Reiko Okano (岡野 玲子, Okano Reiko, born 24 June 1960) is a Japanese manga artist.
Career
Okano was born in Ibaraki Prefecture. She attended a graphic design school after graduating from high school and has never worked as a manga assistant. Her first published work as a professional manga artist was Esther, Please in 1982 in the shōjo manga magazine Petit Flower.[1] In the same magazine, in 1984, she started publishing the series Fancy Dance about a Buddhist monk who is trained in becoming the new head of the temple. In 1989, she won the Shogakukan Manga Award in the shōjo category for Fancy Dance.[2] The same year, the series was adapted into a live-action film directed by Masayuki Suo.
Okano publishes manga in magazines across different gendered categories, including shōjo manga, josei manga and seinen manga. Tomoko Yamada assesses that her style is influenced by sentiments of women's media: "One can see this in the graceful beauty of the conduct of Okano’s characters, the picturesque and polished structure of every frame, and the emphasis on subtlety in story development."[6]