World Masterpiece Theater

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

World Masterpiece Theater is a long-running series of anime adaptations of classic western literature by Nippon Animation most of the time, who were formerly known as Zuiyo Enterprise. Each year, for over three decades, the company took a classic western novel and adapted it into a series of about 50 episodes. The different masterpiece series are, with the exceptions of the occasional sequels or Prequel, not connected with each other.

While the series in general is aimed at children and many of the originals that got adapted were children's books, its themes and plots can be surprisingly mature. Especially in the early years, when anime was little known in North America and Europe, the series stood in stark contrast to the traditional western animation. This may be part of the reason why only three entries in the series (Tom Sawyer, Swiss Family Robinson, and Little Women) made it to the airwaves in the United States, and Anne of Green Gables, despite being from a Canadian author, has never been on Canadian TV in English.

The entries into the series were:

Not to be confused with Masterpiece Theatre, the long-running primetime program on PBS that showcases BBC productions.


The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the World Masterpiece Theater franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Many of the books adapted did not feature a happy end and the creators of the series generally saw no need to change that.
    • A Dog of Flanders is probably the worst offender, though the producers actually tried to make the original's heart-rending Downer Ending less painful after outcries from Japanese viewers pleaded for Nello and Patrasche to not die.
  • Ghibli Hills: Early entries into the series feature the talents of Hayao Miyazaki and it shows.
    • Also, longtime Miyazaki collaborator, the late Yoshifumi Kondo, was a character designer on Little Women.
  • Heartwarming Orphan: Many of the series feature endearing orphaned protagonist. Examples include Anne, Heidi, Pollyanna, Jerusha 'Judy' Abbott from Daddy Long Legs and Remi.
  • Parental Abandonment: if the main protagonist isn't a Heartwarming Orphan they are likely to be abandoned by their parents. Either the parents go missing, are forced to go away (i.e. the March sisters' father going off to fight in the Civil War in Little Women, although their mother remains), or even actively sell their poor offspring into slavery.
    • Occurs at the end of Araiguma Rasukaru, when Sterling is forced to release Rascal back into the wild.
  • Trauma Conga Line: Almost every title listed above is an example of this trope in action, with Shokojo Sera being the single most heartwrenching and painful.

Entries into this series provide examples of:

  • Heroic Pet Story: Lassie pretty much is the Trope Maker for this so it can't be missing from the anime adapation.
  • Robinsonade: The Swiss Family Robinson is not just based upon this trope it even admits it in the title.
  • Yodel Land: Heidi is not just set there, the novels it and its approximately several thousand other adaptions helped to create the idyllic countryside of Yodel Land as we know it today. The Trapp Family Story which is based on the same source as The Sound of Music also has shades of this.
  1. Along with Heidi's, its theme song will be familiar to anyone who's played the classic arcade game Frogger.