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Nutz Productions Wraps Filming on 'Rising'; New Series to Air on TeenNick Israel

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Filming has wrapped on Rising, a new live-action adventure series from Nutz Productions that will debut in 2020 exclusively on TeenNick Israel, the Nickelodeon-branded tweens-and-teens channel that launched in 2017, via the Hot Cable Network and Yes Satellite network. A premiere date has yet to be announced.


Set in 1946, two years before the state of Israel was founded, Rising follows brother and sister Emile and Elinore, illegal immigrants in Israel. They join a group of teens training in a secret base and recruitment center to act as Strike Forces against the British mandate. The fictional characters and events are juxtaposed against actual historical occurrences and real-life legends.

Rising, aimed at tweens and teens, was created by Eden Gurion and Yehonatan Bar Ilan.

The news follows Nutz Productions, the subsidiary production arm of Ananey Communications Group, announcing plans to begin filming work on Sky (2 seasons, 20x22’), a new adventure drama from the creator and producers of Nickelodeon Israel's The Greenhouse and Netflix's Greenhouse Academy– Giora Chamizer and Nutz Productions – together with writer Noa Pnini, in February 2020 on various locations sites all over Israel.

Sky tells the story of a smart and assertive alien girl with the same name, whose spaceship accidentally crashes in a small town on earth. While waiting to be rescued, she hides by transforming herself into the body of the most popular girl in high school. With only three goofy friends to help her out, Sky must survive two weeks on earth without being discovered. Alongside the suspenseful dramatic plot, the general air of the show is whimsical and funny.

Similar to Rising, Sky is also set to premiere on Teen Nick Israel in 2020.

Nutz Productions, the subsidiary production arm of Ananey Communications Group, is currently in the midst of producing Spyders (formally titled The Covurts), the first original co-production between Nickelodeon International and the Israeli production studio — together with Israeli cable network HOT.

Spyders focuses on Anna and Noah Fisher, highly highly skilled undercover agents who work for a ECCO – Environmental Counter Crime Organization, and are tasked with fighting criminals who endanger nature or the environment. Little do they know that their three kids – Daniel (16), Nikki (15) and Tommy (12) – have discovered their secret occupation and have formed a task force of their own, named Spyders.

Nickelodeon has ordered 40 x 22-minute episodes, which will be distributed to Nickelodeon's international audiences spanning 170+ countries and territories via the brand’s more than 100 channels and branded blocks in 2020.

Ananey Communications Group represents the Viacom brands Nickelodeon, Nick Jr., Teen Nick, MTV and Comedy Central in Israel.

More Nick:Nickelodeon International Renames 'The Covurts' as 'Spyders'; To Premiere in 2020!

Original source: TVKIDS.

Originally published: Thursday, January 30, 2020.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Israel News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon Poland to Bring the Magic with Fairytale Activation at VIVO! Piła During February 2020 School Holidays

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Poland - Fans can meet & greet their favourite Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. characters and take part in lots of Nickelodeon-themed activities during the February 2020 school holidays when Nickelodeon Poland (Polska) visits the VIVO! Piła shopping centre in Piła!


From https://vivo-shopping.com

FAIRYTALE HOLIDAYS WITH NICKELODEON CHARACTERS

On the occasion of the holidays in our mall, we have prepared for our customers a number of interesting attractions and good fun, where there is no risk of boredom.

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From https://vivo-shopping.com:

BAJKOWE FERIE Z POSTACIAMI Z NICKELODEON

PODZIEL SIĘ TYM ARTYKUŁEM:

SOBOTA 01 LUTY 2020

BAJKOWE FERIE Z POSTACIAMI Z NICKELODEON

Przed uczniami najbardziej wyczekiwany zimowy okres, czyli ferie. W naszym centrum handlowym przygotowaliśmy dla nich szereg ciekawych atrakcji i dobrej zabawy, przy których nie grozi nuda.

Przez dwa najbliższe weekendy, 1-2 lutego i 7-8 lutego w godz. 12:00 – 18:00, w VIVO! najmłodsi przeniosą się w bajkową rzeczywistość za sprawą postaci znanych z programów Nickelodeon. W pierwszy weekend ferii, 1 lutego, maluchy zobaczą, jak wygląda magiczny świat Shimmer i Shine. W strefie zabaw będą mogły poskakać na ogromnym dmuchańcu, zrobić sobie pamiątkowe zdjęcie w Pałacu Dżinów oraz przy pomocy animatorów stworzyć magiczną bransoletkę. Kolejny dzień to nie lada niespodzianka dla fanów Blaze’a, którzy będą mogli sprawdzić swoje umiejętności w kierowaniu mega autami oraz ponownie poskakać na kolorowym dmuchańcu.

Drugi weekend ferii to gratka dla wielbicieli Wojowniczych Żółwi Ninja i SpongeBoba. W piątek, 7 lutego, razem z Żółwiami Ninja będzie można zagrać w strefie X-boxa i uratować Nowy Jork z ciemności. W sobotę, 8 lutego, dzieci poznają podwodny świat sympatycznego SpongeBoba, z którym będą łapać meduzy. Ponadto na warsztatach maluchy stworzą własnego SpongeBoba, a podczas odpoczynku będą zajadać się pyszną watą cukrową. Dodatkowo na stanowisku fotograficznym ulubieńcy z bajek będą pozować do pamiątkowych zdjęć. Wydarzenie jest bezpłatne.

Serdecznie zapraszamy!


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From wirtualnemedia.pl:

Pierwszy tydzień bajkowych ferii z Nickelodeon w VIVO! Piła

Najważniejsze daty w kalendarzu uczniów, to bez wątpienia wakacje i ferie. Upragniona przerwa od szkolnych obowiązków i czas dobrej zabawy coraz bliżej. Z myślą o wszystkich dzieciach, przez dwa najbliższe weekendy, w VIVO! Piła będą odbywały się bezpłatne atrakcje z bohaterami bajek z Nickelodeon.

Całe dnie beztroskiej i niezapomnianej zabawy? Tak zapowiadają się zimowe weekendy w VIVO! Piła, gdzie dla dzieci i młodzieży przygotowano niezwykłą rozrywkę z postaciami z kultowych bajek znanych z Nickelodeon. W pierwszym tygodniu, w godz. 12:00 – 18:00, w Strefie Zabaw pojawią się Shimmer i Shine oraz Blaze, a dodatkowo stanie tam wielki dmuchaniec. W sobotę, 1 lutego, najmłodsi będą mogli przenieść się w magiczny świat dżinów, stworzyć własną, pełną mocy spełniania życzeń bransoletkę, zobaczyć i zrobić sobie zdjęcie w podniebnym pałacu Shimmer i Shine oraz namalować ich przygody. Natomiast w niedzielę, 2 lutego, fani Blaze i mega maszyn mogą się spodziewać dobrej zabawy ze swoimi ulubieńcami. W Strefie Zabaw powstanie tor, na którym będzie można poznać tajniki bezpiecznej jazdy oraz usiąść za kierownicą ogromnego Blaza. W drugim tygodniu, 7 – 8 lutego, centrum handlowe odwiedzą kolejni znani i lubiani bohaterowie bajek Nickelodeon, ponadto wszyscy chętni będą mogli zrobić sobie zdjęcie na pamiątkę w fotobudce. Więcej informacji wkrótce.

Pierwszy tydzień ferii z Nickelodeon w VIVO! Piła, odbędzie się 1-2 lutego w godz. 12:00 – 18:00, w strefie Food Court. Wydarzenie jest bezpłatne.

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Poland to Premiere 'Just Add Magic' on Monday 17th February 2020!

Additional sources: Google Translate, Google.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nick Jr. Polska and Nickelodeon Preschool Poland News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon Tour France to Hit the Ski Slopes for February 2020 School Holidays

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Nickelodeon France has announced the exciting news that, to celebrate the February school holidays, the channel's hugely successful Nickelodeon Tour will be hitting the ski slopes, bringing popular Nickelodeon characters and activities inspired by hit Nickelodeon shows to ski resorts across France!:


S'INSTALLE DANS LES STATIONS DE SKI

POUR LES VACANCES DE FÉVRIER AVEC

LA PAT' PATROUILLE, LES TORTUES NINJA, BIENVENUE CHEZ LES LOUD...

Toute l'année pendant les vacances scolaires et dans toute la France, les chaînes NICKELODEON occupent le terrain avec le NICKELODEON TOUR, LA plus grande tournée nationale destinée aux enfants.

Cet hiver, du 16 au 26 février, NICKELODEON dévale les pistes et s'installe dans les stations de ski à la rencontre de ses téléspectateurs. Au programme cette année, les héros emblématiques des chaînes et des animations complètement inédites pour le plus grand plaisir des nombreux visiteurs ! Une tournée gratuite et ouverte à tous avec, en bonus, distribution de milliers de goodies pour de super vacances.

DE TOUTES NOUVELLES ANIMATIONS DE 11h À 15h SUR LE FRONT DE NEIGE POUR TOUTE LA FAMILLE AVEC :

*TERRAIN DE HOCKEY TORTUES NINJA - en équipe de 3, les petits vacanciers pourront s'essayer au hockey sur un terrain dédié aux TORTUES NINJA.

*PISTE DE LUGE PAT' PATROUILLE - les enfants pourront descendre les pistes aux couleurs de la PAT' PATROUILLE et devenir les rois de la glisse.

*ESPACE D'ACCUEIL BUTTERBEAN'S CAFÉ - pour se réchauffer, les visiteurs pourront profiter de la tente BUTTERBEAN'S CAFÉ et de son chocolat chaud.

*PHOTOCALL BIENVENUE CHEZ LES LOUD - les petits skieurs pourront se prendre en photo avec la plus déjantée des familles.

Et pour le plus grand plaisir des enfants, BOB L'ÉPONGE, CHASE de la PAT' PATROUILLE, LINCOLN de BIENVENUE CHEZ LES LOUD et MICHELANGELO des TORTUES NINJA viendront en vrai à leur rencontre à l'occasion de Meet & Greets de 16h30 à 17h30.

Tout schuss vers le NICKELODEON TOUR pour des vacances d'hiver réussies !

