TV-Series
Description
Wakana Morizono, a 14-year-old performer in the Edel Rose academy’s Bell Rose unit, stands out with long green hair twisted into feline-inspired twin buns and dark purple eyes. Her Ethnic-style fashion flair complements Prism Live acts where she plays a xylophone—occasionally termed a marimba—guided by her unique sensitivity to music’s invisible "winds" and her ritualistic use of Prism Stones for fortune-telling.
Frequent childhood relocations due to her father’s career left Wakana socially adrift until a pivotal act of defiance: swapping exams to shield solitary classmate Bell Renjoji from parental reprimand. This forged an unbreakable bond, motivating Wakana to adopt her signature hairstyle and a vibrant persona while co-founding Bell Rose with Bell and Otoha Takanashi.
Her admiration for Ann Fukuhara’s Prism Shows curdled into rivalry after illness cost Wakana a chance to perform with her idol, later reigniting when Ann debuted a song Wakana felt was hers. Their clash softened into mutual respect, with Wakana acknowledging her deeper desire to rekindle creative passion—a drive sustained equally by Ann’s early inspiration and Bell’s unwavering support.
Behind Wakana’s boisterous stage presence lies a girl shaped by strict academic upbringing and a fear of disappointing Bell. Her mother, Futaba—a reformed delinquent turned nurturing homemaker—anchored the family, ending their nomadic life and easing Wakana’s isolation. A defining moment arrived when Wakana replaced an ailing Ann in a Prism Show, unlocking her Seventh Coordinate transformation and Ethnic Feathers, symbolizing her metamorphosis from a timid child to a collaborative artist.
Subtle romantic feelings for childhood friend Kazuki Nishina linger beneath her devotion to Bell Rose, reflecting her broader journey from rootlessness to belonging. Wakana’s story weaves loyalty, resilience, and the embrace of performance as joy rather than conquest, celebrating friendship and self-reinvention amid the glittering pressures of Prism Show stardom.
Frequent childhood relocations due to her father’s career left Wakana socially adrift until a pivotal act of defiance: swapping exams to shield solitary classmate Bell Renjoji from parental reprimand. This forged an unbreakable bond, motivating Wakana to adopt her signature hairstyle and a vibrant persona while co-founding Bell Rose with Bell and Otoha Takanashi.
Her admiration for Ann Fukuhara’s Prism Shows curdled into rivalry after illness cost Wakana a chance to perform with her idol, later reigniting when Ann debuted a song Wakana felt was hers. Their clash softened into mutual respect, with Wakana acknowledging her deeper desire to rekindle creative passion—a drive sustained equally by Ann’s early inspiration and Bell’s unwavering support.
Behind Wakana’s boisterous stage presence lies a girl shaped by strict academic upbringing and a fear of disappointing Bell. Her mother, Futaba—a reformed delinquent turned nurturing homemaker—anchored the family, ending their nomadic life and easing Wakana’s isolation. A defining moment arrived when Wakana replaced an ailing Ann in a Prism Show, unlocking her Seventh Coordinate transformation and Ethnic Feathers, symbolizing her metamorphosis from a timid child to a collaborative artist.
Subtle romantic feelings for childhood friend Kazuki Nishina linger beneath her devotion to Bell Rose, reflecting her broader journey from rootlessness to belonging. Wakana’s story weaves loyalty, resilience, and the embrace of performance as joy rather than conquest, celebrating friendship and self-reinvention amid the glittering pressures of Prism Show stardom.