Forum › Nakatani Nio × Canno − Crossed interview
…So, I create a separate thread for this, as suggested by Nezchan.
Original interview http://blog.livedoor.jp/geek/archives/51522471.html (SITE NOT SAFE FOR WORK)
It was published at the time volume 2 of YagaKimi came out. I apologize for potential inaccuracies in the translation.
(Doc file )
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Special conversation between "Yagate Kimi ni Naru"'s Nakatani Nio and "Ano Ko ni Kiss to Shirayuri wo"'s Canno.
From the origin of their fixation on yuri to their work ethics, to the works in which they "felt the presence of yuri", the two authors who carry the yuri genre on their shoulders openly talked with us.
−−Today we're having a conversation in which you two can't not participate, so I thank you both for coming while you're so busy. Is this the first time you actually meet?
Nakatani Nio: Since we met a few days ago at Yuri-ten in Ikebukuro, this is actually our second meeting.
Canno: Since Nakatani-san's manga has a very cool craft to it, I expected her to be equally cool. And when we met, well, she was, but she was also a very kind and lovely woman.
NN: Really? What's this all about! (laugh) I actually always bought Canno-san's doujinshis at doujin displays, so of course I've known about her for a while now.
Ca: Same for me, I've been reading Nakatani-san's doujins since before "Yagate Kimi ni Naru" started. I didn't know very well the exact genre of her works, but Melonbooks had a special page attached saying "It's an awesome manga!", so I bought them regardless.
−−So you knew who the other was before you were serialized. What started your interest in Yuri, Canno-san?
Ca: I guess the trigger was reading "Maria-sama ga miteru" (Shūeisha) in high school. I didn't really care much about the genre at first, but after reading it I became hooked on it.
NN: That's the most notorious entry point! What couple did you like the most?
Ca: My favorite character is Yoshino from "Yellow Rose", and I ship her with Rei-chan. Did you read MariMite, Nakatani-san?
NN: Since it's a sort of landmark for Yuri, I read volume 1 for my culture, and I liked it, but I don't have much time to read novels, so I haven't read the rest. For now I'm only reading one small bit at a time.
Ca: Please be sure to read at least to "Rainy Blue".
NN: I don't quite get that "stop at Rainy" phrase that Yuri fans always use...
Ca: Well, don't worry about that, buy them until Rainy Blue.
NN: Alright, I'll read it.
Ca: Have you enjoyed a particular Yuri series lately?
NN: In my last interview, when I said I like "Hibike! Euphonium" (novel by Takarajimasha, anime by Kyōto Animation), I was retorted that it wasn't Yuri. But there were scenes where I did feel a Yuri vibe, so it was fine by me.
Of course, Euphonium as a whole can't really be called a Yuri, but to me it counts as long as I can feel it in some parts.
Ca: Yeah, I'm that way too. Take "Precure" (Tōei Animation): I watch it as a goldmine of yuri, and in my favorite series, Doki Doki, there's that girl called Hishikawa Rikka...
NN: Oh yeah, Hishikawa!
Ca: She's the main character Aida Mana's partner, but as Mana builds relationships with other characters, Rikka gets jealous and uneasy. If you watch this as a grade schooler, you can think that it's natural to feel this way towards a friend, but when you watch it as an adult, you totally feel the Yuri!
NN: Ahaha! So you have more fun seeing Yuri in mainstream works than reading actual yuri?
Ca: I feel it has become this way, lately, yes. Before, I read only Yuri-hime Comics and such, works that I fully knew were Yuri, but these times I've started to look for Yuri in works that aren't generally lauded as such.
NN: Did it start when you started to draw "AnoKiss"?
Ca: Hmm, I wonder? Lately I enjoy feeling the Yuri in stuff like the yonkoma in "Kirara" (Houbunsha), but I think I also got tired with overly serious and dark works as I grew older. So more than "AnoKiss", it may just be that I'm getting old (laugh).
NN: Since I've started drawing Yuri manga, I've become more conscious of other Yuri works, but what about you, Canno-san? Has drawing AnoKiss made your Yuri antenna more sensitive?
