Heidi (European Spanish, 1975)

This dub is based on the original Japanese version. This dub was a resounding success in Spain, which continues to this day.

Cast

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Adaptation
"Heidi": un relato con el famoso personaje, creado por Juana Spyri. ("Heidi": the tale, with the famous character, created by Johanna Spyri.).
 * Originally, the series kept its original Japanese opening and ending theme songs, as well as its untranslated soundtrack. The series was presented by a voice over that said in Spanish:
 * Note that the name of Johanna Spyri is translated as Juana, as a way of making it Spanish. This comes from the translations of the books made in Spain, where the Swiss author is named as Juana.
 * Notwithstanding the foregoing, records were released with the soundtrack translated into European Spanish, which were marketed in Spain with enormous success.
 * Curiously, in some more recent reissues, the German opening theme is occasionally used.
 * The Latin American Spanish dub uses the scripts translated in Spain by Margarita Ribes Escolano and Angelina Gatell Comas. This is explained because, at least until the 1990s, Spain used to distribute a large amount of Japanese audiovisual material, mainly anime of various genres, thus having greater communication with the Asian country than it could have in Latin America.
 * The names are adapted to the grammar of the Spanish language, just as it is done in the Spanish translations of the original book by Johanna Spyri.
 * One of the most striking cases of adaptation is that of the sheepdog Joseph, who in both Spain and Mexico is known as "Niebla" (Spanish for Fog). The name was chosen by the Spanish translator Angelina Gatell Comas as a secret homage to the Chilean poet and writer Pablo Neruda, and his female dog named Niebla. The reason for the secrecy of the reference was that, when Spain produced the dubbing, the dictator Francisco Franco was still in power, and Neruda was politically opposed to his ideologies, especially due to his active participation in the Spanish Civil War, on the opposite side to Franco.