Masashi Kishimoto

@Manga Artist, Facts and Family

Masashi Kishimoto is a Japanese manga artist, best known for creating the popular manga series ‘Naruto.’ Let’s take a look at his family, personal life, career, etc.

Nov 8, 1974

JapaneseArtists & PaintersArtistsScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 8, 1974
  • Nationality: Japanese
  • Famous: Manga Artist, Artists & Painters, Artists
  • Siblings: Seishi Kishimoto
  • Universities:
    • Kyushu Sangyo University
  • Birth Place: Nagi, Okayama Prefecture
  • Height: 170cm

Masashi Kishimoto born at

Nagi, Okayama Prefecture

Unsplash
Birth Place

Masashi Kishimoto has a twin brother, Seishi Kishimoto. Both the brothers grew up together watching anime and reading manga. Seishi too went on to become a successful manga artist and is known best as the creator of ‘O-Parts Hunter’ and ‘Sukedachi 09.’

Unsplash
Personal Life

In the manga ‘Naruto,’ the lead character, ‘Naruto Uzumaki,’ is shown to be addicted to ramen, a Japanese dish. Masashi drew inspiration to shape this character from his own life, as he himself loves ramen. ‘Naruto’s favorite ramen shop is modeled on Masashi’s favorite ramen shop that actually exists at the ‘Kyushu Sankyo University,’ where he studied arts.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Masashi is married since 2003, but he has never been able to spend enough time with his wife due to his busy work schedule. The couple has a son.

Unsplash
Personal Life

Masashi Kishimoto was born on November 8, 1974, in Okayama, Japan. As a child, Masashi had three addictions: baseball, basketball, and ‘Dragon Ball.’ He and his twin brother would often spend hours in front of the TV, watching endless reruns of ‘Dragon Ball,’ which is arguably the most successful and popular Japanese anime of all time. While in elementary school, he developed a fascination for the art of manga.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

He started drawing his favorite characters from the manga he read and the anime he watched. Soon, he was addicted to manga and started neglecting his studies. He started faring poorly in school. As he approached his teenage years, he began idolizing Akira Toriyama, the creator and designer of his favourite ‘Dragon Ball’ characters.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

While in high school, he started drifting away from manga and spent a lot of time playing baseball and basketball. Everything changed when he saw the poster for the animated film ‘Akira.’ He became highly impressed with the poster design and decided to become a manga creator.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

During his first year at the ‘Kyushu Sangyo University,’ Masashi tried to draw Chanbara manga, which was a less-explored genre. The genre revolved around sword fighting set in a historical period. However, he lost his confidence when he came across ‘Blade of the Immortal,’ a widely celebrated Chanbara manga. He thought he was not good enough to create anything as good as that.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

In his second year of college, Masashi thought his work was more suitable for adult readers, and he started submitting his ideas to magazines. As he met designer Tetsuya Nishio, he realized that his designs were instead perfect for shōnen manga, which was primarily meant for teenage boys.

Unsplash
Childhood & Early Life

Masashi Kishimoto started his career in the mid-90s, when he submitted the pilot of his manga ‘Karakuri’ to ‘Shueisha,’ a publishing company. As a result of its success, Masashi was honored by the company with a mention in their monthly ‘Hop Step Award,’ in 1996. For the next couple of years, Masashi worked on several unsuccessful projects, such as ‘Asian Punk’ and ‘Michikusa.’ In 1997, a one-shot version of his creation ‘Naruto’ was published in ‘Akamaru Jump Summer.’

Unsplash
Career

Tired of repeated failures, he saw one last hope when he was hired to perform some changes on ‘Karakuri’ for ‘Weekly Shōnen Jump.’ The reader surveys rejected it. This made Masashi more careful about the quality of his art. ‘Yakyūō’ and ‘Mario’ were two more unsuccessful projects that he worked on, before he decided to give another shot to the shōnen genre, with ‘Magic Mushroom.’ In the middle of the project, he was asked to stop and develop a serialized version of ‘Naruto’ instead.

Unsplash
Career

In September 1999, the serialized version of ‘Naruto’ was published and became an instant hit. The series followed the life of an orphan boy named ‘Naruto’ and his adventures through a ninja training school. He befriends ‘Sasuke,’ a child with a dark past, and the story follows through their years together in the school. The series hit the right notes with the readers and became hugely successful.

Unsplash
Career

Before it ended in November 2014, the manga series had become a trendsetter. It sold more than 113 million copies in Japan and more than 95 million copies in the US. The manga’s success in the US was rather uplifting for Masashi, who stated that the fact that Americans could relate to the ninja world, a world totally unknown to them, showed they had good taste.

Unsplash
Career

The creator of ‘One Piece,’ Eiichiro Oda, widely known as one of the most creative and popular manga artists of the contemporary era, read ‘Naruto’ and accepted Masashi as a rival. Masashi was a big fan of Oda and said that it was a huge honor for him to be acknowledged by him as his rival.

Unsplash
Career