Ca: Not that much, I would say. Even before my love for Yuri awakened, I liked same-sex romance in general, so outside of that and seeing Yuri in girly anime, my sensitivity is still pretty much the same.
NN: I think I feel the same. So more than Yuri itself, what you really enjoy is shipping, right?
Ca: Yes, I love shipping. There are a lot of people who are both into BL and Yuri, aren't there. (?)
−−Then why do you write Yuri rather than BL?
Ca: I love drawing facial expressions, and if I have to draw very expressive faces, I have more fun with girls. And if I have two girls, that's twice the luck. (laugh)
More than romantic love iself, I like ambiguous relationships that are close to love but might be something else. But if I write such relationships with a boy and a girl, everyone ends up naturally assuming that it's love. However, with two girls the feeling is a bit more balanced, I think. I guess it would be the same with two boys, but as I said I have more fun drawing girls, so… (laugh)
NN: It's true that in AnoKiss, the characters never use the words "love" or "romance". Is that deliberate on your part?
Ca: It's not exactly deliberate, but it's a natural result of that feeling, I guess. And you, Nakatani-san, what made you draw girl's love manga?
NN: I thought, "if a cute girl and a cute girl do cute stuff, it'll be hella cute."
Ca: So you're no different from me! (laugh)
NN: Your way of saying it was cooler, though. (laugh)
Ca: But in YagaKimi there's Maki-kun, who's a guy, right? Didn't you want to avoid featuring boys in a Yuri series?
NN: I didn't. In my interview for Dengeki Online, I said that "In a world where there are also men, I want girls to be chosen anyway." [sorry, I'm not quite sure what the original sentence means here > 「男性もいる世界観の中で、あえて女の子を選んだ形で描きたい」 ] But while there are girls that "fall in love specifically with girls", I think there are also girls "whose crush just happens to be a girl". I wanted to also show that side in the characters' personalities and specificities, and I didn't think I could really depict it if men were completely absent. What do you feel about the presence of male characters in YagaKimi's cast, Canno-san?
Ca: Since Maki-kun doesn't directly get involved in love affairs, I haven't really paid much attention to him, regardless of his gender. If he had made an obvious move on Nanami-senpai or Yuu-chan I would probably have thought "hey, he's a guy", but so far there's no indication he's going to approach them or any of the girls.
NN: I see, that's an original way to view it.
Ca: For now, I only think of Maki-kun as un uke, with Doujima-kun as the seme.
NN: Thank you very mu… wait, what? (laugh) In AnoKiss, however, there's not a trace of male presence.
Ca: Yes, right from the start I decided that there would't be any male characters.
NN: Writing the word "yuri" in the title feels like a sort of challenge. Didn't it take courage?
Ca: I thought that it might not reach the potential readers if I didn't say right away "this is Yuri". So I wanted to get that information across. Since the series was gonna focus on "yuri" and "kiss", the best-sounding title I found with those two words was "Ano Ko ni Kiss to Shirayuri wo". How did you decide on the title "Yagate Kimi ni Naru"?
NN: I did put a lot of meaning in the title, but even in the prototypes I chose ones that had a sort of Yuri aura to them. When volume 1 came out, I was very careful to appeal to Yuri lovers, with the cover (two girls gazing at each other) or the the band around the cover.
Ca: But that's not the case of the title.
NN: Indeed, but many yuri fans told me that "One Day, I Will Become You" sounds extremely Yuri. But some also say "I thought it was a story of substitution".
Ca: Like some kind of horror story. "I'll gradually take your place…" (laugh)
NN: Exactly. (laugh) In "AnoKiss", you have one kiss per chapter, huh.
Ca: Yes, my editor told me to include a kissing scene every time. And to create highlight scenes, in a Yuri manga the kissing scenes might be a selling point, they said. (laugh)
NN: I can get that. You think carefully about where the kiss will be, won't you?
