Speed Racer
| Speed Racer | |
|---|---|
| マッハ GoGoGo | |
| Genre | Sports |
| Created by | Tatsuo Yoshida |
| Directed by | Hiroshi Sasagawa (chief) |
| Music by | Nobuyoshi Koshibe |
| No. of episodes | 52 (list of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Production company | Tatsunoko Production |
| Original release | |
| Network | Fuji TV |
| Release | April 2, 1967 – March 31, 1968 |
| Related | |
| Manga | |
| Written by | Tatsuo Yoshida |
| Published by | |
| English publisher | |
| Magazine | Shōnen Book |
| Original run | June 1966 – May 1968 |
| Volumes | 2 |
| Manga | |
| Mach GoGoGo! | |
| Written by | Toshio Tanigami |
| Published by | Shogakukan |
| Magazine | CoroCoro Comic |
| Original run | January 1997 – October 1997 |
| Volumes | 2 |
| Related works | |
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| Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) | |
Speed Racer, also known as Mach GoGoGo (Japanese: マッハGoGoGo, Hepburn: Mahha GōGōGō), is a Japanese anime television series produced by Tatsunoko Production, that aired on Fuji Television from April 1967 to March 1968. In the United States, the show aired in syndication at approximately the same time. A manga adaptation written and illustrated by Tatsuo Yoshida was originally serialized in print in Shueisha's 1966 Shōnen Book magazine. It was released in tankōbon form by Sun Wide Comics and later re-released in Japan by Fusosha.
Selected chapters of the manga were released by NOW Comics in the 1990s under the title Speed Racer Classics. These were later released by Wildstorm Productions, a division of DC Comics, as Speed Racer: The Original Manga. In 2008, under its Americanized title, Speed Racer, Mach GoGoGo was republished in its entirety in the United States by Digital Manga Publishing and was released as a box set to commemorate the series' 40th anniversary, as well as serving as a tie-in with the 2008 film. The television series was very successful in the United States and is said to have defined anime in that country until the 1990s, being watched by a total estimated audience of 40 million viewers during the 1960s–1970s.