* Début des festivités à Villard-de-Lans le 16/02 puis rendez-vous à :
Chamrousse le 17/02 - Les Contamines Montjoie le 18/02 - Les Menuires le 19/02 - Les Saisies le 21/02 - Valmorel le 23/02 - Montchavin le 24/02 - Saint François Longchamp le 25/02 - Courchevel le 26/02

LE NICKELODEON TOUR
Du 16 au 26 février dans 9 stations de ski

Avec Spin Master

En partenariat avec Citizen Kid, Montagne FM

FORTE DE SON CATALOGUE JEUNESSE PREMIUM, BOB L’EPONGE, LES TORTUES NINJA, DORA L’EXPLORATRICE, PAW PATROL, BLAZE ET LES MONSTER MACHINES, iCARLY, BIG TIME RUSH… LE GROUPE DE CHAINES NICKELODEON EST N° 1 DANS LE MONDE.EN FRANCE, LES CHAINES NICKELODEON JUNIOR, NICKELODEON et NICKELODEON TEEN SONT DISTRIBUEES AUPRES DE PLUS DE 9M DE FOYERS EN EXCLUSIVITE CABLE/SAT/ADSL ET SUR MOBILE/TABLETTE.

COMPREND LES CHAINES SUIVANTES DIFFUSEES EN FRANCE, BELGIQUE ET SUISSE : MTV, MTV HITS, MY MTV, BET, PARAMOUNT CHANNEL, COMEDY CENTRAL, GAME ONE, J-ONE, NICKELODEON JUNIOR, NICKELODEON, NICKELODEON TEEN ET MON NICKELODEON JUNIOR.

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From Leblogtvnews.com:

Nouvelle édition du Nickelodeon Tour, pour les enfants, dans 9 stations de ski en février 2020.

Le mois prochain, du 16 au 26 février 2020, la chaîne jeunesse NICKELODEON dévale les pistes et s'installe dans les stations de ski à la rencontre de ses téléspectateurs. Au programme cette année, les héros emblématiques des chaînes et des animations complètement inédites pour le plus grand plaisir des nombreux visiteurs !

Une tournée gratuite et ouverte à tous avec, en bonus, distribution de milliers de goodies.

TERRAIN DE HOCKEY TORTUES NINJA - en équipe de 3, les petits vacanciers pourront s'essayer au hockey sur un terrain dédié aux TORTUES NINJA.

PISTE DE LUGE PAT' PATROUILLE - les enfants pourront descendre les pistes aux couleurs de la PAT' PATROUILLE et devenir les rois de la glisse.

ESPACE D'ACCUEIL BUTTERBEAN'S CAFÉ - pour se réchauffer, les visiteurs pourront profiter de la tente BUTTERBEAN'S CAFÉ et de son chocolat chaud.

PHOTOCALL BIENVENUE CHEZ LES LOUD - les petits skieurs pourront se prendre en photo avec la plus déjantée des familles.

BOB L'ÉPONGE, CHASE de la PAT' PATROUILLE, LINCOLN de BIENVENUE CHEZ LES LOUD et MICHELANGELO des TORTUES NINJA viendront à la rencontre des enfants.

Début des festivités à Villard-de-Lans le 16/02 puis rendez-vous à :

Chamrousse le 17/02

Les Contamines Montjoie le 18/02

Les Menuires le 19/02

Les Saisies le 21/02

Valmorel le 23/02

Montchavin le 24/02

Saint François Longchamp le 25/02

Courchevel le 26/02

###

Plus Nickelodeon:Nickelodeon France to Premiere 'Just Add Magic' on Monday 3rd February 2020 !

Originally published: Thursday, January 30, 2020.

Additional source: Google Translate.


Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon France and Are You Afraid of the Dark? News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon and VStar Entertainment Group Announce New North American Tour Dates for 'PAW Patrol Live!'; Tickets On Sale September 28

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Originally published: Tuesday, September 18, 2018.

For the latest tour dates, please visit www.pawpatrollive.com.

Official VStar Entertainment Group Press Release via PR Newswire:

Nickelodeon and VStar Entertainment Group Announce New North American Tour Dates for PAW Patrol Live!; Tickets On Sale September 28


Join Everyone's Favorite Pups as They Embark on Two Adventures, PAW Patrol Live! "Race to the Rescue" and PAW Patrol Live! "The Great Pirate Adventure"



MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 18, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Nickelodeon and VStar Entertainment Group today announced the addition of 44 dates to the 2019 Winter and Spring North American tour schedule for the popular PAW Patrol Live! stage shows. Based on PAW Patrol, the top-rated animated preschool series produced by Spin Master Entertainment, the action-packed, music-filled productions PAW Patrol Live! "Race to the Rescue" and PAW Patrol Live!"The Great Pirate Adventure," bring the beloved characters from the series to life off-screen. Pre-sale tickets for both live stage shows are available today and will go on sale to the general public September 28. Fans can visit www.pawpatrollive.com for tour schedules, ticket information and PAW Patrol Live! Tail Mail, where they can sign up to be among the first to receive tour updates and exclusive ticket pre-sale information for their city.

PAW Patrol Live! "Race to the Rescue," now in its third season, takes place on the day of the Great Race between Adventure Bay's Mayor Goodway and Foggy Bottom's Mayor Humdinger, but Mayor Goodway is nowhere to be found. Ryder summons the PAW Patrol to rescue Mayor Goodway and help her finish the race. Using their unique skills and teamwork, the pups show that "no job is too big, no pup is too small," and share lessons on friendship, social skills and problem-solving as they make several heroic rescues on their race to the finish line.

PAW Patrol Live! "The Great Pirate Adventure," debuted in 2017 and takes place during the Pirate Day celebration in Adventure Bay. When Cap'n Turbot falls into a dark and mysterious cavern, it's the PAW Patrol to the rescue! While saving Cap'n Turbot, Ryder and the pups discover a secret treasure map that leads them on an epic adventure. The pups need all paws on deck, as they set sail to save the day and find the pirate treasure before Mayor Humdinger finds it first.

Follow PAW Patrol Live! on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter @pawpatrollive, and use #pawpatrollive. Citi is the official credit card of the PAW Patrol Live! tours. Citi cardholders can visit www.CitiPrivatePass.com for more information on presale tickets.

Just announced dates include:

PAW Patrol Live! "Race to the Rescue"
Winnipeg, MBJan. 3 -5
Grand Forks, NDJan. 8 – 9
Chicago, ILJan. 12 - 13
St. Louis, MOJan. 18 – 20
Cedar Rapids, IAJan. 22 - 23
Nashville, TNJan. 26 – 27
Fairfax, VAFeb. 1-3
Providence, RIFeb. 9 -10
Buffalo, NYFeb. 14 - 17
Erie, PAFeb. 19 – 20
Rochester, NYFeb. 23 – 24
Detroit, MIFeb. 28 – Mar. 3
Cleveland, OHMar. 8 – 10
Toronto, ONMar. 15 – 17
Syracuse, NYMar. 23 – 24
Amherst, MAMar. 26 – 27
Philadelphia, PAApr. 5 – 7
New York, NYApr. 13-14
Albany, NYApr. 19 – 21

PAW Patrol Live! "The Great Pirate Adventure"
Wichita, KSJan. 4 – 6
Pittsburgh, PAJan. 11 - 13
Salt Lake City, UTJan. 19 – 20
Moline, ILJan. 26 - 27
Madison, WIJan. 29 – 30
Bismarck, NDFeb. 2 - 3
Milwaukee, WIFeb. 5 – 6
Minneapolis, MNFeb. 8 - 10
Sioux Falls, SDFeb. 12 – 13
Kansas City, MOFeb. 16 - 17
Austin, TXFeb. 22 – 24
Dallas, TXMar. 1 - 3
Wichita Falls, TXMar. 5 – 6
San Antonio, TXMar. 8 - 10
Midland, TXMar. 12 – 13
Houston, TXMar. 15 - 17
Laredo, TXMar. 19 – 20
El Paso, TXMar. 23 - 24
Phoenix, AZMar. 30 – 31
Tucson, AZApr. 2 - 3
Las Vegas, NVApr. 5 – 7
Riverside, CAApr. 9 - 10
Los Angeles, CAApr. 13 – 14
Long Beach, CAApr. 16 - 17

VStar Entertainment Group is a leading entertainment company and producer of unforgettable live experiences for audiences in the U.S. and internationally. From concept through activation, VStar imagines and creates custom tours featuring original content, and licensed, branded tours that provide highly engaging entertainment for fans of all ages. With nearly four decades of expertise in all aspects of event production and management, VStar delivers turnkey, in-house solutions for theatrical shows, interactive exhibits and brand activations. VStar also creates custom-fabricated mascots and costumes, large-scale sets, scenery and 3-D installations, serving as a valued resource for professional sports teams, Fortune 500 companies and experiential marketing agencies.

Acquired in 2018 by global live entertainment leader, Cirque du Soleil Entertainment Group, VStar has presented more than 39,000 live performances across 40 countries and entertains nearly two million guests annually. Current VStar tours include PAW Patrol Live! Bubble Guppies Live, Cirque Dreams and Discover the Dinosaurs: Time Trek. Previous VStar (formerly VEE Corporation) productions include Sesame Street Live, Barney, Bear in the Big Blue House, Curious George, Dragon Tales, and Kidz Bop Live! For more information, visit www.vstarentertainment.com.

Nickelodeon, now in its 39th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, digital, recreation, books and feature films. Nickelodeon's U.S. television network is seen in more than 90 million households and has been the number-one-rated kids' basic cable network for 22 consecutive years. For more information or artwork, visit http://www.nickpress.com. Nickelodeon and all related titles, characters and logos are trademarks of Viacom Inc. (NASDAQ :VIA , VIAB).

