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Profile | Hayao Miyazaki: the career of anime legend, 83, behind Studio Ghibli, who won his second Oscar for his ‘final’ film The Boy and the Heron

  • Miyazaki, who won an Academy Award in 2003 for best animated feature for Spirited Away in 2003, has won the award again, for The Boy and the Heron
  • We look back at the life and work of the 83-year-old animator and Studio Ghibli co-founder, who has described his work as an ‘agonising struggle’

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Hayao Miyazaki (above) recently won the Oscar for best animated feature for his ‘last’ film The Boy and the Heron. We look back at the life and work of the 83-year-old Studio Ghibli co-founder. Photo: AP

An Oscar win two decades ago introduced the world to Japanese anime great Hayao Miyazaki, and now the Studio Ghibli co-founder, aged 83, has done it again.

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Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron – potentially his last film – took the Academy Award for best animated feature on Sunday, the same category won by the Ghibli classic Spirited Away in 2003.

Enthralling viewers of all ages with his extraordinary imagination, the animator has built a cult following through films depicting nature and machinery in fantastic detail.

The beloved characters dreamt up by Miyazaki include cuddly yet mysterious spirit creature Totoro – the mascot of his celebrated production house.

A scene from Hayao Miyazaki’s Princess Mononoke, 1997. Photo: Studio Ghibli
A scene from Hayao Miyazaki’s Princess Mononoke, 1997. Photo: Studio Ghibli

But despite becoming one of Japan’s top cultural exports and helping take anime mainstream, he describes his work as an agonising struggle and has retired several times, albeit unsuccessfully.

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