Ca: I think the place where a kiss is given is significant, so I don't choose it at random. My editor even keeps an Excel file where they listed who kisses whom and where. Like, in volume 3, "kiss on the foot, indicating submission." (laugh)
NN: A kiss list, now that's interesting! Although, when you say "Excel", it kind of takes the magic away. (laugh)
Ca: But making a list of "character X gives a kiss there in chapter Y" means that by chapter 20 we've almost run out of body parts to kiss. (laugh)
NN: It's important to have some variety in the kisses, I guess. So far, my series has only had 2 kissing scenes, but I still have that voice telling me "this, here, is the highlight!", so I put all my effort onto that point. It's like a fighting game, where you wait for the exact moment when your special attack is sure to hit hard.
last edited at Sep 10, 2016 7:54AM
−−Nakatani-san, did you already know about AnoKiss when you started to draw YagaKimi?
NN: Well, if you draw yuri manga, AnoKiss has already become hard to ignore, so I read it intensely to help me for my own work. Even leaving that aside, my first impression when opening a volume was "Wow, the author is good!" (laugh)
Ca: No way! Thank you very much. (laugh)
NN: To me, seeing a yuri manga that wasn't shoujo-like was refreshing. Sure, it is love-themed, but in the tight lining and expressions, or in the panel layout, it feels closer to shounen. Since there are a lot of shounen aspects in my own way of drawing, I felt maybe we had some things in common in that regard.
Ca: I never read that many shounen manga growing up, and used to read almost only shoujo manga, but I do think my drawings aren't very shoujo-like, so you opinion confirms that.
NN: To me, that makes it easier to read, actually. So I'm glad there is a yuri series with this kind of style!
Ca: I found the art incredibly good too when I read YagaKimi's first chapter. Then Yuu-chan received a confession from a boy, I wondered how she would react, and what kind of yuri story it would evolve into, I was really excited.
After reading the first volume, I was both supporting Nanami-senpai and sympathising with Yuu-chan, who couldn't understand what it was like to be in love. I actually think that if I was into Yuu-chan's shoes, I would be scared of Nanami-senpai. Even though you keep saying "I don't understand", she's constantly pushing in. So reading that and seeing Yuu-chan's acceptance of it, I find her incredibly kind-hearted.
NN: I see. (laugh)
Ca: And yet I'm like "Do your best, Nanami-senpai!", like I'm trying to fan the flames of yuri. (laugh) More specifically, I loved the entire chapter where Nanami-senpai went to Yuu-chan's place! But I guess that's how even a girl feels when she goes to the place of the girl she likes.
NN: I'm glad you say that. (laugh)
Ca: Also, I'm really intrigued by Saeki-senpai. When Nanami-senpai chose Yuu-chan for the election campaign, her friend started to worry that she didn't rely on her, and I love this kind of "complication". (laugh)
NN: Ah, so you do love complications! I actually love Towako from AnoKiss. (laugh) Personally, I sometimes feel I can't write a story without drama, but in a generally quiet and bright story like AnoKiss I was kind of surprised to see a girl like her, who brought problems. I find your way of drawing difficult emotions yet being very clear in the execution really enthralling. [難しい感情を描きつつ、爽やかに仕上げているのが魅力的だと感じます。]
Ca: For AnoKiss, I'm adamant on concluding a given arc within a single volume, or 5 chapters, so I can't create too much complications. So I found it difficult to write volume 3, where Towako appears, with a more dramatic appeal than usual. That's why I love girls in the position of Saeki-senpai… Err, but well, since I said I liked Hishikawa from Doki Doki Precure, I guess that wasn't much of a secret. (laugh)
NN: Indeed. (laugh)
Ca: So yes, I can't wait to see how Saeki-senpai is gonna interact with those two.
NN: I often hear that "Sayaka = Hishikawa", but Hishikawa is voiced by Kotobuki Minako-san, and in the recent PV for Yagate Kimi ni Naru, Kotobuki-san voices Nanami Touko.
Ca: Yes. That's why, when I saw that PV, I was like "It's Kotobuki-san, yaaay!" with a guts pose. (laugh)
−−How did you feel when you heard your characters talk?
NN: Their voices were as I imagined. I didn't picture those voices very clearly until now, but after hearing them in the PV, they are the voices I now hear in my head when working on my storyboards. AnoKiss had some Drama CD's released, what were your impressions?