SOURCE VStar Entertainment Group

Related Links
http://www.vstarentertainment.com

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Latest Dates:

Wicomico Youth & Civic Center
Salisbury, MD
Tue, May 28
Wed, May 29
Race to the Rescue

East Kentucky Expo Center
Pikeville, KY
Sat, June 1
Sun, June 2
Race to the Rescue

Carlson Center
Fairbanks, AK
Sat, June 8
Sun, June 9
The Great Pirate Adventure

Alaska Airlines Center
Anchorage, AK
Fri, June 14
Sat, June 15
Sun, June 16
The Great Pirate Adventure

The RP Funding Center
Lakeland, FL
Sat, July 6
Race to the Rescue

CFE Arena
Orlando, FL
Sat, July 13
Sun, July 14
Race to the Rescue

Au Rene Theater @ Broward Center
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Sat, July 20
Sun, July 21
Race to the Rescue

Watsco Center
Coral Gables, FL
Tue, July 23
Wed, July 24
Race to the Rescue

Straz Center
Tampa, FL
Sat, July 27
Sun, July 28
Race to the Rescue

Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall
Fort Myers, FL
Tue, July 30
Wed, July 31
Race to the Rescue

Times Union Center for the Performing Arts
Jacksonville, FL
Sat, August 3
Sun, August 4
Race to the Rescue

Sanford Center
Bemidji, MN
Sat, August 3
The Great Pirate Adventure

Swiftel Center
Brookings, SD
Sat, August 10
Sun, August 11
The Great Pirate Adventure

Centreplex Coliseum
Macon, GA
Sat, August 10
Sun, August 11
Race to the Rescue

BancorpSouth Arena
Tupelo, MS
Tue, August 13
Wed, August 14
Race to the Rescue

Overture Theater
Madison, WI
Wed, August 14
The Great Pirate Adventure

Orpheum Theater
Omaha, NE
Sat, August 17
Sun, August 18
The Great Pirate Adventure

The Fox Theatre
Atlanta, GA
Sat, August 17
Sun, August 18
Race to the Rescue

Knoxville Civic Auditorium
Knoxville, TN
Tue, August 20
Wed, August 21
Race to the Rescue

Von Braun Center
Huntsville, AL
Fri, August 23
Sat, August 24
Sun, August 25
Race to the Rescue

Pikes Peak Center
Colorado Springs, CO
Sat, August 24
Sun, August 25
The Great Pirate Adventure

See Tickets
Tony's Pizza Event Center
Salina, KS
Tue, August 27
Wed, August 28
The Great Pirate Adventure

Columbus Civic Center
Columbus, GA
Tue, August 27
Wed, August 28
Race to the Rescue

Globe-News Center (GNC)
Amarillo, TX
Fri, August 30
Sat, August 31
Sun, September 1
The Great Pirate Adventure

Donald L. Tucker Civic Center
Tallahassee, FL
Sat, August 31
Sun, September 1
Race to the Rescue

Mississippi Coliseum
Jackson, MS
Fri, September 6
Sat, September 7
Sun, September 8
The Great Pirate Adventure

Ovens Auditorium
Charlotte, NC
Fri, September 6
Sat, September 7
Sun, September 8
Race to the Rescue

Salem Civic Center
Salem, VA
Tue, September 10
Wed, September 11
Race to the Rescue

BJCC Concert Hall
Birmingham, AL
Fri, September 13
Sat, September 14
Sun, September 15
The Great Pirate Adventure

Bon Secours Wellness Arena
Greenville, SC
Sat, September 14
Sun, September 15
Race to the Rescue

First National Bank Arena
Jonesboro, AR
Tue, September 17
Wed, September 18
The Great Pirate Adventure

Landers Center
Southaven, MS
Fri, September 20
Sat, September 21
Sun, September 22
The Great Pirate Adventure

PPL Center
Allentown, PA
Sat, September 21
Sun, September 22
Race to the Rescue

Big Sandy Superstore Arena
Huntington, WV
Tue, September 24
Wed, September 25
Race to the Rescue

Mobile Civic Center
Mobile, AL
Tue, September 24
Wed, September 25
The Great Pirate Adventure

Verizon Arena
Little Rock, AR
Fri, September 27
Sat, September 28
Sun, September 29
The Great Pirate Adventure

Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, NC
Sat, September 28
Sun, September 29
Race to the Rescue

Bank of Springfield Center
Springfield, IL
Tue, October 1
Wed, October 2
The Great Pirate Adventure

Florence Civic Center
Florence, SC
Tue, October 1
Wed, October 2
Race to the Rescue

Rupp Arena
Lexington, KY
Sat, October 5
Sun, October 6
The Great Pirate Adventure

Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
Atlantic City, NJ
Sat, October 5
Sun, October 6
Race to the Rescue

Hanover Theatre
Worcester, MA
Tue, October 8
Wed, October 9
Race to the Rescue

CURE Insurance Arena
Trenton, NJ
Sat, October 12
Sun, October 13
Race to the Rescue

CAJUNDOME
Lafayette, LA
Sat, October 12
Sun, October 13
The Great Pirate Adventure

Santander Arena
Reading, PA
Tue, October 15
Wed, October 16
Race to the Rescue

Houma-Terrebonne Civic Center
Houma, LA
Tue, October 15
Wed, October 16
The Great Pirate Adventure

UNO Lakefront Arena
New Orleans, LA
Sat, October 19
Sun, October 20
The Great Pirate Adventure

Chrysler Hall
Norfolk, VA
Sat, October 19
Sun, October 20
Race to the Rescue

CenturyLink Center
Bossier City, LA
Tue, October 22
Wed, October 23
The Great Pirate Adventure

Cox Convention Center
Oklahoma City, OK
Fri, October 25
Sat, October 26
Sun, October 27
The Great Pirate Adventure

Hippodrome Theatre
Baltimore, MD
Sat, October 26
Sun, October 27
Race to the Rescue

WL Jack Howard Theatre
Monroe, LA
Tue, October 29
Wed, October 30
The Great Pirate Adventure

Altria Theater
Richmond, VA
Tue, October 29
Wed, October 30
Race to the Rescue

Raising Cane's River Center Arena
Baton Rouge, LA
Fri, November 1
Sat, November 2
Sun, November 3
The Great Pirate Adventure

Toyota Oakdale Theatre
Wallingford, CT
Sat, November 2
Sun, November 3
Race to the Rescue

Weidner Center for the Performing Arts
Green Bay, WI
Sat, November 9
Sun, November 10
The Great Pirate Adventure

The Palace Theatre
Stamford, CT
Sat, November 9
Sun, November 10
Race to the Rescue

Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
Fort Wayne, IN
Tue, November 12
Wed, November 13
The Great Pirate Adventure

Sears Centre Arena
Hoffman Estates, IL
Sat, November 16
Sun, November 17
The Great Pirate Adventure

Stranahan Theater
Toledo, OH
Sat, November 23
Sun, November 24
The Great Pirate Adventure

New Jersey Performing Arts Center
Newark, NJ
Sat, November 30
Sun, December 1
The Great Pirate Adventure

See Tickets
Tsongas Center
Lowell, MA
Sat, December 14
Sun, December 15
Race to the Rescue

PAW Patrol Live! “Race to the Rescue”

PAW Patrol Live! "The Great Pirate Adventure"

Mississippi Coliseum, Jackson, MS

Fri, September 6
Sat, September 7
Sun, September 8

Verizon Arena, Little Rock, AR

Fri, September 27
Sat, September 28
Sun, September 29

Rupp Arena, Lexington, KY:

Sat, October 5
Sun, October 6

CAJUNDOME, Lafayette, LA

Sat, October 12
Sun, October 13

Houma-Terrebonne Civic Center, Houma, LA

Tue, October 15
Wed, October 16

UNO Lakefront Arena, New Orleans, LA

Sat, October 19
Sun, October 20

WL Jack Howard Theatre, Monroe, LA

Tue, October 29
Wed, October 30

WL Jack Howard Theatre, Monroe, LA

Tue, October 29
Wed, October 30

CenturyLink Center, Bossier City, LA

Tue, October 22
Wed, October 23

Raising Cane's River Center Arena, Baton Rouge, LA

Fri, November 1
Sat, November 2
Sun, November 3

PAW Patrol Live! “Race to the Rescue” will be visiting Floyd L. Maines Veterans Memorial Arena in Binghamton, NY! Performances will take place on Tuesday March 19 at 6:00 p.m. and on Wednesday March 20 at 10:00 a.m., & 6:00 p.m.

The Sioux Falls, SD show in February 2019 will be at the Denny Sanford Premier Center.

The Milwaukee, WI in February 2019 will be at the Miller High Life Theatre.

The The Rochester, NY show in February 2019 will be at the Auditorium Theatre.

The Cleveland, OH show in March 2019 will be at the Playhouse Square.

The El Paso, TX show in March 2019 will be at the El Paso County Coliseum.

The Phoenix, AZ show in March 2019 will be at the Comerica Theatre.

PAW Patrol Live! "The Great Pirate Adventure will visit the Canadian Tire Centre in Ottawa, Canada from November 23-25. Click here to win a 4-pack of tickets!

From the Dispatch-Argus-QCOnline.com:

The doggone chase is on for 'Paw Patrol Live!' actor

MOLINE — The first production Danard Daniels acted in was in Miami, at elementary school when he was 8, playing the sun. The 24-year-old Norfolk, Va., native continues to spread warmth to audiences nationwide.

The peppy professional actor/dancer/singer/puppeteer plays Chase — the police pup — in the touring production of PAW Patrol Live! “The Great Pirate Adventure,” which bounds into Moline’s TaxSlayer Center next weekend, Jan. 26 and 27.

In Nickelodeon and VStar Entertainment Group’s action-packed, music-filled show, the heroic pups from the top-rated animated preschool series (on Nick. Jr.), produced by Spin Master Entertainment, embark on a pirate-themed adventure to uncover hidden treasure.

“Kids love Paw Patrol because it conveys that no job is too big and no pup too small,” Danard said in a recent telephone interview. “It shows social skills and the importance of teamwork. The characters are relatable, enjoyable. They replicate today’s heroes, like firefighters and police officers.”

Chase is the police pup, and the oldest of all the pups, and each actor operates the large puppet for his or her character. “He has leader qualities, but is still a puppy, can be very goofy,” Danard said. His catch phrase is “Chase is on the case,” he noted.

In PAW Patrol Live!, Mayor Goodway is getting everything shipshape for a big Pirate Day celebration in Adventure Bay. When Cap’n Turbot falls into a dark and mysterious cavern, it’s PAW Patrol to the rescue, according to a show summary, noting Chase, Marshall, Rubble, Skye, Rocky and Zuma save Cap’n Turbot.

They discover a secret pirate treasure map that leads them on an epic adventure. The pups need “all paws on deck” for this pirate adventure, including help from the newest pup who’s all ears. ... Tracker, the synopsis says. “Using their heroic rescue skills, problem solving and teamwork, the pups set sail to save the day.”

“Our show is based on a form of theater in Japan, a form of puppetry,” Danard said. “I’m standing straight up, the puppet is on all fours, and we are acting and singing and dancing with the puppet. It is a challenge; it’s a different style of puppetry than I’ve ever done. This was very challenging. I really do love it.”

He started acting when he was 8 in Miami but stopped when he moved back to Virginia. In Norfolk, Danard was 17 when he started musical theater, training under a community-theater group called the Hurrah Players. His first show there was “Wizard of Oz,” and his first professional job was when he was 19 with Busch Gardens Williamsburg’s “Sesame Street,” in Virginia.

Danard ended up performing on the “Sesame Street Live” tour in 2016-17. “I loved to see the kids’ faces; they’re really into it. You can see expressions of children, see them dancing.

Other performances includes “Deck the Halls” (Busch Gardens Williamsburg), “Drew & Stiles’ Peter Pan” (Virginia Musical Theatre Company), “Gypsy” (VMT), “Mamma Mia” (VMT), and “Disney’s The Little Mermaid” (VMT)

Danard is thrilled to be a part of PAW Patrol Live! because he loves Nickelodeon and always wanted to be a Nick “kid.”

