Ami Koshimizu

Ami Koshimizu
小清水 亜美
Koshimizu in November 2008
Born (1986-02-15) February 15, 1986 (age 38)[1]
Other namesAmisuke (あみすけ)[2]
Amikke (あみっけ)
Amiko (あみこ)
Alma materAomori Yamada High School
Occupations
Years active2003–present
AgentOffice Restart
Height169 cm (5 ft 7 in)[1]
Musical career
Genres
InstrumentVocals
LabelsColumbia

Ami Koshimizu (小清水 亜美, Koshimizu Ami, born February 15, 1986)[3][4] is a Japanese actress and singer.[4] She has voiced many different types of characters, from young girls to adult women, as well as boys and animals. Her roles include leads such as Ryuko Matoi in Kill la Kill, Charlotte E. Yeager in Strike Witches series, Kallen Stadtfeld in Code Geass, Anemone in Eureka Seven, Irina Tachibana in Rio: Rainbow Gate, Nadja Applefield in Ashita no Nadja, Leonmitchelli Galette Des Rois in Dog Days, Shizuri Mugino in A Certain Scientific Railgun series, Yumi Hoshino in KimiKiss: Pure Rouge, Takuto Hasegawa in Magician's Academy, Hibiki Hojo in Suite PreCure, Nanaka Yatsushiro in Myself ; Yourself, Ersha in Cross Ange, Himari Noihara in Omamori Himari, Sailor Jupiter in Sailor Moon Crystal, Mikumo Guynemer in Macross Delta, Nodoka Haramura in Saki, Tenma Tsukamoto in School Rumble, Holo in Spice and Wolf, and Yang Xiao Long in both RWBY (Japanese dub) and RWBY: Ice Queendom. In video games, she voiced notable characters like Agnès Oblige in Bravely Default, Mai Shiranui since KOF Sky Stage, Mist in Rune Factory, Rimurisu in Tears to Tiara, Rinka in the Atelier series, Miyabi in Zenless Zone Zero (Japanese Dub), Rosa Ushiromiya in Umineko: Golden Fantasia, Tsuruhime in Sengoku Basara, Yukiko Amagi in Persona 4, Captain/Major Claire Rieveldt and Musse Egret in The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel series, Beidou (Hokuto in Japanese) in Genshin Impact (Japanese Dub), and Zima and Projekt Red in Arknights. She also is known for her dubbing role for Thailand films which starred Yanin Vismitananda. In addition, she also voiced in the live action anime film Shimajiro and the Rainbow Oasis.

  1. ^ a b c 小清水 亜美|日本タレント名鑑. Nihon Tarento Meikan (in Japanese). Retrieved December 30, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ ボイスクロニクル 声の年代記. Gakken. 2007. p. 53. ISBN 978-4-05-604923-7.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference doi top was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ a b "小清水亜美 profile". columbia.jp. Archived from the original on August 26, 2015. Retrieved October 15, 2015.

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