How Were Haruka and Michiru’s VAs Told to Portray Their Characters?

Masako Katsuki and Megumi Ogata

Masako Katsuki and Megumi Ogata

Though the arguments have mostly settled down in recent years, discussions over the nature of Haruka and Michiru’s relationship was, at one time, one of the most hotly contested debates in the nascent days of the North American Sailor Moon fandom.

Today, we’re going to take a look at an interview conducted with Megumi Ogata and Masako Katsuki, voice actresses for Haruka Tenoh and Michiru Kaioh respective, and see how they approached figuratively, and literally, breathing life into their characters.

I hope you stick around!

Me and my cousins do this all the time.

Me and my cousins do this all the time

The ironic part of the whole debate surrounding the degree of lesbian-cosity1 in Haruka and Michiru’s relationship is that while fans continued to ardently debate both sides well into the early 2000s thanks in part to CWi’s changing Haruka and Michiru into cousins in the early North American dub,2 Ms. Takeuchi had already answered this question years ago at San Diego Comic Con 1998, where she confirmed that Haruka and Michiru were intended to be seen as lovers.3

It probably also didn’t help that the early online Sailor Moon fandom was filled with 30% made up lies, 30% fanfiction represented as real canon, and 40% nuggets of truth… when you were lucky. I can’t tell you how long it took me to figure out that there weren’t, in fact, “Sailor Knights.” 1997 was a dark year.

Voice Talents 1995

Voice Talents 1995

Anyway, as much as I love beating dead horses – and I’m sure that you’ve noticed it’s something of a hobby of time – we’re not here to talk about that today. Nope! We’re here to take a look at an interview where they discussed their characters. The interviews were printed in ザ・声優1995 (Za Seiyuu 1995; Voice Talent 1995).4

First off, Masako Katsuki!

Interviewer

— You portray Neptune as rather mysterious.

Masako

She definitely doesn’t come across like you would in day-to-day life, and she rarely expresses her feelings in a straight-forward manner. They [the production staff] keep telling me ‘don’t put a lot of feeling into it!’ I really want to put my emotions behind it, but the production staff doesn’t want me to do it like that. But I can’t completely keep my emotions out of it, you know. That’s why I’m constantly thinking about where to put feeling into it, and where to suppress.

Which, I guess, partially explains away at least some of that cool demeanor Michiru has both in her normal life and in her escapades as Sailor Neptune.

You, uh, mad Michiru?

You, uh, mad Michiru?

So, moving on, let’s take a look at what Megumi had to say about her character!

Interviewer

What is the relationship between Uranus and Neptune?

Megumi

The director told us to “they may both be women, but play them like a husband and wife,” so I play the role with that in mind.

Interviewer

What does Haruka think of girls? And, in particular, Michiru?

Megumi

I’m pretty sure she thinks that all girls are cute.

Interviewer

And about the other Sailor Senshi too, for example?

Megumi

I’d say so. But with Michiru, their relationship is that of equals. I think they’re like friends, like partners, and even like a husband and wife.

Interestingly enough, I don’t have the interview with me offhand, but this isn’t the first time I’ve seen the relationship between Haruka and Michiru described as that of husband and wife.

And yes, I’m aware that I could use the term “spouse,” but that would be going against the dynamic of the relationship that they’re trying to express here, especially in terms of the roles these two play in their interactions together. But that’s more an interesting difficulty in the nuance of translation than anything else.

Megumi Ogata and Masako Katsuki

Megumi Ogata and Masako Katsuki

Unfortunately this magazine spent most of the interviews touching on Masako and Megumi’s careers as voice talents and on their other characters, such as the newly released Magic Knights Rayearth, so there isn’t too much to talk about with respect to their roles in Sailor Moon.

However, I always love reading up on how voice actors and actresses view their characters when bringing their characters to life, and it was definitely interesting for me to see how the anime production staff directed the portrayal of Haruka and Michiru.