“My nephew and little cousin were obsessed with Paw Patrol Live,” he said of the preschoolers. “When we went on tour with Sesame Street, we saw kids walking in with Paw Patrol clothes.”

On the series, all the animals have special skills, gadgets and vehicles that help them on their rescue missions. The current tour started in October in Portland, Maine, and will run into June, ending in Anchorage, Alaska, Danard said.

What does he like best about the tour? “Being able to travel to places I’ve never been to, don’t have the chance to go to, and to see these kids yell out the characters’ names,” Danard said. “These kids really know. Every now and then, we get videos from our fans, show how the children react. It’s great.”

PAW Patrol Live! “The Great Pirate Adventure” includes an intermission, and incorporates an innovative costume approach to help bring the pups to life on stage. The performance is interactive, encouraging audiences to learn pirate catchphrases, dance the pirate boogie and help the pups follow the treasure map and solve picture puzzles during their mission.

For more information on the show, visit pawpatrollive.com.

###

From Fairfax County Times:

Can advanced costumes enhance emotions?

PAW Patrol Live! “Race to the Rescue,” a musical adventure for preschoolers, uses an innovative costuming approach, Bunraku puppetry, to make the pups on stage look exactly as they are on Nickelodeon’s top-rated television show, “PAW Patrol.” But can technology enhance emotions?

The live show is coming to Fairfax’s EagleBank Arena from Jan. 31 to Feb. 2. We spoke with actor Pen Chance about the show’s costuming approach: “Every single costume is made a little bit differently. Just kind of like the pups are. They are different species of pups on the television show and so each costume is tailored just a little bit differently to them. For instance, Sky, since she's the Cockapoo, her costume might be just a little bit lighter in weight, and then Rebel, the bulldog, his might be a little bit heavier. But it takes a lot of training and many weeks of sweat and not necessarily skipping a workout because you go to work and that's your workout, just trying to get the controls of these puppets down because it's very intricate. It's very unique. But, I believe that it comes across very well. So, all the work our actors put in, you can really see it on stage.

How is this innovative costuming approach make a difference for the actors?

Chance: Well, literally because of our costume department's dedication, they look exactly like the cartoon characters. It just takes a different level of skill to be able to operate it. For instance, the front paws of the pups — those are our human legs. Then we're trying to get the timing right with the hands, so the pups’ mouths can match what we're saying and it looks really unique, and there are small things that our company has learned that can make the biggest difference. Like, if you are bending your knees, that might just look like a human is squatting, but it's going to look like the pup is looking up. Or if you tilt your head one way a little bit to the right or left, it's going to mean something like a different tactic entirely for these characters.

Can actors still connect to their feelings while they are surrounded by all this advanced and overwhelming technology?

Chance: Absolutely, because I mean, as long as I've been acting, you go into the rehearsal process, and it's fine. You can tap into what you think the character is going to be like. But when you finally get into costume, no matter what that costume is, that's the final piece. For me, whenever I've put a costume on, I'm like, OK, I now get this character. I've been studying it for so long in rehearsals, but now that I have the costume, it's the final piece of the puzzle. And it's the same deal with PAW Patrol Live! Our costumes are just extensions of our characters and it really does help bring that energy to life.


Pen Chance of PAW Patrol Live!: “If we can get at least one child asking, ‘How did we do that? ‘How did we make all this happen?’ and it gets the wheels in their brain turning, thinking about maybe getting involved in the arts and having a bigger role in it in their community, that's a successful day at work for me.”

PHOTO COUTESY OF VSTAR ENTERTAINMENT

Chance, who worked as a teacher and an actor before joining PAW Patrol Live!, never expected a career in children’s theater. He has been on tour for almost two years and loves every minute of it: “I will always remember one of my first times going to the theater; I was watching ‘Wizard of Oz.’ I was there with my school, and we got to sit in the front row. There was a part of the show where Dorothy, Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion had to run out into the audience, and the lion ran right in front of me, in the front row. I remember his tail; it kind of hit me a little bit. It bumped into my leg … I was thinking about his tail, like ‘Wow, I actually felt the tail, and it was heavier than I thought it might be. I wonder what else is going on up there on stage, and maybe backstage, that I don't know about.’ And that started my interest and my intrigue. And I would go to my sister's dance classes and eventually I said that I wanted to get more involved, and that was over 20 years ago, and I still remember that moment vividly,” said Chance. “So, what I try to do every time we go out on stage is maybe recreate that moment for someone else. And we have so many opportunities: every single show, hundreds upon thousands, depending on how many kids there are that day. I like to say, if we can get at least one child asking, ‘How did we do that? How did we make all this happen?’ and it gets the wheels in their brain turning, thinking about maybe getting involved in the arts and having a bigger role in it in their community, that's a successful day at work for me.”

###

More Nick:Nick Jr. Live! "Move To The Music" U.S. Theatrical Tour To Debut Fall 2019!

Originally published: Tuesday, September 18, 2018.

Additional sources: Lexington Herald Leader, CBS KNOE 8 News.

Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nick Jr., Nickelodeon Preschool and PAW Patrol News and Highlights!

'The SpongeBob Musical' National Tour Announces Cast

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Update (1/19/2020) - Refreshed The SpongeBob Musical tour dates!

Full Casting Announced For The SpongeBob Musical On Tour


Full casting has been announced for the upcoming North American Tour of Nickelodeon's The SpongeBob Musical.

This explosively imaginative production will launch at Proctors in Schenectady, New York this September before bringing Bikini Bottom and its beloved residents to previously announced engagements in Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto and more.

The production will feature will star Lorenzo Pugliese as SpongeBob SquarePants, Daria Pilar Redus as Sandy Cheeks, Beau Bradshaw as Patrick Star, Christopher Cody Cooley as Squidward Q. Tentacles, Zach Kononov as Mr. Krabs, and Tristan McIntyre as Plankton.

The ensemble includes Morgan Blanchard, John Cardenas, Natalie L. Chapman, Richie Dupkin, Stephen C. Kallas, Helen Regula, Méami Maszewski, Stefan Miller, Joshua Bess, Mary Nickson, Dorian O'Brien, Caitlin Ort, Elle-May Patterson, Sydney Simone, Ayana Strutz, Teddy Gales, Miles Davis Tillman, and Rico Velazquez.

SPONGEBOB MUSICAL 2019-2020 Tour Cities:

SCHENECTADY, NY
09/22/19-09/28/19
PROCTORS

HARTFORD, CT
10/01/19-10/06/19
The Bushnell

MADISON, WI
10/08/19-10/13/19
Overture Center

BOSTON, MA
10/15/19-10/27/19
Boch Center

PEORIA, IL
10/29/19-10/30/19
Peoria Civic Center

HUNTSVILLE, AL
11/01/19-11/03/19
Von Braun Center Concert Hall

NASHVILLE, TN
11/05/19-11/10/19
Andrew Jackson Hall

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK
11/12/19-11/17/19
Civic Center Music Hall

DAYTON, OH
11/19/19-11/24/19
Schuster Center

BROOKVILLE, NY
11/26/19-11/27/19
Tilles Center

NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ
11/29/19-12/01/19
State Theatre

PHILADELPHIA, PA
12/03/19-12/15/19
Forrest Theatre

TORONTO, ON
12/17/19-12/22/19
Meridian Hall

WILMINGTON, NC
01/13/20-01/14/20
Wilson Center

MORGANTOWN, WV
01/16/20-01/16/20
Lyell B. Clay Concert Theatre

LEXINGTON, KY
01/17/20-01/19/20 Lexington Opera House

PADUCAH, KY
01/20/20-01/20/20
Carson Center

CONWAY, AR
01/21/20-01/21/20
Reynolds Performance Hall

LONGVIEW, TX
01/23/20-01/23/20
Belcher Performance Center

SAN ANTONIO, TX
01/24/20-01/26/20
Majestic Theatre

MIDLAND, TX
01/27/20-01/27/20
Wagner Noel PAC

PHOENIX, AZ
01/31/20-02/02/20
Orpheum Theatre

LAS VEGAS, NV
02/04/20-02/09/20
The Smith Center Reynolds Hall

SAN FRANCISCO, CA
02/12/20-02/16/20
Golden Gate Theatre

FORT WORTH, TX
02/20/20-02/23/20
Bass Performance Hall

IDAHO FALLS, ID
03/02/20-03/02/20
Idaho Falls Civic Center

BUTTE, MT
03/03/20-03/03/20
Mother Lode Theatre

TACOMA, WA
03/05/20-03/05/20
Pantages Theatre

EUGENE, OR
03/06/20-03/07/20
Hult Center

DENVER, CO
03/10/20-03/22/20
Buell Theatre

YAKIMA, WA
03/08/20
Capitol Theatre

LOS ANGELES, CA
03/24/20-04/12/20
Dolby Theatre

WICHITA, KS
04/28/20-04/30/20
Century II Concert Hall

ST. LOUIS, MO
05/02/20-05/03/20
Stifel Theatre

CLEVELAND, MS
05/04/20-05/04/20
Bologna Performing Arts Center

OXFORD, AL
05/05/20-05/05/20
Oxford Performing Arts Center

COLUMBUS, GA
05/06/20-05/07/20
River Center For The Performing Arts

NICEVILLE, FL
05/08/20-05/08/20
Mattie Kelly Arts Center

ORANGE PARK, FL
05/09/20-05/10/20
Thrasher-Horne Center for the Arts

PROVIDENCE, RI
05/12/20-05/17/20
Providence PAC

PITTSBURGH, PA
06/02/20 - 06/07/20
Benedum Center

FINDLAY, OH
6/08/20-6/08/20
Marathon Center for the Performing Arts

RED BANK, NJ
06/10/20 - 06/11/20
Count Basie Theatre

VIENNA, VA
06/12/20 - 06/13/20
Filene Center

CHARLOTTE, NC
06/16/20-06/21/20
Belk Theatre

HOUSTON, TX
06/23/20-06/28/20
Jones Hall

DALLAS, TX
07/14/20 - 07/19/20
Winspear Opera House

TAMPA, FL
07/21/20-07/26/20
Straz Center for the PA

KANSAS CITY, MO
07/27/20 - 08/02/20
Starlight Theatre

For ticket information and additional dates, visit www.TheSpongeBobMusical.com.

