Snoopy Museum Tokyo opens in Roppongi

Japan’s Snoopy craze is about to hit fever-pitch with the opening of Snoopy Museum Tokyo in Roppongi on April 23rd. As announced last year, the venue features exclusive exhibits of Charles M. Schulz’s original drawings as well as a themed cafe and merchandise galore. Following on from successful pop-up cafes in Tokyo and down south in Kyushu, Japanese fans of the Peanuts gang are in for a treat with this new Snoopy Mecca. Tickets cost ¥2,000 for adults on the day or ¥1,800 in advance. Admission is divided into five time slots per day. This is the world’s first such Snoopy museum, organized by Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center. The location is an up-market part of Roppongi seven minutes walk from the station that the operators claim is urban yet quiet, “just like the Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa”. The first exhibition is “My Favorite Peanuts”, showcasing sixty of...

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Japan’s Snoopy craze is about to hit fever-pitch with the opening of Snoopy Museum Tokyo in Roppongi on April 23rd.

As announced last year, the venue features exclusive exhibits of Charles M. Schulz’s original drawings as well as a themed cafe and merchandise galore.

Following on from successful pop-up cafes in Tokyo and down south in Kyushu, Japanese fans of the Peanuts gang are in for a treat with this new Snoopy Mecca.

&nbspSnoopy Museum Tokyo opens in Roppongi

Tickets cost ¥2,000 for adults on the day or ¥1,800 in advance. Admission is divided into five time slots per day.

This is the world’s first such Snoopy museum, organized by Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center. The location is an up-market part of Roppongi seven minutes walk from the station that the operators claim is urban yet quiet, “just like the Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa”.

The first exhibition is “My Favorite Peanuts”, showcasing sixty of Charles M. Schulzs original Peanuts cartoons, personally selected by his wife, Jean Schulz.

Musuem facilities include Cafe Blanket, a cafe with a terrace and a name derived from Linus’ signature security blanket, and Brown’s Store, which is the museum shop packed full of toys and more.

The museum will only be open until September 2018, though we suspect the time limit is just there to concentrate visitor numbers. If the museum proves a big hit, it will surely find a way to extend.

A previous Snoopy exhibition in Roppongi in late 2013 attracted 280,000 visitors. The Peanuts Movie, whichgrossed over $5 million at the local box office in December, also recently went on DVD release in Japan.


Source and image: Trends in Japan
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