< BACK

Ethazar's Selective Concert Mari Yoshiko

エプタザールSelect Concert 眞理ヨシコ
Classic music

Mari Yoshiko

This photo is not describe about event or place exactly. It might be some image supported to explain this event.

Yoshiko Mari (Yoshiko Mari, December 4, 1938 -) is a Japanese children's singer, voice actor, eminent professor at Toyo Eiwa Jogakuin University. Her real name is Miko Sato (Sato Yoshiko).

Yoshiko Mari was born in Gifu Prefecture. Then she moved to Tokyo. From Tokyo Metropolitan Komaba High School, she studied under Hiroshi Sakai, a lecturer at Tokyo University of the Arts. After that, under the guidance of Fukamidori Natsuyo, she graduated from Vocal Music Department of Tokyo College of Music. In 1961, when she was in Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, she passed the audition of NHK and became the new voice of NHK "Song Plaza".

After that, at "Mother to Is Ito" (then Uta no Ehon) was selected as a first sister of Uta. At that time she appeared under the name "Yoshiko Mari".

In 1963, the children's song "Toy Chacha Cha" used at NHK "Uta no Ehon" hit such as selling 40,000 records in one month and received the 5th Japan Record Awards Nursing Rhyme Award.

From the 1970s to the 1980s, she played an important role as a voice actor in several of the puppet theater programs for children who had been broadcasting on the NHK general TV at 18 o'clock, and at the same time she was singing a play drama.

Many awards such as welfare culture award (special department) have been awarded to her.
In 2011, she released the 50th anniversary singing CD album "Utatsumugi".
Currently, she is Toyo Eiwa Jogakuin University's professor, Japan Youth Culture Center director, Fuku
Ambassador for children's songs in Hirono-cho prefecture, Fukushima Prefecture Ambassador for Education and Restoration.

Schedule & Ticket

There is no schedule or ticket right now.

Place information

Visuals help you imagine

More photo & video

Other languages

Chinese (Simplified)  English  French  German  Korean  Malayalam  Russian  Thai  Vietnamese 
More languages

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mari Yoshiko", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.
Content listed above is edited and modified some for making article reading easily. All content above are auto generated by service.
All images used in articles are placed as quotation. Each quotation URL are placed under images.
All maps provided by Google.

Buy Ticket >