Broadway's best creative minds reimagine and bring to life the beloved Nickelodeon series with humor, heart and pure theatricality in a neon-sparkly "party for the eyes and ears" (Daily Beast). Be there when SpongeBob and all of Bikini Bottom face catastrophe-until a most unexpected hero rises to take center stage. This "creative explosion" (Broadway.com) is "nothing short of genius" says TheaterMania, so bring the entire family to celebrate friendship and cooperation, and learn the power of unity and inclusion.

The SpongeBob Musical explodes with energy and features an original pop and rock-infused score by a legendary roster of Grammy Award®-winning songwriters. Led and conceived by visionary director Tina Landau (2018 Tony Award nominee) and a Tony Award®-winning design team, the production brings the spirit of SpongeBob to life with humanity, heart, and pure theatricality. The SpongeBob Musical features a book by Kyle Jarrow, orchestrations and arrangements by Tom Kitt, musical supervision by Julie McBride & Tim Hanson, and choreography by Christopher Gattelli. The design team includes scenic and costume design by David Zinn, lighting design by Kevin Adams, projection design by Peter Nigrini, sound design by Walter Trarbach, hair and wig design by Charles G. LaPointe, make-up design by Joe Dulude II, foley design by Mike Dobson, and casting by Stewart/Whitley.

The SpongeBob Musical is a one-of-a-kind musical event with original songs by Yolanda Adams, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Jonathan Coulton, Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, The Flaming Lips, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper & Rob Hyman, John Legend, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T's, They Might Be Giants, T.I., Domani & Lil'C and songs by David Bowie & Brian Eno, and by Tom Kenny & Andy Paley. Additional lyrics by Jonathan Coulton. Additional music by Tom Kitt.

The Original Cast Recording is available now from Masterworks Broadway wherever music is sold and streamed.

Explore the depths of theatrical innovation in The SpongeBob Musical, 2018 Best Musical winner of the Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards, where the power of optimism really can save the world.

Original post:

The SpongeBob Musical National Tour Finds Its Cast of Bikini Bottom Residents

The traveling production will launch in September in Schenectady, New York.

Lorenzo Pugliese, Beau Bradshaw, and Daria Pilar Redus

The complete cast is set for the upcoming national tour of Nickelodeon's Tony Award-winning The SpongeBob Musical, which will launch in September in Schenectady, New York!

The non-Equity touring production will star Lorenzo Pugliese as SpongeBob SquarePants, Beau Bradshaw as Patrick Star, and Daria Pilar Redus as Sandy Cheeks, with Christopher Cody Cooley as Squidward Q. Tentacles, Zach Kononov as Mr. Krabs, and Tristan McIntyre as Sheldon Plankton.

Rounding out the company are Joshua Bess, Morgan Blanchard, John Cardenas, Natalie L. Chapman, Richie Dupkin, Teddy Gales, Stephen C. Kallas, Méami Maszewski, Stefan Miller, Mary Nickson, Dorian O'Brien, Caitlin Ort, Elle-May Patterson, Helen Regula, Sydney Simone, Ayana Strutz, Miles Davis Tillman, and Rico Velazquez.

Additional tour stops include engagements in Boston, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Toronto, Houston, Nashville, Oklahoma City, Philadelphia, and San Antonio.

Inspired by Nickelodeon's hit animated series of the same name, SpongeBob SquarePantsis a one-of-a-kind musical event that explodes with energy and features an original pop and rock-infused score by a legendary roster of Grammy® Award-winning songwriters. Led and conceived by visionary director Tina Landau (2018 Tony Award nominee) and a Tony Award®-winning design team, the production brings the spirit of SpongeBob to life with humanity, heart, and pure theatricality.

The stakes are higher than ever as SpongeBob and all of Bikini Bottom face the total annihilation of their undersea world. Chaos erupts. Lives hang in the balance. And just when all hope seems lost, a most unexpected hero rises up and takes center stage.

The musical features a book by Kyle Jarrow and a score from orchestrator Tom Kitt and a variety of pop artists: Yolanda Adams, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Jonathan Coulton, Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, The Flaming Lips, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper and Rob Hyman, John Legend, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T’s, They Might Be Giants, T.I., Domani and Lil’C, and songs by David Bowie and Brian Eno, and by Tom Kenny and Andy Paley. Additional lyrics by Jonathan Coulton. Additional music by Tom Kitt.

Get ready to dive to all-new depths of theatrical innovation at SpongeBob SquarePants, where the power of optimism really can save the world!

Following a Chicago tryout during summer 2016, the musical opened on Broadway in December 2017 (under the title SpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical) at the Palace Theatre, where it ran through September 16, 2018.

The Broadway cast for SpongeBob SquarePants included Tony Award Nominee Ethan Slater as SpongeBob SquarePants, Tony Award Nominee Gavin Lee as Squidward Q. Tentacles, Lilli Cooper and Christina Sajous as Sandy Cheeks, Brian Ray Norris as Eugene Krabs, Danny Skinner as Patrick Star and Wesley Taylor as Sheldon Plankton.

The ensemble included Brandon Espinoza, Alex Gibson, Gaelen Gilliland, Juliane Godfrey, Jordan Grubb, Kyle Matthew Hamilton, Curtis Holbrook, Jesse JP Johnson, L'ogan J'ones, Jai'len Christine Li Josey, Kelvin Moon Loh, Lauralyn Mcclelland, Vasthy Mompoint, Oneika Phillips, Catherine Ricafort, JC Schuster, Allysa Shorte, Abby C. Smith, Robert Taylor Jr., Allan K. Washington, Brynn Williams, Matt Wood and Tom Kenny as the French Narrator.

The critically acclaimed SpongeBob SquarePants musical was named Best Musical by the Drama Desk Awards and Outer Critics Circle and earned 12 Tony Award nominations - the most nominated musical of the 2017-2018 theatre season - including nods for Best Musical, director Tina Landau, book writer Kyle Jarrow, title player Ethan Slater (in his Broadway debut), and the all-star roster of songwriters (including Sara Bareilles, Cyndi Lauper, and John Legend) who contributed to the score. The production earned 12 Tony Award nominations including best musical, equaling Mean Girls for the most of any show this season, and while The Band's Visit swept the honors, SpongeBob did score a deserved win for Best Scenic Design of a Musical for David Zinn's scenic design. The show’s director, Tina Landau, earned a Tony Award nomination for her inventive and unconventional approach to the material that humanized the characters than creating literal representations of the familiar Nickelodeon cartoon.

Visit TheSpongeBobMusical.com for the full tour itinerary.

SpongeBob SquarePants - The New Musical Original Cast Recording is available to purchase today at https://spongebobmusical.lnk.to/SpongebobMusicalRecording.

SpongeBob SquarePants is produced by Nickelodeon with The Araca Group, Sony Music Masterworks and Kelp on the Road.

From The Boston Globe:

This touring musical promises to reel in Boston’s ‘SpongeBob’ superfans


Director Tina Landau in rehearsal with Lorenzo Pugliese and the rest of the cast. (JEREMY DANIEL)

Who lives in a pineapple under the sea? SpongeBob SquarePants. Except right now, he’s away from Bikini Bottom on tour with “The SpongeBob Musical,” the Tony-nominated adaptation of Nickelodeon’s beloved animated series. After a Broadway run, the zany production will play the Boch Center Wang Theatre from Oct. 15 to Oct. 27 as part of its North American tour.

Most people know SpongeBob from his animated misadventures, packaged into two 11-minute segments per episode. Often, the burger-flipping sponge finds himself in simple situations that escalate to the absurd. For instance: An episode from 2002 finds SpongeBob and his best friend, starfish Patrick Star, going door-to-door selling candy bars. SpongeBob tries to pick a tantalizing loose thread off the shirt of his snobby co-worker and neighbor, Squidward. Things unravel from there.

Instead of ramping things up one step at a time, “The SpongeBob Musical” begins with an explosive revelation. Residents of Bikini Bottom learn that a nearby volcano, Mount Humongous, is set to destroy the entire town in 24 hours. As Squidward (Christopher Cody Cooley), Patrick (Beau Bradshaw), Sandy the squirrel (Daria Pilar Redus), money-grubbing Mr. Krabs (Zach Kononov), and his rival Plankton (Tristan McIntyre) reckon with impending doom, it’s up to one optimistic sponge to save the ecosystem he calls home.

Translating 11-minute-long, action-packed episodes into more than two hours of musical theater proved challenging, director Tina Landau said in a phone interview. The New York City theater artist started developing the show in 2007 and has been working with it ever since.

“The show was not conceived as a musical,” Landau said. “It’s more like a performance art event, and a party, and a carnival, and a rock concert.” A star-studded lineup of musicians contributed to the show’s soundtrack, which includes songs by David Bowie and Brian Eno, Panic! at the Disco, They Might Be Giants, Sara Bareilles, and John Legend, to name a few.

Characters wear clothing that suggests their animated counterparts’ but doesn’t try to replicate it. Squidward wears pants with extra-green legs. SpongeBob wears his iconic suspenders. “But the intention was never to put him in a large, square, foam kind of theme-park costume,” Landau said.

In the animated series, SpongeBob plays his nose like a flute and contorts his malleable body into improbable shapes. In the musical, SpongeBob’s human actor jumps around excitedly and pulls his pet snail Gary behind him on wheels. “We have not shied away from the fact that SpongeBob stretches and contorts,” Landau said. “We have just found really theatrical ways to express that.”

SpongeBob’s first episode ran in 1999, inspiring legions of millennial superfans who grew up watching the show. SpongeBob memes continue to circulate on social media. Fans even petitioned to get the iconic SpongeBob rock song “Sweet Victory” (from the 2001 episode “Band Geeks”) performed at the 2019 Super Bowl. They wanted to honor show creator Stephen Hillenburg, who died last fall.

This production taps into that deep vein of SpongeBob fandom. “We have found that our biggest group of fans are definitely in their 20s and 30s,” Landau said.

Like so many of his peers, Lorenzo Pugliese grew up watching SpongeBob’s antics. The actor, who plays SpongeBob in the touring production, graduated from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia this spring.

“Actually, I don’t even know if I told Tina this,” Pugliese said over the phone, laughing. “But when I was a kid, in the morning, I would wake up, open up the windows and yell, ‘Good morning world, and all who inhabit it!’ ” It’s a quote from a classic SpongeBob scene. And now, Pugliese gets to yell it at the top of every performance.

Bonus: Boston theatergoers can celebrate SpongeBob with an extra treat. J.P. Licks, the ice cream chain founded in Jamaica Plain, will offer a sea salted pineapple ice cream flavor for a limited time as a joint promotional effort. Sounds like it would pair nicely with a Krabby Patty.

The SpongeBob Musical

At Boch Center Wang Theatre, Oct. 15-27. Tickets from $25, www.bochcenter.org.

