Love me Licia

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Love me Licia
GenreComedy
Created byAlessandra Valeri Manera
Developed byBarda & Lumetti
Directed byMario Cavazzuti
StarringCristina D'Avena
Pasquale Finicelli
Salvatore Landolina
ComposerGiordano Bruno Martelli
Country of originItaly
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes34
Production
Running time25 minutes
Original release
NetworkItalia 1
Release6 October (1986-10-06) –
24 December 1986 (1986-12-24)

Love me Licia is an Italian television series. It is the first of the four live adaptations of the Japanese manga Ai Shite Knight (known in Italy as Kiss Me Licia). Its sequels are Licia dolce Licia, Teneramente Licia, and Balliamo e cantiamo con Licia.

Plot[edit]

Bee Hive, a musical group that left for the United States at the end of the animated series, return from America and then go on tour followed by their girlfriends. Licia suspects that Mirko, her boyfriend and frontman of the Bee Hive, has fallen in love with Mary, the group's foreign manager, but in reality the one who falls in love with her is Marrabbio, Licia's father; Marrabbio will literally lose his head for Mary and will do his best to conquer her, often offering her inviting food cooked by him, but will have to measure himself against the younger and more beautiful Vilfredo, whom he nicknamed "Boiled Artichoke"; Vilfredo, however, will also have a negative role in the series, because he will kidnap the cat Giuliano in order to obtain the formula of Marrabbio's meatballs, to be later forgiven in the following series.

Miss Mary will have the power to sweeten the grumpy Marrabbio, to such an extent that he will be convinced to let Lycia go to the sea with Mirko and the Bee Hives, in order to be able to take care of Andrea, even if the grouch will still follow his daughter to the beach anyway, where new adventures and comic skits will take place.

Cast[edit]

Actor Voice actor Role
Cristina D'Avena Donatella Fanfani (dialogues)
Cristina D'Avena (sing)
Licia (Yakko)
Pasquale Finicelli Ivo De Palma (dialogues)
Enzo Draghi (sing)
Mirko (Go)
Salvatore Landolina Pietro Ubaldi Marrabio (Shigemaro)
Sebastian Harrison Gabriele Calindri Satomi
Luca Lecchi Paolo Torrisi Andrea (Hashizo)
Francesca Cassola Debora Magnaghi Elisa (Kaoru)
Emanuela Pacotto Elisabetta Cucci Marika (Meiko)
C. Brambilla Pisoni Valeria Falcinelli Miss Mary
Marco Bellavia Sergio Romanò Steve (Hiroyuki)
Giovanni Colombo Federico Danti Tony (Eiji)
Manuel De Peppe Luigi Rosa Matt (Shin'ichi)
Elisabetta Odino Alessandra Karpoff Manuela (Isuzu)
Debora Magnaghi Debora Magnaghi Hildegard
Sante Calogero Riccardo Mantani Grandpa Sam
Antonio Paiola Antonio Paiola Lauro
Augusto Di Bono Augusto Di Bono Lucas
Giordano Garramone Alessandra Karpoff Grinta (Gonta)
Clotilde Santamaria Marcella Silvestri Miss Katia
Federico Danti Franco Gamba Vilfredo María
Corrado Corrado Himself
Persian Cat (Uncredited) Pietro Ubaldi Juliano
Unknown (Uncredited) Unknown (Uncredited) Giovanni

Production[edit]

Aishite Knight was very successful in Italy, so broadcasting company Fininvest decided to make, with the consent of the original producers, the show Love me Licia as a sequel of the anime.

Cristina D'Avena, who had sung the Italian opening of the original anime, would play Yakko, while Pasquale Finicelli was chosen for Go Kato. Although the two were both singers, Finicelli's voice is never heard in the show while D'Avena's voice was only used for one song. This is because all the actors of the show were voiced by the voice actors of the characters they played, so Cristina D'Avena was dubbed in the parts spoken by Donatella Fanfani, while Finicelli was voiced by Ivo De Palma in the dialogues and, in the sung parts, by Enzo Draghi. The character of Lauro was played by his voice actor (Antonio Paiola), so he was not dubbed. Characters invented specifically for the show were also equally voiced except for Lucas (Bee Hive's new manager) and Hildegard (a German girl) who were voiced by their actors. The interpreters of Shigemaro and Grandpa Sam (Salvatore Landolina and Sante Calogero respectively), despite being both professional voice actors, were voiced by Pietro Ubaldi and Riccardo Mantani.

The show is affected by the influence of the original anime much more than the other three future ones, especially for the look of the characters (Yakko, for example, had bobbed hair like in the anime, although in later series they will become smooth).

Differences from the original anime[edit]

  • Aishite Knight is set in Japan, while from the dialogues of Grandpa Sam and Hildegard it is understood that the TV series is set in Italy.
  • All the places that appear in the series (Shigemaro's restaurant, Yakko's house, the Bee Hive rehearsal room, Go's house and the kindergarten where Hashizo, Kaoru and Gonta go) are different from the anime.
  • Hashizo and Satomi have blue and purple hair in the anime, respectively; in Love me Licia both have brown hair.
  • Go does not wear earrings unlike in the anime, where he wore them very often.
  • Shin'ichi looks totally different from that of the anime and has a bigger role alongside Hiroyuki.
  • In Love me Licia Go, Satomi and Shigemaro do not smoke.
  • Grandpa Sam and Lauro have a major role in Love me Licia.
  • Eiji in Love me Licia never wears sunglasses.
  • Hashizo's birthday in Aishite Knight is July 7 while in Love me Licia it is December.
  • At the end of the original anime Yakko and Go promise to get married when the latter returns from United States of America, having also had the consent of Shigemaro. in the show Shigemaro is opposed to the marriage between the two.
  • Juliano has a very comedic role in Aishite Knight, often resulting in wacky comic relief; in Love me Licia he is a more normal cat who rarely talks.
  • The TV show is less dramatic, more sentimental and child-friendly.

Soundtrack[edit]

The initial and final theme song of the show was written by Giordano Bruno Martelli and Alessandra Valeri Manera and sung by Cristina D'Avena.

Filming[edit]

The interiors of the series were shot in the former studios of Merak Film S.r.l. while the exteriors in the park of Brugherio both in Cologno Monzese.

The Bee Hive concerts were shot in a former disco in Jesolo and Igloo in Varallo.

New characters[edit]

The show features new characters invented specifically for it.

  • Lucas: the manager of Bee Hive, replacing Yamadazaka. Played and voiced by Augusto Di Bono.
  • Miss Mary: the foreign manager by Bee Hive. Shigemaro falls in love with her and tries to make him eat her meatballs. Played by C. Brambilla Pisoni and voiced by Valeria Falcinelli.
  • Vilfredo María: initially introduced as a Spanish womanizer, he turns out to be an industrial informant of a company who will try to find out Shigemaro's secret recipes then being unmasked. As a result, he kidnaps the cat Juliano promising to give him back if he is told the recipe but he will be stopped. Played by Federico Danti and voiced by Franco Gamba.
  • Hildegard: a friend of the protagonists from West Germany, with a talent for mimicking voices. Played and voiced by Debora Magnaghi.
  • Giovanni: a war veteran who will help the protagonists in finding Juliano. The actor who played it he's unknown.

Existing characters[edit]

  • Corrado: a TV host who hosts the show where Bee Hive perform. Played by himself
  • Kim Basinger: an actress who should have had a pool date with Shin'ichi. She is mentioned only by Shin'ichi.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]