Ca: From the start, there were characters who talked and others who didn't talk in my head. I was happy that the voices of those who talked inside me could now be heard by the readers. As for those who didn't talk, it felt refreshing, like "so that's what their voices sounded like". I had always imagined Kurosawa Yurine with the voice of Mizuhashi Kaori, so I thought "now everyone can hear it too". Shiramine Ayaka didn't talk in my head, so my feeling was more "Ooh! So that's what you sound like. You're cute, Shiramine." (laugh) The way I picture the characters hasn't changed, but right after the recording I really heard those voices in my head, though now they have quieted down.
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Ca: I really think your art is pretty, but do you employ any assistants?
NN: No, I draw all alone.
Ca: You mean you draw everything by yourself, even the backgrounds? That's something…
NN: And you, Canno-san, do you employ assistants?
Ca: I do receive help from friends, occasionally, but normally I work alone. I'm afraid of drawing manga with people I don't know, honestly… Well, you could say I'm just shy. (laugh)
NN: Oh I know how you feel! I'm really shy too… Since I'm not very good a communicating with people, I end up more comfortable with controlling all of my work myself. But I'm aware that it may not be such a good thing when you draw manga.
Ca: That's a very mature comment.
NN: What I'm saying is very childish, though. (laugh) "I can't communicate, so I'm fine by myself!" (laugh)
Ca: Ahaha!
NN: Still, you're pretty impressive yourself. AnoKiss' backgrounds are really filled and polished.
Ca: You could say I'm a bit afraid of the void, so I often try my best to fill the blanks. In your art, however, it's like the blanks are used as an integral component of the picture, and I'm fond of that.
NN: Thank you very much! I have a question about AnoKiss: on the first chapters cover, many characters are drawn, and one of them in the back, Machida Kaoru, already appeared in volume 4. As you are writing an ensemble story, I wonder how far you had planned from the start.
Ca: Kaoru is an exception, actually. I had always planned on introducing her and even imagined the chapter, but she wasn't my top priority either, so she ended up appearing quite late. If the story had ended in 2 or 3 volumes, she wouldn't have appeared, but now we're at volume 4. So, no, I haven't really planned that much ahead. (laugh)
NN: Is that so. Since the gardening club arc and even the astronomy arc flowed so naturally, I thought you had all that in mind from the beginning.
Ca: I pretty much advance at random, but if it feels planned then I'm glad. (laugh)
−−You two have talked quite a lot today. How was it?
NN: As I was one of her fans, I almost feel guilty for talking with her so casually.
Ca: Oh no, I thank you, really. Yagate Kimi ni Naru has a very cool artstyle and you are equally cool, so I was afraid you'd tell me "I don't care about someone who draws such frivolous manga!", but luckily you are a kind person. (laugh)
NN: What do you mean frivolous?! No way! I'm really thankful that I could talk with you today. I could tell you what I liked and what my favorite character was in AnoKiss, so as a fan I feel content… AnoKiss and YagaKimi, despite being both yuri mangas, differ on a lot of aspects, but I was happy to find that I had a lot in common with you, Canno-san.
I'll work hard on YagaKimi so that it doesn't lose to AnoKiss, so please be well!
−−Thank you very much for today.
Interview: Kaazu (Kaazu SP)
−−−−−−−−−−−
…So yeah, you can now consider me a NioCanno shipper.
But more seriously, imagine a yuri written by Nakatani and drawn by Canno. That would be something. * o *
maybe they'll make good manga if they collab (?)
I think theyre fine doing things on their own. Theyve got different styles, writing, paces, moods, themes. I might prefer Nakatani's art style a bit more, but I love Canno's very much too.
I'm content seeing their individual works, I'm really glad both their series got licensed in English.