###

From Beloit Daily News:

OVERTURE CENTER WELCOMES 'SPONGEBOB'

MADISON - He may live in a pineapple under the sea, but SpongeBob will soon be visiting a Stateline Area stage.

The beloved children's cartoon character is being brought to life in "The SpongeBob Musical" Oct. 8-13 at the Overture Center.

"The show has all the things that we know and love from the cartoon, but it has a much more realistic storyline," said actor Cody Cooley.

Cooley, a native of Sykesville, Maryland, is portraying the disgruntled Squidward Q. Tentacles in the brand new traveling Broadway production.

"Squidward is the everyman, just going about his day job and trying to get through it," Cooley said. "He really just wants to be at home playing his clarinet."

Although SpongeBob Squarepants has had many memorable episodes from its years on Nickelodeon, those who attend the show will see something completely new.

The storyline, not based on any previous plots, is that beautiful Bikini Bottom is about to be destroyed by a natural disaster. All the characters must come together to save the day.

"All the characters in the show look at the problem in their own unique way, and the story is all about how a community can be brought together and work together," Cooley said.

Viewers can expect to see the story played out with a fun and colorful set, Broadway numbers and lots of dancing, including a 7-to-8 minute tap routine by Cooley.

There won't be any foam-costumed actors on stage, Cooley added. The show's directors have worked very hard to embrace the human connection the story makes.

"When I saw this show on Broadway, I thought it was so refreshing that you expected it to be like what you'd see in a theme park, but it's not at all," Cooley said.

Families are sure to enjoy the show's production quality, songs, and seeing a brand new cast that is excited to perform for a live audience. Madison will be the third stop on the tour.

"This show has such great heart and such a good message," Cooley said. "The kids will really love seeing SpongeBob on stage and the adults will love the humor...it's all really fun."

Tickets for "The SpongeBob Musical" start at $31 and go up to $141. Shows will take place at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8-10; 8 p.m. Oct. 11; 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Oct. 12; 1 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Oct. 13.

A special "Meet the Artist" event will happen after the show on Thursday, Oct. 10, where a brief Q&A session will take place. There also will be a "Best Day Ever" event at noon on Sunday, Oct. 13, featuring art projects and more.

The show is rated as appropriate for children ages 5 and up. For additional information and to purchase tickets, visit www.overture.org or follow the Overture Center on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube or Instagram.

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From Mass Live:

Broadway’s ‘SpongeBob Musical’ coming to Hartford, Boston

When Stephen C. Kallas was growing up in Monroe, Conn., he enjoyed sitting on the couch watching the animated series “SpongeBob SquarePants” on Nickelodeon.

Soon he’ll be on the stage at The Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts in Hartford performing as Old Man Jenkins in the “The SpongeBob Musical,” which runs Oct. 1-6. The musical will later travel to Boston for an Oct. 15-27 run at the Boch Center-Wang Theater.

It’s the 20th anniversary of SpongeBob, an incurable optimist and earnest sea sponge, so it’s especially “cool to jump into the (stage) show when there is such a big anniversary for the brand,” said Kallas, 24, speaking from Schenectady, New York, before the production began a national tour there.

Kallas enjoyed SpongeBob as a child because “it was so whacky and so out there,” but he could connect with the characters.

“SpongeBob SquarePants” launched in 1999. The series chronicles the adventures and endeavors of the title character and his friends in the fictional underwater city of Bikini Bottom. It has been the top children’s animated series on television for the last 17 years, generating a universe of beloved characters, pop-culture catchphrases and memes, theatrical releases, consumer products, a Tony award-winning Broadway musical and a global fan base.

Created by Stephen Hillenburg and produced by Nickelodeon in Burbank, California, the character-driven cartoon chronicles the nautical and sometimes nonsensical adventures of the eponymous yellow sponge, shaped like a kitchen sponge.

Moving from cartoon viewer to stage actor in the SpongeBob world is “just as amazing as I thought it would be,” said Kallas, who graduated in 2017 from Wagner College in Staten Island, New York, with a bachelor’s degree in theater with concentrations in performance and design tech management.

He began acting in fifth grade when a friend asked him to get involved with the production of The Music Man. “I said, ‘Sure, why not?’ and was bit by the theater bug,” he said.

He acted during college and after graduation landed roles in regional productions like The Wizard of Oz and Newsies throughout the country.

Kallas is excited to return to Connecticut to act at The Bushnell for the first time; he saw many shows there while growing up in the Constitution State.

He praised the comedy and the music in SpongeBob, saying fans will understand the “Easter eggs” (references to the original cartoon) while newcomers will enjoy it too.

The SpongeBob Musical features an original pop and rock-infused score by a roster of Grammy Award-winning songwriters. Led and conceived by director Tina Landau, a 2018 Tony Award nominee, and a Tony-winning design team, the production brings the spirit of SpongeBob to life with humanity, heart and theatricality.

The musical has original songs by Yolanda Adams, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Jonathan Coulton, Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, The Flaming Lips, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper and Rob Hyman, John Legend, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T’s, They Might Be Giants, T.I., Domani and Lil’C and songs by David Bowie and Brian Eno and by Tom Kenny and Andy Paley.

“SpongeBob SquarePants” was adapted as a stage musical in 2016 by Landau. SpongeBob SquarePants, The Broadway Musical premiered in Chicago in 2016 and opened on Broadway at the Palace Theatre on in 2017. The musical opened to critical acclaim and tied for most-nominated production at the 2018 72nd Tony Awards with 12 Tony nominations.

Kallas said the production is for audiences of all ages. “It’s definitely an uplifting show” about community, inclusion and “being a positive person and what it means to be a good neighbor.”

“Everybody could use a little positivity in their life,” he added.

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From Broadway World:

First Look At The National Tour Of THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL!
by BWW News Desk Sep. 25, 2019
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The North American Tour of Nickelodeon's THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL launched at PROCTORS in Schenectady, NY this week before bringing Bikini Bottom and its beloved residents to previously announced engagements in Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto and more.

Check out a first look at the tour's three leads in action!


Check out the full list of dates and tour stops [above]!

For ticket information and additional dates, visit www.TheSpongeBobMusical.com.

Broadway's best creative minds reimagine and bring to life the beloved Nickelodeon series with humor, heart and pure theatricality in a neon-sparkly "party for the eyes and ears" (Daily Beast). Be there when SpongeBob and all of Bikini Bottom face catastrophe-until a most unexpected hero rises to take center stage. This "creative explosion" (Broadway.com) is "nothing short of genius" says TheaterMania, so bring the entire family to celebrate friendship and cooperation, and learn the power of unity and inclusion.

THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL explodes with energy and features an original pop and rock-infused score by a legendary roster of Grammy Award®-winning songwriters. Led and conceived by visionary director Tina Landau (2018 Tony Award nominee) and a Tony Award®-winning design team, the production brings the spirit of SpongeBob to life with humanity, heart, and pure theatricality. THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL features a book byKyle Jarrow, orchestrations and arrangements by Tom Kitt, musical supervision by Julie McBride & Tim Hanson, and choreography by Christopher Gattelli. The design team includes scenic and costume design by David Zinn, lighting design by Kevin Adams, projection design by Peter Nigrini, sound design by Walter Trarbach, hair and wig design byCharles G. LaPointe, make-up design by Joe Dulude II, foley design by Mike Dobson, and casting by Stewart/Whitley.

THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL is a one-of-a-kind musical event with original songs by Yolanda Adams, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Jonathan Coulton, Alex Ebert of Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, The Flaming Lips, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper & Rob Hyman, John Legend, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T's, They Might Be Giants, T.I., Domani & Lil'C and songs by David Bowie & Brian Eno, and by Tom Kenny & Andy Paley. Additional lyrics by Jonathan Coulton. Additional music by Tom Kitt.

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From The Boston Globe:

The VIP Lounge with Morgan Blanchard

Blanchard, from Portsmouth, N.H., plays Patchy the Pirate in “The SpongeBob Musical,” coming to the Boch Center Wang Theatre Oct. 15-Oct. 27.

While Morgan Blanchard was growing up in Portsmouth, N.H., he and his family would drive to Boston to attend theater productions in Boston. “The first musical I ever saw was at the Wang. It was ‘Cats,’ ” recalled Blanchard (who plays Patchy the Pirate in “The SpongeBob Musical,” coming to the Boch Center Wang Theatre Oct. 15-27) in a recent phone interview. “It was so magical to be this young kid seeing these shows, and now I get to be the person I was looking up to at that time. It’s nice to hopefully be [performing at] someone’s first musical -- and I’m assuming with ‘SpongeBob’ that there will be a lot of new audiences.” Blanchard was quick to point out that the Tony-nominated show, based on the beloved animated series on Nickelodeon, is not just for kids. “The show has an incredibly relevant and important message that I think a lot of people need to hear -- especially now -- about community and coming together and celebrating each other and all of our differences,” he said. In addition to seeing family and friends when the national tour lands in Boston, Blanchard said he is most excited about “sleeping in my own bed” at his parents’ home in Portsmouth. “I live out of a suitcase, so it will be nice to be home,” said Blanchard, who graduated from Ithaca College last year and immediately joined the national tour of “The Sound of Music” before joining the cast of “The SpongeBob Musical.“ We caught up with the 23-year-old actor to talk about all things travel.

Favorite vacation destination?

London – no question. While in college, I studied abroad in London for four months and it was a pivotal moment for my personal growth. The city’s history, parks, and commitment to the arts offer a myriad of activities to explore.

Favorite food or drink while vacationing?

Wine. Always wine. And of course any sort of delicacy from the place I’m visiting. I love trying new things.

Where would you like to travel to but haven’t?

Italy. It’s where my family is from, and who doesn’t love Italian food?

One item you can’t leave home without when traveling?

A journal. I always make sure to travel with a journal so I can keep track of my entire trip and look back on the memories.

Aisle or window?

Window – so I can look out and see my destination from above.

Favorite childhood travel memory?

My mother works for a travel agency so we would travel constantly as a kid. But my favorite memory has to be my trip to Japan with a student ambassador group when I was in middle school. It was a complete culture shock . . . and such a beautiful country.

Guilty pleasure when traveling?

Farmers’ markets. I always make sure to find the local farmers’ markets in each destination. Local markets can tell you so much about a city and those who inhabit it. And the food is cheap.

Best travel tip?

Try traveling alone. You’ll get to do exactly what you want and hopefully make some friends along the way. And always strike up conversations with strangers.

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From MOOSE GAZETTE:

‘SpongeBob’ made a splash on Broadway. Now, he’s headed to Boston.

