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Rather than read the given script for the acting category, Onizuka gives her a couple of action figures and she ends up doing an excellent improvised piece (with Vice-Principal Uchiyamada getting an accidental role). In the anime, Onizuka throws a cellphone on stage and she leaves a sentimental message on Miyabi's answering machine instead.
Great Teacher Onizuka, officially abbreviated as GTO, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tooru Fujisawa. It was originally serialized in Kodansha 's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine from January 1997 to February 2002, with its chapters collected in 25 tankōbon volumes.
S. Toshiyuki Saejima; Gintoki Sakata; Akari Sakura; Kyoko Sakura; Seishiro Sakurazuka; Mikado Sanzenin; Ranma Saotome; Sara (Jewelpet) Sasuke Sarugakure; Ryohei Sasagawa
In the Great Teacher Onizuka anime adaptation, Nao Kadena takes the role of the school nurse played by Naoko Moritaka in the manga. Her techniques and past are remarkably similar to her character in Shonan Junai Gumi - though she was clearly introduced as a brand new acquaintance to the existing cast.
This category pertains to the Great Teacher Onizuka, AKA GTO media franchise. Pages in category "Great Teacher Onizuka" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
GTO: Paradise Lost (Japanese: GTO パラダイス・ロスト, Hepburn: GTO Paradaisu Rosuto) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tooru Fujisawa.It is a sequel to the main Great Teacher Onizuka manga series.
Great Teacher Onizuka is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tohru Fujisawa, serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine from January 8, 1997, [1] to February 13, 2002. [2] Its chapters were collected in twenty-five tankōbon volumes by Kodansha and released under the "Shōnen Magazine Comics" imprint from May 16, 1997, [ 3 ...
Key visual of the series. The Great Teacher Onizuka anime television series is based on Tohru Fujisawa's manga series of the same name. Animated by Studio Pierrot and directed by Noriyuki Abe, the series ran for 43 episodes and was broadcast on Fuji Television from June 30 1999, to September 24, 2000. [1]