

No home video releases are known to exist, though given the time frame a VCD release in South East Asia is possible, but unlikely. No footage from this dub has surfaced online, and any changes such as name or song changes are unknown.

See Also

  • Magical DoReMi - Prior to 4Kids' involvement with the franchise, an unreleased English pilot was produced to sell the show to western broadcasters.

References