SpongeBob SquarePants may live in a pineapple under the sea, but for the next few months, he’s taking it on the road. A little more than a year after its Broadway run, “The SpongeBob Musical” is on a 45-city national tour. Its fourth stop? Boston’s Wang Theatre, where the splashy celebration will take the stage from Oct. 15 to 27.

The musical adaptation of the beloved Nickelodeon series follows your favorite absorbent, yellow, and porous sea dwelling played by Lorenzo Pugliese, as well as Patrick (Beau Bradshaw), Sandy Cheeks (Daria Pilar Redus), Squidward (Cody Cooley), and the rest of Bikini Bottom’s usual suspects. In this episode, the town grapples with news that volcano “Mount Humongous” may erupt and destroy their beloved underwater city.

“SpongeBob” originally premiered in Chicago in June 2016 prior to its Broadway debut in December 2017. It quickly earned critical success, snagging 12 Tony nominations to tie with “Mean Girls” for the most nods that year, and won Best Musical at both the 2018 Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards.

The show is conceived by Tina Landau, who has served as director for all of its iterations. The musical also features a book by Kyle Jarrow, choreography by Christopher Gatteli, orchestrations and arrangements by Tom Kitt, and music by a slew of Grammy Award-winning artists including John Legend, Lady Antebellum, T.I., and Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Boston-born band Aerosmith.

While the show is an adaptation of the animated hit, it is not a replica. Instead of theme park-style getups, the actors wear clothing reminiscent of their characters — SpongeBob dons a yellow shirt and red tie, Mr. Krabs has red boxing gloves as hands, and Sandy’s costume is accessorized by her signature pink flower. And while the TV series was created for the younger set, that’s not the case for its musical counterpart.

“[Landau] said on Broadway they would say, ”SpongeBob the Broadway Musical’ — it’s so good, you can even bring your kid.’ It’s made for everyone,” cast member Morgan Blanchard told Boston.com over the phone. “It confronts a lot of ideas that we are struggling with right now in terms of community and coming together and the obsession over fear, and how we use fear to either dominate or divide and how destructive that can be, which I think is arguably more relevant to adults than it is to children.”

Blanchard plays Patchy the Pirate, the show’s sole human character and one he describes as a “whack-a-doodle superfan of SpongeBob.” You may remember the character from the animated series’s occasional live-action segments. For Blanchard, a Portsmouth, N.H. native, the Boston leg of the tour holds personal significance. Growing up, he would come into the city around six or seven times a year to see theatrical productions. And although he spent last year on the national tour of “The Sound of Music,” this month will mark his first time taking the Boston stage.

“I’ve been waiting to come to the Wang [Theatre], he said. “It’s just a childhood dream to do that.”

The SpongeBob Musical; Tuesday, Oct. 15 – Sunday, Oct. 27 at various times; Wang Theatre, Boston; $25 – $125; all ages

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From Easton Journal:

Bikini Bottom comes to Boston with ‘The SpongeBob Musical’

Starring as SpongeBob in the North American tour is Scranton, Pennsylvania, native Lorenzo Pugliese, a 2019 graduate of the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. By telephone recently from Hartford, Connecticut, Pugliese talked about what it’s like to be making his road show debut and more.

Of all the leading male characters in Broadway musicals, there’s only one based on a rectangular kitchen sponge – the always absorbing SpongeBob.

The title character in Nickelodeon’s long-running animated television comedy series “SpongeBob SquarePants” stepped onto the stage in June 2016, when “SpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical” premiered in Chicago before opening on Broadway at the Palace Theatre in December 2017.

Conceived and directed by Tina Landau, with book by Kyle Jarrow, choreography by Tony Award winner Christopher Gattelli, and orchestrations and arrangements by Tony and Pulitzer Prize winner Tom Kitt, the Broadway production earned 12 Tony Award nominations in 2018.

It won for Best Scenic Design in a Musical for David Zinn’s recreation of the underwater world of SpongeBob and his friends in Bikini Bottom.

With a refashioned title, “The SpongeBob Musical” is now on a tour coming to Boston’s Boch Center Wang Theatre on Oct. 15, with a score that includes songs by Yolanda Adams, David Bowie, Steven Tyler & Joe Perry, Sara Bareilles, Cyndi Lauper, John Legend, Panic! At the Disco, The Flaming Lips, Lady Antebellum, and others.

Starring as SpongeBob in the North American tour is Scranton, Pennsylvania, native Lorenzo Pugliese, a 2019 graduate of the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. By telephone recently from Hartford, Connecticut, Pugliese talked about what it’s like to be making his road show debut and more.

Q: Before you landed this role, what would you have thought if someone had told you that you’d be playing a sponge on your first tour in a musical?

A: Someone actually did tell me that. It was my sophomore year in college, and a friend who’d seen “SpongeBob” in New York, told me that I’d be perfect for the role. It sounded kind of crazy at first, because I didn’t know anything about the musical. Not too long after, though, my girlfriend, Julia Toitch, took me to see the Broadway show as “character research.” Then I understood what the person meant.

Q: What is it like bringing an iconic animated character like SpongeBob to life on stage?

A: It’s definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life. It’s incredibly high energy, but with every moment super calculated. The cool thing, though, is that there’s so much truth and humanity in these characters. Tina Landau directs us to do human portrayals of these characters, rather that caricatures.

One of my favorite things about SpongeBob is that he actively wants to become manager at the Krusty Krab restaurant. He is working toward a goal, which I respect.

Q: Are you fan of the “SpongeBob SquarePants” series?

A: I loved it as a kid. There’s a line that SpongeBob says every day, “Good morning, world, and all who inhabit it.” I used to wake up every morning and scream it out my bedroom window. Now it’s my very first line in the musical.

Q: Who’s your favorite character and why?

A: SpongeBob is definitely my favorite character – always has been, always will be. He’s wacky and outlandish which makes him not only very appealing to the audience, but also great fun for me to play as a performer.

Q: Some amazing songwriters have contributed to this score. What’s it like to get to do their music?

A: Having the music of all these different artists in one score means we can do everything from country and pop to rock. The song by Bowie and Brian Eno, “No Control,” in act one is very panicky and works just perfectly with the story. And that’s just one of the great numbers in this show.

Q: What’s your favorite musical number from the show?

A: My favorite is Squidward’s big number “I’m Not a Loser” by They Might Be Giants. It’s a flawless, perfectly crafted, Golden Age of Broadway number that’s marvelously performed by our Squidward, Cody Cooley, and company. I’m offstage, but I watch it from the wings every night. I love it!

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From Metro US:

New England native sets sail in ‘The Spongebob Musical’

Morgan Blanchard on bringing the show’s first national tour to Boston.

Are you ready kids, because “The Spongebob Musical” ships up to Boston this month as part of the show’s first national tour.

Set to take over the Wang Theatre Oct. 15-27, the hit production based on the beloved Nickelodeon cartoon earned 12 Tony nominations and one win during its initial run on Broadway. After kicking off the national tour in Schenectady last month, Spongebob, Patrick, Squidward and the rest of the Bikini Bottom gang are finally heading to the Hub, and they’re setting sail with a special cast member who knows how to navigate Boston’s dirty water.

New England native Morgan Blanchard takes on the role of Patchy the Pirate in “The Spongebob Musical,” and he is thrilled to bring the show to his old stomping grounds. In fact, the Wang Theatre was where Blanchard saw his first touring show, “The Phantom of the Opera,” as a kid while growing up in Rye, N.H., just outside of Portsmouth.

“I could not be more excited,” Blanchard tells Metro. “Just to perform at the Wang is the craziest thing in the world. It’s where I grew up seeing all the tours coming through.”

Ever since his first school play in kindergarten, Blanchard has been enamored with theater and the arts. He scored his first role with a professional show in fifth grade as part of a production of “The Sound of Music” at Prescott Park, and hasn’t slowed down since.

“I kind of did theater non-stop from that moment on,” says Blanchard, who has a BFA in Musical Theatre from Ithaca College.

With a slew of regional and national credits under his belt, Blanchard knew early on in high school that he wanted to make a career out of his creative outlets.

“Probably my freshman year of high school is when I knew that this is what I wanted to do,” says Blanchard. “Fortunately I had parents who were so supportive and ready to back me in that regardless of whether it’s stable or not.”

Having been a fan of the franchise since childhood, Blanchard admits that playing Patchy the Pirate in “The Spongebob Musical” is a massive opportunity, and he’s determined to give it his all since so many fans across the globe love the swashbuckling character from the cartoon.

“It’s pretty huge,” says Blanchard. “It’s the biggest opportunity I’ve come across yet and I’m so grateful.”

“It’s such a blast to bring to life these cartoon characters that you think are so surface level,” he adds, “but they’re actually very detailed and can tell a really relevant and truthful story.”

As for why Spongebob and his pals have had such a big impact on culture over the decades, Blanchard notes that part of it is due to the show’s focus on community.

“The whole concept of Bikini Bottom,” says Blanchard. “This idea of community is very relatable. That’s what keeps people coming back to it.”

There’s also the show’s unique brand of humor, which Blanchard believes has influenced an entire generation of fans.

“The humor really has morphed our generation,” says Blanchard. “The way our generation finds things funny is incredibly shaped by Spongebob and other Nickelodeon cartoons.”

Oct. 15-27, Wang Theatre, 270 Tremont St., $25+, bochcenter.org

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From seacoastonline.com:

Portsmouth native performing in ‘SpongeBob Musical’ in Boston

PORTSMOUTH - The award-winning “SpongeBob Musical” is making its national 45-city tour stop in Boston this week, featuring Portsmouth native Morgan Blanchard who will be performing in his debut tour as Patchy the Pirate.

During its initial run on Broadway, Tina Landau’s Nickelodeon cartoon-based production earned 12 Tony nominations with a win. “SpongeBob” originally premiered in Chicago in June 2016 prior to its Broadway debut in December 2017. The reinvented “SpongeBob Musical” opens at the Boch Center Wang Theatre Tuesday and runs through Oct. 27.

“It is the Broadway production, but we reconstructed it a little so it could work on tour, moving from theater to theater,” Blanchard said. “As much as it’s a Broadway production, it’s kind of a new version. We tried out some new things. It’s cool to be able to work on something that’s kind of transforming.”

Blanchard is a 2014 Portsmouth High School graduate and 2018 graduate of Ithaca College where he earned his degree in musical theater with an acting focus.

“It all basically started in my early-on music class with Tammy Burns, who was the music teacher at my elementary school at the time, who I still keep in touch with and love dearly,” he said. “When I was in fifth grade, I auditioned for ‘The Sound of Music’ at Prescott Park and did that.”

