Manga Written by
Reiko Yoshida and illustrated by
Mia Ikumi,
Tokyo Mew Mew was first serialized in
Nakayoshi magazine between September 2000 and February 2003. The twenty-nine chapters were then compiled into seven
tankōbon volumes by
Kodansha. The first volume was released on February 1, 2001, with the final volume released April 4, 2003. In April 2003, a sequel called
Tokyo Mew Mew à la Mode premiered in
Nakayoshi. Running until February 2004 and written solely by Mia Ikumi, the sequel was published as two volumes. The manga ended in August 2022, and was compiled into seven volumes. A short, 2-chapter manga sequel of the original series made by the original creators titled
Tokyo Mew Mew 2020 Re-Turn was published between December 2019 and January 2020. It was Ikumi's final manga before her death in March 2022.
Tokyo Mew Mew and
Tokyo Mew Mew à la Mode are licensed for an English-language release in North America by
Tokyopop. The first volume of the main series was released on June 1, 2004, with volumes released subsequently until the seventh volume was published on December 15, 2005. The two volumes of
Tokyo Mew Mew à la Mode were released on June 7 and September 13, 2005, respectively. Unlike the Japanese releases, each Tokyopop chapter is named. The main series is licensed for an English language release in Singapore by
Chuang Yi.
Carlsen Comics has licensed the series, through its regional divisions, and released the series in German, Danish and Swedish. The series is also licensed for regional language releases in French by
Pika Édition, in Polish by
Japonica Polonica Fantastica, and in Finnish by
Sangatsu Manga.
Tokyo Mew Mew was one of the first manga series released in Spanish in North America by Public Square Books.
Kodansha Comics released an omnibus version of the series, featuring a new translation in September 2011.
Anime Pierrot,
TV Aichi, Tokyu Agency and We've Inc. adapted
Tokyo Mew Mew into a fifty-two episode anime series, directed by Noriyuki Abe. Broadcast on
TXN affiliates, the series premiered on April 6, 2002, and aired weekly until its conclusion on March 29, 2003. Most of the music for the series was produced by Shin Yoshimura and composed by
Takayuki Negishi. Two pieces of theme music were also used for the anime series. "My Sweet Heart", performed by
Rika Komatsu, was the series opening theme. The ending theme "Koi wa A La Mode" is performed by the five
voice actors who play the Mew Mews. In Japan, the series was released across nine
Region 2 DVD volumes. The ninth volume included a bonus DVD containing extra content. At some point during the TV broadcast, AEON changed its name to We've.
Tokyo Mew Mew was later licensed for an English-language dubbed release by
4Kids Entertainment. In its announcement about the series, 4Kids originally noted that the show would be renamed to
Hollywood Mew Mew and that they would be heavily editing and localizing episodes so that viewers would not recognize its Japanese origins. Subsequent 4Kids press releases about the series referred to the new series as
The Mew Mews and its original name
Tokyo Mew Mew. When the series premiered on
4Kids TV on February 19, 2005, it aired under the name as
Mew Mew Power. Characters and episodes were renamed, scenes were cut and storylines were modified. The music was replaced with a new score provided by
Bear in the Big Blue House and
The Book of Pooh composer, Julian Harris, and the opening theme was replaced with the song "Team Up", performed by
Bree Sharp and Mollie Weaver. Twenty-six episodes of
Mew Mew Power aired on
4Kids TV in the United States because 4Kids was unable to get a
merchandising deal for the series and the English dub had stopped production. The 4Kids episodes aired on
YTV in Canada and on the
Pop Girl satellite television channel in the United Kingdom; these included three dubbed episodes not broadcast in the United States. Although
Mew Mew Power has not been released to
home video in North America, ten of the 4Kids episodes have been released to
Region 4 DVD in Australia and New Zealand by
Magna Pacific and all twenty-six 4Kids episodes were released to
Region 2 DVD in South Africa.
Mew Mew Power was licensed for regional airing in French by Arès Films, which released nine dubbed 4Kids episodes to DVD in February 2006 as a single volume through Warner Home Vidéo France. The French dub aired on
Télétoon+ as part of their Code F block. The company also licensed the remaining twenty-six episodes of the series that 4Kids had not obtained, releasing them in two DVD box sets through AK Vidéo. A new anime adaptation titled
Tokyo Mew Mew New was announced to commemorate the manga's 20th anniversary. It was later revealed that the adaptation will be animated by
Yumeta Company and
Graphinica, and directed by Takahiro Natori, with Yuka Yamada handling the series' scripts, Satoshi Ishino designing the characters, and
Yasuharu Takanashi composing the music. New cast members were chosen to play the Mew Mews through a public audition held in Q2 2020, and they will also be promoting as an
idol group named Smewthie as their characters. The new series premiered on July 6, 2022, on TV Tokyo.
Sentai Filmworks has licensed the series outside of Asia and was streamed on
Hidive. A second season of
Tokyo Mew Mew New was announced at the end of the final episode on September 21, 2022. It premiered in April 2023.
Video games turn-based role-playing video game in which the player controls a new Mew Mew, , as well as the original five heroines. They must defend Ringo's island from Quiche, the Chimera Animas and a new alien named . Both Ringo Akai and Gateau were created by the manga's artist, Mia Ikumi, following design specifications from Takara. The game uses voice actors from the anime series, with the two new characters voiced by
Taeko Kawata and
Ryōtarō Okiayu, respectively. Ikumi was pleased with how both characters turned out and expressed a desire to use Ringo as a regular character in a future manga series. Ringo later joined the other Mew Mews in the
Petite Mew Mew bonus story in the second volume of
Tokyo Mew Mew à la Mode.
CDs Multiple music and
character CDs have been released for the
Tokyo Mew Mew series by
King Records. The first, a CD single, contained the full and
karaoke versions of "Koi wa A La Mode", performed by the five
voice actors who played the Mew Mews, and a second song performed by
Saki Nakajima, who voices Ichigo. On July 24, 2002, a five-disc
limited edition collector's box set was released containing character songs for each of the Mew Mews, performed by their respective voice actors and a
remix of "Koi wa A La Mode". The individual character song discs were released as standalone CDs on September 4, 2002. An additional character CD set, containing remixed versions of two songs from each individual album, followed on December 25, 2002. A second character CD for Ichigo, containing five new tracks performed by Nakajima, was released on February 26, 2003. The first full anime soundtrack,
Tokyo Mew Mew Original Soundtrack was released on September 25, 2002, by
NEC. The CD included the series opening and ending themes and twenty-seven pieces of series background music. NEC released a second
soundtrack on January 22, 2003; it contains the opening and closing themes, along with an additional twenty-nine tracks of background music. On March 26, 2003, two "best of" CDs were released for the anime series:
Tokyo Mew Mew Super Best Hit – Cafe Mew Mew side and
Tokyo Mew Mew Super Best Hit – Tokyo Mew Mew side. Each CD includes ten of the series' "most popular" musical pieces. ==Reception==