日本卡通形象Hello Kitty11月1日迎来40周岁生日,世界各地粉丝举办庆祝活动,为这一“酷萌”偶像庆生。
A cute-a-bration has broken out among Hello Kitty fans, as the beloved Japanese character marks its 40th year. Since introducing Hello Kitty in 1974, the Sanrio company has turned simple design and a
knack2 for accessorizing into $8 billion worth of annual sales.
The
milestone3 inspired a Hello Kitty
Con4 in Los Angeles and a large run in Singapore. But the largest fete was in Tokyo, where Sanrio put on a parade and other events.
Hello Kitty's cultural context is currently being explored by the Japanese American National Museum, where an exhibit includes "a 12-foot-tall statue
depicting5 Hello Kitty as Cleopatra," as reporter Lisa Napoli
noted6 for NPR last month.
The museum's director, Greg Kimura, told Napoli that despite arriving when anti-Asian sentiment was high in the U.S. back in the 1970s, Hello Kitty "was immediately adopted by young girls because they sensed in her this connection to Japanese and Asian cultural idiom."
The
feline7 character's 40th birthday has also included
controversy8, after Sanrio said in August, "Hello Kitty is not a cat. She's a cartoon character. She is a little girl. She is a friend. But she is not a cat. She's never
depicted9 on all fours. She walks and sits like a two-legged creature."
But as Japan Times notes today, Hello Kitty "started out life known only as 'the white kitten with no name' ('namae no nai shiroi koneko')." And the company has
modulated10 its tone, telling the website Kotaku, "Hello Kitty is a personification of a cat."
Of course, none of that fazed the feline's fans. NPR.org reader Len Black's comments on Lisa Napoli's story included this birthday poem:
"Lordy, Lordy Hello Kitty is forty, Very cute for such a shorty. The little
Kit1 hasn't changed a bit. They say she's a girl dressed as a cat. Don't know about that. In my heart you'll always be a cat. Happy Birthday Kit Kat!"