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Sailor Moon Museum will finally make its outside-Japan debut

Sailor Moon Museum will finally make its outside-Japan debut

SoraNews245 days ago
After traveling to four cities in Japan, the exhibit is ready to head out and meet the international Sailor Moon fan community.
Earlier this year, Sailor Moon fans in the U.S. and U.K. got a special treat as the live-action stage musical, Sailor Moon The Super Live, traveled overseas for a series of performances in London and across America. Unfortunately, both tours have now finished, and it doesn't look like they'll be doing encore laps either, as the producers have announced that both casts are headed home to Japan for a run at the Sunshine Theater in Tokyo from October 9 to 13. There's even a bit of international prestige attached to them now, as they're being billed as 'Team US' and 'Team UK' in promotions, and their respective posters show the Sailor Senshi standing in front of glittery rainbow recreations of the New York and London skylines.
But it's not all bad news for the outside-Japan fan community, because while the Sailor Moon musical is going back to the series' home country, the Sailor Moon Museum will be going overseas.
Construction crews won't be having to break down and reassemble an entire building, however. The Sailor Moon Museum is actually a traveling exhibition displaying artwork and artifacts chronicling over 30 years of Sailor Moon history, with artifacts from the manga, anime, and live-action versions of the story. After starting in Tokyo, the Sailor Moon Museum then moved to Fukuoka, Osaka, and Nagoya. As the video here shows, it's a very impressive collection, but it's never been displayed outside Japan before. What's more, the organizers say that the museum will 'power up' for its overseas debut, implying that there may be new items or aspects that visitors will be able to experience for the first time anywhere.
▼ The most recent Sailor Moon Museum ended its run in Nagoya in September of last year.
\閉幕まで1週間!/
#美少女戦士セーラームーン ミュージアム 名古屋会場も残すところあと1週間となりました。 セーラー戦士たちに名古屋で会えるのも残りわずか…!ぜひこの機会をお見逃しなく💎 🌙名古屋展チケット 好評発売中
https://t.co/p6ibcc0aMJ #セーラームーンミュージアム pic.twitter.com/p2aQ72aPnk — セーラームーンミュージアム (@sailormoon_ex) August 25, 2024
No venue information has been released at this point, but with Sailor Moon having huge fanbases in North America, Latin America, Europe, and elsewhere in Asia, pretty much anywhere in those regions is a viable candidate, and the choice of language in the announcement, that the exhibit is going 'overseas' without mentioning a specific country, could be a sign the that multiple countries will be on the list.
The Sailor Moon Museum is slated to make its overseas debut this autumn.
Source: Sailor Moon official website (1, 2)
Top image: Sailor Moon official website
Insert images: Sailor Moon official website, PR Times
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Between reality and fiction: A summer's day in Karuizawa with Minae Mizumura
Between reality and fiction: A summer's day in Karuizawa with Minae Mizumura

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Between reality and fiction: A summer's day in Karuizawa with Minae Mizumura

Every summer, I find myself escaping into the pages of a certain novel like clockwork: Minae Mizumura's 'A True Novel.' Its evocative, heady depiction of the summer resort town of Karuizawa in Nagano Prefecture, more of a supporting character than a mere backdrop for the human drama that unfolds, draws me in to almost forget, for a moment, the relentless humidity of a Tokyo summer — as if I, too, am cooling off under the shaded mountain roads of the summer resort town. It is difficult to summarize 'A True Novel,' published in 2002. At its heart, it is a love story that delves into the transformations Japanese society undergoes in the postwar era, centering on the shifting fate of one affluent family and those around them that get caught up in the tide. 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The fictional author-like figure in the narrative frame describes how she encountered a story that resembled 'Wuthering Heights' and recognized it as having the makings of a different novel. Similarly, when Mizumura herself considered how she could even approach writing a love story comparable to Bronte's classic but rooted in Japan, a 'true novel' in Japanese — the answer lay in Karuizawa. 'Here you could talk about love in the Western sense,' she says. 'What might seem foreign can happen here.' Visitors walk around Kumoba Pond in Karuizawa, Nagano Prefecture. The pond is referenced in Minae Mizumura's 'A True Novel.' | HANAKO LOWRY She explains that 'Wuthering Heights' and other 19th-century novels were what Japanese writers would have encountered as Western literature following the Meiji Restoration of 1868. 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