Yakyū-kyō no Uta
| Yakyū-kyō no Uta | |
Cover of the first volume | |
| 野球狂の詩 | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Baseball |
| Manga | |
| Written by | Shinji Mizushima |
| Published by | Kodansha |
| Magazine | Weekly Shōnen Magazine |
| Demographic | Shōnen |
| Original run | 1972 – 1976 |
| Volumes | 17 |
| Live-action film | |
| Directed by | Akira Katō |
| Produced by | Hiromi Higuchi |
| Written by | Masayasu Ōehara, Rokurō Kumagaya |
| Music by | Shin Takada |
| Released | March 19, 1977 |
| Runtime | 93 minutes |
| Anime television series | |
| Directed by | Tameo Kohanawa |
| Produced by | Kōichi Motohashi |
| Music by | Michiaki Watanabe |
| Studio | Nippon Animation |
| Original network | FNS (Fuji TV) |
| Original run | December 23, 1977 – March 26, 1979 |
| Episodes | 25 |
| Anime film | |
| Yakyū-kyō no Uta: Kita no Ōkami, Minami no Tora | |
| Directed by | Eiji Okabe |
| Produced by | Kōichi Motohashi |
| Music by | Taiji Nakamura |
| Studio | Nippon Animation |
| Released | September 15, 1979 |
| Runtime | 90 minutes |
| Television drama | |
| Produced by | Setsurō Wakamatsu |
| Written by | Keiji Okutsu |
| Studio | Fuji Television Telepack |
| Original network | Fuji TV |
| Original run | January 7, 1985 |
| Manga | |
| Yakyū-kyō no Uta Heisei-hen | |
| Written by | Shinji Mizushima |
| Published by | Kodansha |
| Magazine | Mister Magazine |
| Demographic | Shōnen |
| Original run | 1997 – 2000 |
| Volumes | 3 |
| Manga | |
| Shin Yakyū-kyō no Uta | |
| Written by | Shinji Mizushima |
| Published by | Kodansha |
| Magazine | Comic Morning |
| Demographic | Shōnen |
| Original run | 2000 – 2005 |
| Volumes | 11 |
Yakyū-kyō no Uta (Japanese: 野球狂の詩; lit. "Poetry of Baseball Enthusiasts") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shinji Mizushima. It follows Yūki Mizuhara, a young woman who wants to do veterinary medicine at college but instead she became a baseball player. It was originally serialized in the Kodansha's Japanese manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine between 1972 and 1976 and has been adapted into several spin-off manga, a live-action film, an anime television series, an anime film, and a Japanese television drama. In 1973, it received the 4th Kōdansha Literature Culture Award for children's manga.