Manga Written and illustrated by
Ai Yazawa,
Nana first appeared as a two-part
prologue in 1999 in
Shueisha's
Cookie manga magazine (volumes 1 and 2), a sister magazine of
Ribon. Initially, Yazawa was asked to create two one-shots to accompany the launch of
Cookie, and she decided to make both stories related to each other so that they would be easier to read in case they were picked up for serialization. Yazawa stated that while creating ''
I'm No Angel'' in the early 1990s, she had wanted to draw a story centered on a
rockabilly band. when it was relaunched as a monthly magazine. and in June of that same year it was announced that the series would be put on hiatus due to Yazawa falling ill. Yazawa returned from the hospital in early April 2010, but it was unspecified when or if she would resume the manga. During Yazawa's 2022 art exhibition, she expressed interest in continuing the series once she could. The individual chapters of
Nana have been collected by Shueisha into 21 volumes, published under the Ribon Mascot Comics Cookie imprint, between May 15, 2000, and March 13, 2009. Its latest four chapters have not been published in a volume.
Nana is licensed for English-language release in North America by
Viz Media. It was serialized in Viz Media's manga anthology
Shojo Beat, premiering in the July 2005 debut issue and continuing until the August 2007 issue. The 21 volumes were published between December 6, 2005, and July 6, 2010. Viz Media added the series to its
Viz Manga digital service in May 2023. On January 24, 2025, Viz Media announced that it would publish the series in a 2-in-1
omnibus edition starting in Q4 of the same year.
Nana prominently features the brand
Vivienne Westwood, as Yazawa herself is a fan of the brand. Some outfits featured in the series are clothing from her personal collection.
Films Two live-action film adaptations were produced. The first,
Nana, was released on September 3, 2005. The film stars
Mika Nakashima as Nana Osaki,
Aoi Miyazaki as Hachi (Nana Komatsu),
Ryuhei Matsuda as Ren Honjou,
Tetsuji Tamayama as Takumi Ichinose,
Hiroki Narimiya as Nobuo Terashima, and
Kenichi Matsuyama as Shinichi Okazaki. The DVD edition was released on March 3, 2006. The film grossed more than at Japanese box office and stayed in the top 10 for several weeks. A sequel,
Nana 2, premiered on December 9, 2006. Miyazaki, Matsuda and Matsuyama would not be reprising their respective roles as Hachi, Ren, and Shin; as such, their roles were assigned to
Yui Ichikawa,
Nobuo Kyo, and
Kanata Hongō, respectively.
Anime An
anime adaptation of
Nana was produced by
Nippon Television,
VAP,
Shueisha and
Madhouse and directed by
Morio Asaka, with Tomoko Konparu handling series composition, Kunihiko Hamada designing the characters and
Tomoki Hasegawa composing the music. The series aired on Nippon TV from April 5, 2006, to March 28, 2007. The first and third opening song, "Rose" and "Lucy", respectively, and the third ending song, , were performed by
Anna Tsuchiya (credited as Anna inspi' Nana), who provided the singing voice for Nana Osaki; Lufkin also performed the ending song "Winter Sleep" (for episodes 43 and 44). The episodes were collected and distributed on 17 DVD volumes by VAP from July 7, 2006, to November 21, 2007. In 2007, Viz Media licensed the anime for release in North America, and released it on four DVD box sets between September 9, 2009, and April 13, 2010, including an English dub.
Funimation acquired the broadcast rights to Viz Media's dub and it premiered on the
Funimation Channel in 2009. After Viz Media lost the rights,
Sentai Filmworks re-licensed the series in 2021 and premiered on its
Hidive service on April 22 that same year. Sentai Filmworks released the series on a
SteelBook Blu-ray edition on February 22, 2022, and on a regular Blu-ray edition on May 17 of that same year. The anime was intended to be equal to the manga, and adapted up to the first chapter of volume 12 to avoid
filler. In April 2007, when asked about a continuation of the anime, Junko Koseki (editor of
Nana in Shueisha) and
Masao Maruyama (the then-managing director of Madhouse) stated that they had decided to wait until the manga's conclusion before producing more material.
Image and tribute albums Nana inspired two
image albums;
Punk Night: From Nana, released by
King Records on September 26, 2003; and ''Nana's Song is My Song
, released by Momo & Grapes on November 6 of that same year. A tribute album, Love for Nana: Only 1 Tribute'', was released by
EMI Music Japan on March 16, 2005; several famous artists contributed to it, including English musician
Glen Matlock of the
Sex Pistols, Canadian singer-songwriter
Skye Sweetnam, and various Japanese artists.
Video games A video game adaptation for the
PlayStation 2 platform was produced by
Konami and released on March 17, 2005. A
PlayStation Portable game, was released on July 6, 2006. A
Nintendo DS game, was released by Konami on June 21, 2007. ==Reception==