Happy!

Happy!

The cover of the first tankōbon of manga Happy!, released in Japan by Shogakukan on February 28, 1994, featuring Miyuki Umino.
ハッピー!
Genre Sports
Manga
Written by Naoki Urasawa
Published by Shogakukan
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Big Comic Spirits
Original run 19931999
Volumes 23
Live-action television film
Directed by Osamu Katayama
Written by Hideo Tsuchida
Released April 7th, 2006
Live-action television film
Directed by Ryutaro Kawashima
Written by Hideo Tsuchida
Released December 26th, 2006

Happy! (ハッピー!) is a sports manga written and illustrated by Naoki Urasawa. It was published in Big Comic Spirits from 1993 till 1999. The story is about a teenage heroine who embarks on a career as a professional tennis player to repay an enormous debt incurred by her brother to Yakuza loan sharks, with the threat that if she fails, they will force her into a life of prostitution at a soapland. The series was adapted into two television movies in 2006.[1]

Characters

Miyuki Umino (海野 幸 Umino Miyuki)
The heroine of the story, Miyuki is a tennis prodigy, capable of beating one of the top tennis players in Japan even while when out of practice. She has a pure heart and is devoted to her family above all else, but her desperation and the schemes of those around her quickly give her a terrible reputation as a "bad girl of tennis". She lost the Cinderella Cup to her rival Choko.
Ieyasu Umino (海野 家康 Umino Ieyasu)
Miyuki's brother disappears right after the start of the manga but his ill-considered business schemes, are what create the huge debt that Miyuki must pay off. He feels guilty about causing the deaths of their parents and his get-rich-quick schemes are an attempt to make up for the poverty he inflicted on his siblings.
Junji Sakurada (桜田 純二 Sakurada Junji)
The Yakuza debt collector who shadows Miyuki and her career was himself once an aspiring athlete and is alternately threatening, supportive and discouraging. He hopes she can succeed and drags his feet when his superiors pressure him not to give her a chance, but he regularly points out the almost certain futility of what she's doing.
Kikuko Kaku (賀来 菊子 Kaku Kikuko)
A promising young tennis star who is Miyuki's first opponent and becomes a fervent advocate of the prodigy after losing to her. Kaku is a lesbian who is at least somewhat in love with Miyuki and this is used to spread malicious rumours that Miyuki has seduced Kaku.
Keiichiro Ohtori (鳳 圭一郎 Ohtori Keiichiro)
The son of one of the grande dames of Japanese tennis, he went to school with Miyuki and she turns to him for assistance getting her tennis career started. He is thoroughly under the thumb of his tyrannical mother however and this limits the assistance he will give her. He is a good tennis player but his mother decides he lacks the potential to be the best and forbids him to pursue a professional career in tennis.
Utako Ohtori (鳳 唄子 Ohtori Utako)
Keiichiro's mother, she was once the champion of Japan. She is rich, vain, callous and vengeful, hating Miyuki for being the daughter of the man she couldn't get. However she agrees to sponsor and train Miyuki in order to use her to embarrass the rival Ryugasaki family. Miyuki's bad reputation starts with Utako's teaching Miyuki a very unsportsmanlike maneuver on the tennis courts and insisting that Miyuki use it to humiliate her opponent.
Choko Ryugasaki (竜ヶ崎 蝶子 Ryugasaki Choko)
The daughter of Hanae Ryugasaki, Utako's rival from Kyoto, Choko is also Miyuki's unscrupulous arch-rival who delights in sabotaging Miyuki with cruel practical jokes and scurrilous rumours. She portrays herself as a cute and innocent victim of Miyuki's wickedness.
Thunder Ushiyama (サンダー牛山 Ushiyama Sandaa)

Miyuki's rather lecherous tennis coach. He used to train big name tennis players but was banned from the sport for life when he was accused of rigging a game. Nonetheless, he is apparently an exceptional coach and was personally hired by Madame Ohtori to coach Miyuki.

Live-action Drama

Manga

Volume list

No.Release date ISBN
01 February 28, 1994[2]ISBN 4-09-183401-9

      References

      1. http://asianwiki.com/Happy!
      2. "Happy! 1" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
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