On that note, is there a particular voice actress/actor you’d be interested in hearing more about? I have a bunch of old anime magazines and read these reviews often just for fun, but I’d be more than happy to see what I can find if you have any requests!

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References:

  1. This is totally a word now. I’m going to use it as often as I need to until it catches on.
  2.  See Sailor Uranus (Censorship) (Wikipedia)
  3.  See p. 10 of the November 1998 issue of Animerica; provided here
  4.  See pp. 36-39 of ザ・声優1995, published December 1994

6 thoughts on “How Were Haruka and Michiru’s VAs Told to Portray Their Characters?

  1. “On that note, is there a particular voice actress/actor you’d be interested in hearing more about?”

    Sure, dude! The more 90s anime factoids you’ve got for us the better. Is AnimeTheor.ist waking up from its long slumber?

  2. As someone who has developed an immense dislike of fan-canon and pairings (I’m looking at you Reinako) being pushed as fact. I am frankly glad that there was actual official confirmation on the status of this relationship, I assume the Director was our old friend Ikuhara.

    Given the time, age group and indeed country this first appeared, it was a pretty bold move. Even if there was still a distinctive masculine/feminine set-up with both characters, in that Haruka was the guy and Michiru the lady. But even today this sort of thing is still very rare in media (barring fetish material).

    Despite what you’d no doubt expect me to say. I wouldn’t mind hearing some stuff on Emi Shinohara. 😛

    On an additional note, it amuses me that the VO’s have very similar hairstyles to their characters. With Katsuki especially, all you need do is dye it.

    • Yeeeeah, me and shipping don’t exactly have a good relationship.
      While I understand that fans have their own takes on the story and like different things about the series, it absolutely baffles me how one can say in the same breath that they “love Rei’s character,” and then in the next completely rewrite her personality in order to make her fit into whatever relationship they are in support of.

      By all means, like what you want to like… but how are you still a fan of the original character if you totally disregard her personality and how she’s portrayed in the anime and manga?

      =p I guess I’m just ranting now.

  3. Ah~ Even back then she [katsuki-san] said “suppress”. Back in 2013, she was on Ogata’s radio show “Ogata Megumi no Seiten Hekireki” (緒方恵美の晴天ヘキレキ!) as a guest and she talked a little about character portrayal, virtually saying the same thing she said here: “Suppress” or “Store away” (溜める)

    And Ogata also mentioned how the director wanted her to “perform like they were married” ;D

  4. I know Neptune’s actress did voice work for Super Sentai in Megaranger she voiced Neijayellow known in the US as the Psyco yellow ranger. She did not 0lay or voice her human desguise form they got a JAV actress for that. But she uses Neptune’s voice but colder sounding it’s creepy.

  5. “It probably also didn’t help that the early online Sailor Moon fandom was filled with 30% made up lies, 30% fanfiction represented as real canon, and 40% nuggets of truth… when you were lucky. I can’t tell you how long it took me to figure out that there weren’t, in fact, ‘Sailor Knights.’ 1997 was a dark year.”

    No joke! I remember, very vividly, reading Sailor Moon fan sites at my friends house (because we didn’t have a computer that connected to the internet in 1997) to get information on seasons that hadn’t been dubbed by DiC yet. At that point, I think only the first season had been released in the US. But fan sites are how I first learned about Sailor Uranus and Neptune, years before Sailor Moon S would every be dubbed by Cloverway.

    There was one website where someone had detailed this convoluted backstory (they called it a “theory”) about how Sailor Uranus had a twin brother, and the brother and Sailor Neptune were in love during the Silver Millennium, but when they were all reincarnated his soul went into Sailor Uranus’s body….all to explain *why* the lesbian couple existed in the story.

    I remember thinking, “Wait….that can’t be true right? That’s kind of ridiculous!” but the writer framed it as “This is totally what the series is going for, trust me I know, and it will be revealed in time.” so I had to do some research on other sites before I realized it was just this person’s kinda homophobic way of explaining away the two girls that liked each other L O L.

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