If they were to team up though, i think I'd like to see two collaborations; have them alternate the roles of artist and writer.
last edited at Sep 10, 2016 11:18AM
it still amazes me how they both work on their manga all alone (Canno admits she's getting help a little bit, but still)
Especially Nakatani, I'm always amazed with her artstyle, knowing she does it all alone makes me respect her much more. (The background!! The background oh my god)
Despite writing the same genre their works give a really different vibe, they'll make a good companion but no, i dont really want to see them collaborate on something
Lel. I clicked on this thread hoping that Canno and Nakatani Nio are together. Haha. I thought there's actually a chance that one yuri artist is in a relationship with another since I haven't heard of anyone dating their fellow yuri artist yet. Lol. Although I am getting a strong feeling that Okeya and Fukutarou are dating since they usually collab on their Tainaka Ritsu X Akiyama Mio doujins but aside from them, I have no clue about the other artists. Haha. Well, if ever there was, I will be so stalking them or supporting them. Haha.
This seemed like a really fun cross interview. It's pretty refreshing to hear from the mangaka themselves, especially since they were almost like each other's fans haha.
…After watching the trailers for Izetta The Last Witch, I totally get what Canno meant now. Once you've started reading Yuri, you can't help but see it everywhere…
^ you dont even need goggles for that one, I sent it to friends and we all agreed it looked kinda gay
From the Yuri-ism Podcast: "I think when you visit the site, you already have thick glasses. It's like you look out into the nature and think it's gay"
i'm leaving a comment just to say: now i ship them 2
and here's my rather short "ship yuristas" list
takemiya jin and her "partner" (horii kisuke)
(my) morishima went to see rebellion with some yurista (or was it mera hakamada? fujio? morinaga?? i may be mixing them...)
also, me x morishima
From the Yuri-ism Podcast: "I think when you visit the site, you already have thick glasses. It's like you look out into the nature and think it's gay"
Are you talking about the yuriism site?
The entire interview was gold, but I love this line in particular:
NN: I thought, "if a cute girl and a cute girl do cute stuff, it'll be hella cute."
Thanks for the translation!
Man, female yuri manga-ka really are a lot more common nowadays.
Good interview.
I'm pretty sure they're the vast majority actually...
I thought they basically always had been
I'm pretty sure they're the vast majority actually...
I always find that surprising and fascinating considering since most BL manga-ka are female, you assume the opposite is true that most yuri manga-ka are male. But that's not the case at all.
last edited at Sep 6, 2016 2:02AM
I'm pretty sure they're the vast majority actually...
I always find that surprising and fascinating considering since most BL manga-ka are female, you assume the opposite is true that most yuri manga-ka are male. But that's not the case at all.
Because most BL is drawn as fan service for women so mostly women draw it, but most Yuri is drawn for actual lesbians so it is mostly drawn by women.
I'm pretty sure they're the vast majority actually...
I always find that surprising and fascinating considering since most BL manga-ka are female, you assume the opposite is true that most yuri manga-ka are male. But that's not the case at all.
Because most BL is drawn as fan service for women so mostly women draw it, but most Yuri is drawn for actual lesbians so it is mostly drawn by women.
Further, most yuri that isn't flat-out porn (and even a good chunk of that) is romance-themed, And in Japan, as in the west, romance is generally considered the province of women.
Fascinating interview, thank you very much for posting it. We in the West really don't get enough access to this kind of direct commentary on the genre and the industry, something I've always considered a key weakness of being a yuri fan outside of Japan. This kind of insight is extremely valuable. Thanks again.
…Rereading a few chaps of AnoKiss (as well as the latest interlude chapter), I get a bit more what Nakatani meant when she said Canno's style isn't very shoujo-like. It's not just the artstyle, the dialogue and humour really feel more like a shounen romcom than a conventional yuri at times. Hell, one of the main girls being a tsundere is a very shounen trait in itself.
Hell, one of the main girls being a tsundere is a very shounen trait in itself.
Is it? I've always loved a good tsundere and I admit it's not popular but there's a few around.
Jeez I can't get over them not havin assistants! I don't wanna know how hard they work for me to sit back and read it haha
Thanks for translating!
last edited at Oct 5, 2016 8:43AM
Dunno, among the yuri I've read (which aren't that many, admittedly), none of the protagonists were Ayaka's brand of tsundere.
As for the assistants, I don't know for Dengeki Daioh, but Comic Alive seems to have pretty lax rules regarding the number of pages. So it's probably easier for them to manage their pace and efforts.
last edited at Oct 5, 2016 8:53AM