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I will not give up this Tiara. It's time for me to show the way.
―Cesario


Cesario (シーザリオ, Shiizario) is a character in Uma Musume: Pretty Derby.

Personality[]

Cesario is a horse girl of intelligence and compassion. Influenced by her father, a famous trainer, and mother, who is passionate about education, she holds a great interest in nurturing the next generation of horse girls who come after her. She holds retired Tiara-winning horse girls as her ideal type since she learned that they also focus on being role models to younger horse girls. According to her best friend, whom she rooms with, she has a very clear on-off routine.

Appearance[]

Physically, Cesario mostly resembles a recolor of Special Week (her RL sire/father) and features short dark blue hair in a similar bob cut with a white crown braid and white bangs (the marking is roughly shaped like the irregular star marking of the original horse). She has purple eyes and has an ornament around her left ear.

Relationships[]

Songs[]

Special Commentary[]

Uma Musume Real Life
  • Requirement:
  • Reference:

Notes[]

Trivia[]

  • Cesario is the first horse girl owned by the Carrot Farm.
  • As the announcement of her appearance, Carrot Club published a newsletter about Uma Musume series.
It was announced that Cesario will appear as a new horse girl.
Real-life Cesario also overcame lots of difficulties, winning the American Oaks.
I'm looking forward to being described the story of her glory.
―Carrot Club official[1]

Real Life[]

On that day, she became the queen of two countries.
―JRA Heroes poster[2]


Cesario is a racehorse in the 2000s. She is one of representative foals of Special Week as well as Buena Vista. winning the Japanese and the American Oaks. She was also a great broodmare. She bore three G1 horses and many of her descendants are active now.

Name Origin[]

Comes from the protagonist in Shakespeare's play, Twelfth Night, or What You Will. Viola calls herself as Cesario when crossdressing.

  • She is the first American G1 winner in Japanese horses. The announcer called her the "Japanese superstar", and it became her nickname.
That's what I mean, Melhor Ainda is eight lengths from the Japanese superstar, Cesario!
―2005 American Oaks Invitational Stakes
Domo arigato!
Cesario takes the fourth running of the American Oaks
and for the first time since 1959, a Japanese horse comes to the United States and wins a stakes race,
and not just any stakes race the grade one, American Oaks!
―2005 American Oaks Invitational Stakes


  • Epiphaneia, one of her foals, win two G1 races and became a studhorse. Three of his foals, Daring Tact, Efforia, and Circle of Life won G1s.

Notes[]


References[]

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