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Shin Sawada (沢田 慎, Sawada Shin) Voiced by: Kenichi Suzumura (Japanese); Kevin T. Collins (English) Portrayed by: Jun Matsumoto 18-year-old Shin is the leader of class 3-D (17-year-old leader of 2–4 in the manga). He is cool, level-headed, smart, and somewhat introverted. Everyone in the class looks up to him.
His portrayal of the troubled but highly intelligent student, Shin Sawada, drew acclaim and won him Best Supporting Actor at the 33rd Television Drama Academy Awards. [42] He later returned with most of the original cast to star in the special epilogue episode in 2003.
She also wrote and composed the song "Shin'ai naru Hitoe" (lit. "To the Dear Person") in memory of Kōzō Murashita who died in 1999. Sawada released album History 2 on October 21, 2004, to commemorate her 25th anniversary as a recording artist. She has performed in the "Furano Chapel Concert" at Shin-Furano Prince Hotel for a few days every ...
The next day, a wild bear strays into the camping area. When Ms. Sawada is attacked, Yūya subdues the beast bare-handedly, and the academy administration decides to keep it around as a guard animal. On the day he is scheduled to meet Lexia's father, Yūya thwarts Luna's attack on the Princess and knocks her out.
Shin's sister, under a lot of pressure from their parents, decided to go to a dangerous club. Shin found out and tried to help her sister escape, but after police officers came and Shin was determined to make sure his sister wasn't caught, Shin was the one who got arrested.
Kenichi Suzumura (鈴村 健一, Suzumura Ken'ichi, born September 12, 1974) is a Japanese voice actor, narrator, and singer who is affiliated with and a representative of INTENTION, a voice acting company he founded in March 2012. [6]
These songs, while not having Tokyo in their names, lyrics, or in content, have, in their (promotional) videos, scenes of Tokyo. "I Love The Things You Do To Me" by Balaam and the Angel "Love Missile F1-11" by Sigue Sigue Sputnik "Just Can't Get Enough" by The Black Eyed Peas "Motorcycle Emptiness" by The Manic Street Preachers
"Yoru no Odoriko" is a high tempo song with a four on the floor beat, [17] with elements of dance music, pop music and rock. [18] [19] The song begins with a section mixing "light" synthesizer sounds and feminine backing vocals, on top of a bass drum rhythm. [20] [21] This section builds for two minutes and twenty seconds before reaching the ...