Japanese inbetweener who contributed to Dragon Ball's early production, helping establish the frame-by-frame movement that defined the series' martial arts choreography.
Kadota served as an inbetweener on one episode of original Dragon Ball, participating in the labor-intensive process of creating the thousands of intermediate frames between key animators' drawings. Inbetween animation forms the invisible foundation of fluid motion in anime, and Kadota's work helped translate the series' action sequences into smooth, dynamic movement. Though her Dragon Ball credit represents a small portion of the series' production, it reflects the massive team effort required to animate the early DBZ saga arcs. Her contribution exemplifies the dozens of largely uncredited inbetweeners whose precision work made Dragon Ball's martial arts look fluid and impactful.
Kadota's animation work was concentrated in the 1980s-1990s, with credits appearing on Gegege no Kitarō, Stop! Hibari-kun, and Tokimeki Tonight, as well as the Dr. Slump and Arale-chan theatrical film. Her participation in Dragon Ball coincided with the era when Toei Animation was producing its most landmark titles. Limited documentation survives about her career trajectory, but her work on Dragon Ball places her among the numerous production staff whose contributions proved essential to the franchise's foundational success.
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