How Was Sailor Moon Affected by the 1995 Hanshin Earthquake?

Sailor Sting & the Police

Sailor Sting & the Police

Though we often talk about how Sailor Moon has had a lasting impact on the real world, it’s important to remember that the series did not exist in a vacuum. Throughout the five years that it was front and center in society’s consciousness, the world continued to change around it — and not always for the better.

As many of you already know, prior to the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and subsequent tsunami, the Great Hanshin Earthquake that struck on January 17, 19951 was the largest-scale natural disaster Japan had faced in recent history.

What many of you probably don’t know, however, is that Anza and the other members of the Sailor Moon Musical — Seramyu — cast were in Osaka for their final performance of the season when the earthquake occurred.

Today we’re going to talk about the lasting impact the Great Hanshin Earthquake had on Sailor Moon and even on the story’s canon! There’s some interesting trivia here, so you may want to stick around!2

No, we're not talking about Naru Osaka yet...

No, we’re not talking about Naru Osaka yet…

In case you’ve ever been curious why you always hear about the Hanshin area in Japan but can’t seem to find it on a map, it’s because it doesn’t actually exist. At least not technically.

As Wikipedia so eloquently puts it, the Hanshin (阪神) name is “derived from the second kanji from Osaka (大阪) and the first kanji from Kobe (神戸) (but in on-reading instead of kun-reading) [and is generally used to refer] to the area between Osaka and Kobe in the Kansai region of Japan.”3

So for all none of you who were being kept up at night by this mystery, you may now rest easy.

Now that we’ve got that out of the way, back to the Sailor Moon musical!

"The Path to Become the Super Warrior" poster

“The Path to Become the Super Warrior” poster

“Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon S Transformation – The Path to Become the Super Warrior” (美少女戦士セーラームーンS 変身・スーパー戦士への道) was a winter musical that ran from December 28, 1994 to January 16, 1995.4

As fate would have it, the last performances of their month-long musical tour took place at the Theater Drama City venue in Osaka on January 15 and 16.5

After finishing up their final show on the evening of January 16, the cast and crew spent the night in a hotel near Osaka before they were to return to Tokyo the following day, on January 17. At 5:46 am, however, all plans were put on hold when the earth heaved and the entire Hanshin region trembled with it.

I was just 9 years old and living in America when it happened, and yet I still remember the images of the destruction being aired on US news programs.

Even with on-site television broadcasting and radio reporting, information was still what we would consider “slow” compared to the always-connected world we live in now. For much of that first day, apparently large numbers of Sailor Moon fans were concerned about the well-being of their favorite real world representations of the Sailor Team that the Bandai offices were flooded with calls asking about the cast.6

Misako Iwana (Mars), Akiko Kosaka (music director of Sailor Moon musicals), Anza Oyama (Moon), Momoko Okuyama (Healer)

Misako Iwana (Mars), Akiko Kosaka (music director of Sailor Moon musicals), Anza Oyama (Moon), Momoko Okuyama (Healer)

Fortunately the hotel that Anza, the cast, and supporting musical staff were staying in didn’t suffer any major damage and, with the exception of their return getting pushed back a day, they didn’t suffer from any major problem.

It’s all a pretty sobering experience when you consider just how even a simple choice as staying in another hotel could have had a wildly different outcome, and lasting impacts on the Seramyu musicals for years to come.

Alas, this wasn’t the only impact that the Hanshin earthquake would have on Sailor Moon franchise. It would even go so far as to impact the series’ canon itself, even if in a very indirect way.

ChibiUsa's Picture Diary 4: The Secret of the Hammer Price Hall

ChibiUsa’s Picture Diary 4: The Secret of the Hammer Price Hall

We’re talking about the ChibiUsa Picture Diaries, of course! More specifically, “The Secret Hammer Price Hall,” which was the fourth and final side story in the series, which was carried in the August 1996 issue of Nakayoshi’s sister magazine, RunRun.

