List of Tramps Like Us characters

This is a list of characters from Tramps Like Us (Kimi wa Petto).

Main characters

Sumire Iwaya is a hard-working and highly successful journalist, who is demoted to the lifestyle section after punching her boss when he sexually harasses her. Ogawa feels that Sumire's "stubborn" personality at the beginning stems from Ogawa's own experience as a new manga artist.[1] Sumire enjoys both her job and her romance with Hasumi, unlike depictions of female characters in the 1980s and 1990s.in the end she notices she has fallen in love with Momo and in the last chapter she marries him.[2]

A young dancer who Sumire finds and takes in as her pet. Initially, Ogawa had intended to make him much more animal-like in his mannerisms.[1] He is said to represent a "comfortable, cooperative, and compatible" sort of a man.[2]

Hasumi is a successful journalist who went to university with Sumire. He is said to represent the "three highs" (tall, high income, well-educated) kind of a man that Japanese women have stereotypically desired.[2]

Other characters

Sumire's childhood friend, a housewife to a pilot and mother of Ran.
Momo's ex-girlfriend, a dancer
A dental assistant (manga)/office worker (drama) determined to seduce and marry Hasumi-senpai.
Two American journalists who work under Sumire.
A company therapist in the TV series. He owns a long-haired chihuahua and talks with Sumire about pets a lot. He changes the dog's name every day. Drama role by: Kyozo Nagatsuka
Takeshi (Momo)'s friend who also does ballet. In the TV series he has an unrequited love for Rumi. Drama role by: Eita
One of Sumire's co-workers. Drama role by: Misa Uehara
One of Sumire's co-workers. Drama role by: Sato Riyuuta
Sumire's landlord in the TV drama, he is a very cheery person.
One of Sumire's neighbours in the TV drama. Very noisy.
One of Sumire's co-workers. He is an otaku who collects figurines. His mother was American, but she died when he was young. He wears glasses, and everyone is transfixed by how attractive he is when he takes them off. He doesn't realise this. He admires Sumire. (Vol. 10-)
Sumire's older sister. She is very conventional and supportive of her grandfather. She practices a tough love on her younger sisters. She is married with children.
Sumire's younger sister. She is rebellious, smokes, and founded a biker gang.

References

  1. 1 2 Ogawa, Yayoi. Tramps Like Us. 14.
  2. 1 2 3 Saeki, Junko (2008). "Beyond the geisha stereotype - Changing images of 'new women' in Japanese popular culture". In Segers, Rien T. A new Japan for the twenty-first century: an inside overview of current fundamental changes and problems. Routledge contemporary Japan series. 21. Routledge. pp. 163–165. ISBN 978-0-415-45311-0.
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