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John Gremillion is an American stage and voice actor.He has provided voices for a number of English-language versions of Japanese anime series and video games; [1] notable credits include Gentle Criminal from My Hero Academia, Dracule Mihawk from One Piece, Roland Chappelle from Food Wars, Arthur Randall from Black Butler, Go Mutsugi from Area 88, Yamato Hotsuin from Devil Survivor 2: The ...
Steven John Ward (born 2 June 1990) is a South African actor. [1] His most notable roles include Ade in the horror film House on Willow Street (2016), Elton in Queen Sono (2020), Ezra in Triggered (2020), and Dracule Mihawk in Netflix's live adaptation of One Piece (2023).
In June 2002, Animage readers voted One Piece to be the sixteenth best new anime of 2001 [61] and voted it sixteenth place in 2004 in the category Favorite Anime Series. [62] In a 2005 web poll by Japanese television network TV Asahi One Piece was voted sixth most popular animated TV series. [63]
One Piece fans now have six more familiar faces to anticipate when the live-action adaptation of Eiichiro Oda’s pirate manga series comes to life at Netflix. The following new cast members were ...
In the anime television series, Nami is voiced by Akemi Okamura. [5] In the 4Kids English adaptation, she is voiced by Kerry Williams. [6] In the Funimation English adaptation, her voice is provided by Luci Christian. [7] Nami is portrayed by Emily Rudd in the live-action adaptation of One Piece. [4]
Fictional swordfighters in anime and manga (91 P) Pages in category "Martial artist characters in anime and manga" The following 103 pages are in this category, out of 103 total.
A wandering samurai who holds the title as the strongest swordsman. By the events of One Piece, his corpse and sword are stolen by Gecko Moria to serve him on Thriller Bark. He ultimately entrusts his sword to Roronoa Zoro. Flare (フレア, Furea) Voiced by: Maaya Sakamoto (vomic), [3] Kana Hanazawa (ONA) [4] (Japanese); Brianna Knickerbocker ...
The third guidebook, One Piece: Yellow – Grand Elements, was released on April 4, 2007, [92] and the fourth, One Piece: Green – Secret Pieces, followed on November 4, 2010. [93] An anime guidebook, One Piece: Rainbow! , was released on May 1, 2007, and covers the first eight years of the TV anime.