is a Japanese manga series by Fujiko Fujio about the titular obake, Q-Taro, who lives with the Ã
Âhara family. Q-TarÃ
Â, also known as "Q-chan" or "Oba-Q", is a mischief-maker who likes to fly around scaring people and stealing food, though he is deathly afraid of dogs.
The story is usually focused on the antics of Q-TarÃ
 and his friends. The manga was drawn in 1964âÂÂ1966, 1971âÂÂ1974, 1976 by the duo Fujiko Fujio (Hiroshi Fujimoto and Motoo Abiko). An English manga volume was published in Japan as Q the Spook.
There are three anime series adaptations of Obake no Q-TarÃ
Â. The first was shown on the Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) in black and white, and ran from 1965 to 1967. The second series, produced in color, ran from 1971 to 1972 on Nippon TV. The third series ran from 1985 to 1987 on TV Asahi.
The series was broadcast in the United States in the 1970s as Little Ghost Q-Taro, making it one of only three works by Fujiko Fujio to reach North America. In France, one of the episodes of the 1965 series was aired in November 1967 as part of ORTF Chaine 2's Japanese week, complete with French subtitles.
Characters
Voiced by: Machiko Soga (1965), Junko Hori (1971), Fusako Amachi (1985)
The protagonist of the manga, Q-TarÃ
 has a fear of dogs and cannot transform although he is an obake.
Voiced by: Kazue Tagami (1965), Yoshiko Ã
Âta (1971), Katsue Miwa (1985)
A human friend of Q-tarÃ
Â, ShÃ
Âta Ã
Âhara is an elementary school student. Q-TarÃ
 calls him and Shota calls Q-TarÃ
 . His grades are generally poor, and he was once second from the bottom of his class.
Voiced by: Masako Nozawa (1965), Sumiko Shirakawa (1971), YÃ
« Mizushima (1985)
Shota's older brother and the eldest son of the Ohara family who is a middle school student. Unlike Shota, his academic ability during his middle school days are average. Whenever Shinichi is at home, he usually spends his time listening to music, specifically enjoying records from the Beatles and Elvis Presley.
Voiced by: Hiroko Maruyama (1971), Eiko Masuyama (1985)
U-ko, a judoka, is Q-TarÃ
Â's girlfriend obake.
Voiced by: Misae Kita (1965), Yoshiko Yamamoto (1971), Fuyumi Shiraishi (1985)
Doronpa is an American obake. Q-TarÃ
 tends to have a rivalry towards him due to the fact that U-ko idolizes Doronpa's intelligence and he likes to annoy Q-TarÃ
 because he is Japanese.
Voiced by: YÃ
Âko Mizugaki (1965), Kazuko Sawada (1971), YÃ
«ko Mita (1985)
P-ko is Q-TarÃ
Â's younger sister.
Voiced by: Makoto KÃ
ÂsakaâÂÂReiko Katsura (1971), Keiko Yokozawa (1985)
O-jirÃ
 is Q-TarÃ
Â's younger brother. Although he can understand others' speech, he can only say "bakeratta". Only Q-TarÃ
 understands what O-jirÃ
 says.
Father of Q-TarÃ
Â, P-ko, and O-jirÃ
Â.
Mother of Q-TarÃ
Â, P-ko, and O-jirÃ
Â.
Voiced by: Kaneta Kimotsuki (1965/1971), Hiroshi Takemura (1985)
Nickname: Godzilla. A bully in Shota's class and neighborhood.
Voiced by: Mitsuko Aso (1965), Sumiko Shirakawa (1971), Kaneta Kimotsuki (1985), Naoki Tatsuta (1985, stand-in)
Shota's smart classmate.
Voiced by: Unknown (1965), Kazuko Sawada (1971), Naoki Tatsuta (1985)
Shota's rich classmate who kisses up to Godzilla. His name is also similar to the rich boy in Kaibutsu-kun He has an assortment of 0's and 100's at will.
Voiced by: Mariko Tsukai (1965), Michiko Nomura (1971), Sanae Miyuki (1985)
Shota's female classmate, always referred to as and U-ko lives with her.
Voiced by: Yoko Asagami (1985)
Shin'ichi's girlfriend. She is a middle school student, and P-ko lives with her.
Voiced by: Hiroshi Ã
Âtake (1965), Akira Shimada (1971), Shingo Hiromori (1985)
Ramen eater character that Q-taro always eats his ramen if he comes to Koike's room. He also appears too as a ramen eater in Doraemon, he appears as a teacher in Ninja Hattori-kun, he appears as Michio's father in Ultra B, and he becomes both between ramen eater and teacher in Biriken.
Voiced by: Reizo Nomoto (1965/1971), Shingo Kanemoto (1985)
Ohara's neighbor and Doronpa lives with him and resembles Doraemon.
Reception and impact
The popularity of the 1965 anime adaptation caused a cultural phenomenon called "Oba-Q boom" (ãªãÂÂQãÂÂã¼ã Oba-KyÃ
« bÃ
«mu), which made the series have an 30% audience rating, high popularity with children and spawn a variety of toys, songs and clothes, as well a host of imitators. The reason of Q-TarÃ
Â's popularity was that the series was grounded in everyday Japanese life, with Q-TarÃ
 questioning the structure of Japanese society and the comedic situations that occurred because of Q-TarÃ
 misinterpreting it.
Pac-Man creator Toru Iwatani cited the series as inspiration for the designs of the Ghosts in the Pac-Man video game series. In the manga series To Love Ru, the ghost character Shizu Murasame has a fear of dogs as an homage to Little Ghost Q-Taro.
Notes
References
External links