![]() ![]() ![]() This early Magical Girl show was very unusual that it included a laugh track-which is not present in Sally the Witch (which didn't came to America), but more common in American-produced cartoons.Īnother important early Magical Girl show was Majokko Meg-chan in 1974. Sally the Witch's American counterpart, Archie's Sabrina the Teenage Witch (then known as the Sabrina portion of Sabrina and The Groovie Goolies during its early years), was an early American example of a Magical Girl show, and the first animated magical girl series to be produced and aired in the United States, and it ran as a Saturday-morning cartoon. Yokoyama explicitly adapted its concept for a younger audience, while Akatsuka merely says he was "inspired" by it. While two series claim the role of "first magical girl anime"-Mitsuteru Yokoyama's Mahotsukai Sally ( Sally the Witch, 1966-1968) and Fujio Akatsuka's Himitsu no Akko-chan (broadcast 1969, but its manga predates Mahotsukai Sally)-the creators of both credit Bewitched as a primary inspiration for their work. It may come as a surprise to learn that the entire Magical Girl genre is descended, effectively, from the American live-action Magical Girlfriend sitcom Bewitched. Magical Girl Warriors arguably have the widest demographic appeal, and in the West are often synonymous with the idea of a Magical Girl. ![]()
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