In the interest of being fair, I’d say that the ChibiUsa Picture Diaries are only debatably considered a part of the Sailor Moon series canon. Some people would like to include them, some don’t. Personally, since they don’t actually conflict with anything else that we know about the Sailor Moon universe, I’d count them as canon. Whether you want to, though, is up to you.

So what is the “Secret Hammer Price Hall” about? Well, in a nutshell, it stars Hotaru, ChibiUsa, and her gyaru friends Ruruna and Naruru as they decide to help a friend save his pawnshop. They inadvertently awaken a Genius Loci and bad things happen.7

What makes this story especially unique is that Ms. Takeuchi offered up an appearance in this manga through the auction/variety/comedy TV program Tunnels Hammer Price.8 The show was famous for letting people bid on opportunities to appear in manga, voice a character in a Studio Ghibli movie,9, go on a picnic with a famous actor, have a chance in the ring with a wrestler, and more.

100% of the money earned through the auction was given to the Japanese Red Cross Society to go assist the victims of the Hanshin earthquake.

Someone bid a lot of money just for one line as Yuko's father in Whisper of the Heart

Someone bid a lot of money just for one line as Yuko’s father in Whisper of the Heart

Though I can’t find any corroborating evidence, according to one Twitter user’s memory,10 the winning bid to appear in Sailor Moon was around 2 million yen, or approximately $20,000 USD.11

In addition to the winning bidder getting a supporting role as pawnshop owner Makoto Hanmastsuura,12 several other connections to the manga’s beginnings are apparent in the story, the most obvious of which being the story’s title, Hammer Price, coming from the TV program that spawned it.

Naruru and Ruruna, ChibiUsa’s gyaru friends

Less obvious, though, is the connection with ChibiUsa’s friends.

Naruru Osaka is the younger sister of — shock! — our favorite Osakan-but-not-really, Naru Osaka. Her best friend and partner in crime is named Ruruna Kobe.

Osaka, Kobe. Han, Shin.

Yep, they’re a throwback to the Hanshin earthquake connection.

I'll leave the rest of to more knowledgeable Sailor Moon critics

I’ll leave the rest of to more knowledgeable Sailor Moon critics

Now, I’ll leave the debate on the quality of the Hammer Price story to better-informed Sailor Moon critics than myself,13 but I do think it’s an interesting addition to the Sailor Moon storyline. The addition of the charity auction backstory, and the influence that had on the characters appearing in it, also fascinates me.

If you haven’t read the story, I encourage you to give it a shot and see what you think. If you have, I’d love to hear your thoughts on it! Would you consider it a part of the canon? Why or why not? Let me know down below!

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References:

  1.  See Great Hanshin Earthquake (Wikipedia)
  2. I tried to come up with an earthquake pun, but thought better of it. See, I’m doing better!
  3.  See Hanshin (Wikipedia)
  4.  See Sailor Moon S – Henshin – Super Senshi e no Michi
  5.  See 美少女戦士セーラームーン (ミュージカル) (Wikipedia)
  6.  See セラミュと震災
  7.  See https://missdream.org/sailor-moon-scanlations/sailor-moon-manga-scanlations/chibiusas-picture-diary-4/
  8.  See Tunnels Hammer Price (Wikipedia)
  9. Whisper of the Heart, in case you’re curious
  10. See @murratchx
  11. The Japanese economy hasn’t been doing so how, so even with inflation, the difference between the values over the past 24 years is minimal; see 2 million yen in 1994 accounting for inflation in 2018
  12. It’s unclear if this is actually his real name. Due to how private Japanese tend to be and how even manga authors typically use pen names, I’d guess it’s not.
  13. The Sailorati? Moonerati? Level 9000 Moonies?

5 thoughts on “How Was Sailor Moon Affected by the 1995 Hanshin Earthquake?

  1. Also: Keiko Kitagawa, live action PGSM Sailor Mars and Kobe native, is a survivor of the earthquake. She lost many of her school friends (she was 9 years old) and the experience is an important part of her personality.

  2. If anything, I wonder if Sailor Moon SuperS was the way it was unlike the dream arc Manga because of the Aum Shinrikyo gas attack in 1995?

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