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[79] During the original run musicals ran in the winter and summer of each year, with summer musicals staged at the Sunshine Theater in the Ikebukuro area of Tokyo. In the winter, musicals toured to other large cities in Japan, including Osaka, Fukuoka,[80] Nagoya, Shizuoka, Kanazawa, Sendai,[81] Saga, Oita, Yamagata and Fukushima. [82] The final incarnation of the first run, New Legend of Kaguya Island (Revised Edition) (新・かぐや島伝説 <改訂版>, Shin Kaguyashima Densetsu (Kaiteban)), went on stage in January 2005, following which, Bandai officially put the series on a hiatus. [83] On June 2, 2013, Fumio Osano announced on his Twitter page that the Sailor Moon musicals would begin again in September 2013. [84] The 20th anniversary show La Reconquista ran from September 13 to 23 at Shibuya's AiiA Theater Tokyo, with Satomi Ōkubo as Sailor Moon. Satomi Ōkubo reprised the role in the 2014 production Petite Étrangère which ran from August 21 to September 7, 2014, again at AiiA Theater Tokyo. Live-action film & series[edit] Cancelled Disney film adaptation[edit] Sailor MoonDirected byStanley TongBased onSailor Moonby Naoko TakeuchiStarring Geena Davis Winona Ryder Elisabeth Shue Production
companies Walt Disney Pictures DIC Entertainment Toei Company Distributed byBuena Vista Pictures DistributionRelease dateCancelledCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish During the 1990s, Disney was going to adapt Sailor Moon into a film under the Walt Disney Pictures banner but it was cancelled immediately. [85][86][87][88][89][90][91] Unrealized American adaptation[edit] Main article: Sailor Moon (1994 TV pilot) In 1993, Renaissance-Atlantic Entertainment, Bandai and Toon Makers, Inc. conceptualized their own version of Sailor Moon, which was half live-action and half Western-style animation. [92][93] Toon Makers produced a 17-minute proof of concept pilot and a two-minute music video, both of which were directed by Rocky Solotoff, who also worked on the pilot's script. [94] Renaissance-Atlantic presented the concept to Toei, but it was turned down as their concept would have cost significantly more than simply exporting and dubbing the anime adaptation.
January 23, 2015. Archived from the original on August 1, 2015. Retrieved August 3, 2015. ^ Alverson, Brigid (October 8, 2015). "NYCC EXCLUSIVE: Kodansha Announces "Attack on Titan" Anthology". Comic Book Resources.
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