From then on, Blanchard performed in several summer productions at Prescott Park in Portsmouth and went on to do work with Mainstage Theatre and the Seacoast Repertory Theatre along with multiple high school plays.

Almost immediately after college graduation, Blanchard went on tour with “The Sound of Music,” his first professional show and then wrapped up in June 2019, just a month before committing to “SpongeBob Musical.”

“Technically, I live in New York. I have an apartment in the city,” he said. “But really, I live out of a suitcase right now in the middle of the country.”

Blanchard says performing Patchy the Pirate in the “SpongeBob Musical” has easily been his favorite, most entertaining role yet. On top of his main role, he performs in the show’s ensemble as well so he has the opportunity to play a lot of different roles.

Although this performance is anticipated by the crowd to be a reimagining of the beloved television series, it is not the same. While the comedy show was originally crafted for a younger crowd, Blanchard said, this musical is set to attract a much broader audience, and is inviting to all ages.

“It’s made for everyone,” said Blanchard.

Blanchard also mentioned that the performance contains messages that allude to coming together through inclusivity, giving younger audience members first-time exposure to theater in a positive way.

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From The Oklahoman:

What to do in Oklahoma on Nov. 12, 2019: See 'The SpongeBob Musical' at OKC's Civic Center Music Hall

Today's featured event:

Plunge into the colorful undersea world of Bikini Bottom as the national tour of "The SpongeBob Musical," the Tony-winning Broadway hit based on the 20-year-old Nickelodeon animated series, opens in Oklahoma City at 7:30 tonight at the Civic Center Music Hall, 201 N Walker.

Aimed at multigenerational audiences, performances continue at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 1:30 and 7 p.m. Sunday.

As previously reported, the show features musical numbers by John Legend, Lady Antebellum, Aerosmith, They Might Be Giants, David Bowie and Brian Eno, Sara Bareilles, Yolanda Adams, Cyndi Lauper, Panic! At the Disco, Plain White T's and Oklahoma City-based art-rockers The Flaming Lips

"I was a huge fan of the show growing up,""The SpongeBob Musical" star Lorenzo Pugliese told me in an interview. "I think when you're able to create something that's so unique and so different but also somehow so relatable and identifiable with the general population, it's really something special. And I think that that's exactly what they did with SpongeBob. And I think that's why it's done so well for so long."

To read more of my preview of "The SpongeBob Musical," click here.

For tickets and information, go to www.okcbroadway.com or call 594-8300.


For more Oklahoma events, go to oklahoman.com/calendar.

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From The Times Herald:

Collegeville native starring in "The SpongeBob Musical." coming to Forrest Theater


Tristan McIntyre as Sheldon Plankton, left, and Caitlin Ort as Karen the Computer in The SpongeBob Musical, playing the Forrest Theatre December 3 through 15. photo credit: Jeremy Daniel

COLLEGEVILLE — Her "SpongeBob Musical" character may be a long way from the queen of "South Pacific," Nellie Forbush, but Caitlin Ort brings her passion for musical theater to both roles equally.

"'South Pacific' is such a beautiful story; it's definitely one of my favorite musicals. The music is just timeless," noted the Collegeville native, on the phone from Oklahoma City, her current stop touring with "The SpongeBob Musical."

Ort has appeared in both professional and community theater versions of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic "South Pacific."

"It was a very fulfilling experience working on that show because the message is so important, about tolerance of people who are different than you and finding similarities in people you assumed are very different from you."

Bringing SpongeBob's Karen the Computer to life was a decidedly different experience, noted Ort, who stars in The SpongeBob Musical" at the Forrest Theater in Philadelphia Dec. 3 through 15.

"I grew up on SpongeBob, so I was familiar with the cartoon character, but what's different about this show is that in the cartoon she is a computer but in the musical she is portrayed as a humanized version of the character," Ort said of the show. "All of the characters have their own human versions of these roles and very much have a human take, and the director, Tina Landau, had so many cool ideas about how my character moves through space and she is influenced by robotic movement but still has a human quality about what her needs and wants are. It's very much taking inspiration from the cartoon characters but making them human. The show is very much what the Broadway production was, same costume design, set design and choreography. Tina is a collaborative director and is an ensemble-first director. So what we do onstage we can take ownership of because we developed it as a group. Tina was very open and communicative with us if we had questions or ideas we wanted to try out."

Inspired by the long-running Nickelodeon TV program, "The SpongeBob Musical" won a 2018 Tony award and was a 2019 Best Musical winner of the Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards. The production stars 2019 University of the Arts graduate and Scranton, PA native Lorenzo Pugliese as 'SpongeBob Squarepants" and features an original pop and rock-infused musical score by a roster of Grammy Award-winning songwriters, including Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith, Sara Bareilles, Lady Antebellum, The Flaming Lips, Cyndi Lauper and many others.


Caitlin Ort credits her early love of musical theater to the roles she played in Methacton Community Theater productions.

The show was created for a diverse audience, noted Ort, who received a BFA in Musical Theater from Ithaca College.

"Most of our audiences are a mix of adults who want to bring their kids to the show or are in their 20s and 30s and grew up with SpongeBob and want to see the musical version of it. It's sophisticated enough for an adult to appreciate but iconic for children to recognize these characters and appreciate all the colors and the dancing and the music. So it's really a show that anyone can enjoy," Ort said. "It's a departure from the cartoon because it's not recreating anything from the cartoon. It's an entirely different story. It is a Broadway musical for all different types of audience members. It really is a show for everyone."

Ort, a 2012 Methacton High School grad now living in New York, won the role after a series of auditions, she explained.

"I was familiar with the casting agency so I contacted the casting office and asked for an appointment to be seen because I thought that I was really right for it. I auditioned for them seven times over the course of about five weeks. Then I just waited for a few months and I got a phone call saying I got the part. When national tours are going out oftentimes they call people in several times, especially when you're going in for such a big role. The creative team often wants to work with you as much as you can to see how you take direction see if you're a right fit for it."

Ort's interest in musical theater began at a young age, when she appeared in local community theater productions, she recalled.

"The first musical I ever did was with Methacton Community Theater when they did 'The King and I.' I've been hooked on it ever since, trying to get involved with as many community theater shows as I could, and also the high school productions."

It all naturally evolved into a desire for a career in the industry, she said.

"I wasn't sure it was even something you could pursue a degree in, but my older sister Megan and I both learned that you could pursue a degree in performance arts. We both ended up going to Ithaca College and getting degrees in musical theater," Ort said.

With Megan now touring with a professional opera company, both sisters achieved success fairly quickly.

Ort's professional credits also include roles in "A Charlie Brown Christmas" (Frieda); "The Merry Wives of Windsor" (Mistress Ford), "Baskerville: A Sherlock Holmes Mystery" (Actress 1); "Ragtime" (Evelyn Nesbit); "Show Boat" (Kim Ravenal)"; "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying" (Hedy LaRue) and "Jesus Christ Superstar."

Her website is www.caitlinort.com

"I've been very fortunate with the work that's been coming my way since I graduated," Ort said. "I think a lot of it has to do with having a very supportive family. My sisters and my parents have just been so supportive of me having a career. They kept my spirits up even when I auditioned for hundreds and hundreds of jobs and only a small percentage (panned out), so I think that's one of the reasons I've been having success. I do have this huge passion for live theater," she added, "but I'm also interested in different forms of the entertainment business so I've been thinking of branching out lately."

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From app.:

'SpongeBob' splashes into State Theatre, four-legged tap dancing and all

Like a lot of people, Cody Cooley was a little skeptical when he heard "SpongeBob SquarePants" was being made into a Broadway musical.

And then, like a lot of people, he was blown away when he saw it.

And that's a very good thing, since the 2016 Rider University theater graduate now is enjoying every moment of playing Squidward with the show's national tour, hitting the State Theatre in New Brunswick from Nov. 29 to Dec. 1.


Cody Cooley stars as Squidward in the national tour of "SpongeBob SquarePants" the musical, hitting the State Theatre in New Brunswick this weekend. Courtesy of State Theatre

The show features a book by Kyle Jarrow and music from an all-star group including Sara Bareilles, Panic! At The Disco, John Legend, Lady Antebellum, Cyndi Lauper, Plain White T's and more, orchestrated by Tom Kitt.

"I liked it. I loved it. I thought it was a lot of fun. I was not the biggest supporter of it when it first came because, you know 'SpongeBob on Broadway, why is that a musical?' But it was cool. I really loved it. I thought it was great. I wanted to be a part of it and I'm very happy to be part of the tour."

And he says Squidward is the perfect role for him.


Cody Cooley stars as Squidward in the national tour of "SpongeBob SquarePants" the musical, hitting the State Theatre in New Brunswick this weekend. Courtesy of State Theatre

"When I watched the cartoon — I got into it a little bit later than most people — I definitely identified with Squidward as a character because he's very sarcastic and he's not this energy bubble of optimism. He's definitely the realist of the group. I love playing the sarcastic character or the grouchy, one-liner, spring everybody back into reality, which is fun."

Oh, and he tap dances. On four legs.

Cooley says he got to start rehearsing with the costume much earlier than his castmates, and it helped him not only navigate the physical challenges, but really get into Squidward's head.

"It's definitely informative of the character. I would definitely say that it has helped me embody the character more because I stand differently. I walk differently. I act differently. It was fun. It was fun to work in them and to figure out how to make everything happen throughout the process."

The high-energy, inventive show was known for surrounding its audience with color and creativity on Broadway, and Cooley says that director Tina Landau and set designer David Zinn worked incredibly hard to keep that experience alive on tour, despite the challenges of constantly working in different venues.


"The SpongeBob Musical" splashes into the State Theatre in New Brunswick from Nov. 29 to Dec. 1. Courtesy of the State Theatre

"On Broadway it a massive set. And there were things out in the audience, like the Rube Goldberg machines, and they found ways to have that same feel, but have it be able to tour."

The changing venues bring a challenge to any touring production, but "SpongeBob" may present some extra challenges.

"It definitely is dependent on the space. It definitely uses what the theater has to give and it's different in every space. It's different in every venue because it's so unique. We always get a breakdown of what is happening with the show and each venue. So we'll say 'This part is different tonight or this week. Someone will enter from here instead of all the way at the back of the house.' So it definitely is interesting to always go into work on Tuesday and find out what's different with the show."

Cooley says that in addition to the joy and creativity surrounding "SpongeBob," the show's messages also make it an key production for the times.


"The SpongeBob Musical" splashes into the State Theatre in New Brunswick from Nov. 29 to Dec. 1. Courtesy of the State Theatre

"I think its message of community is incredibly important because our day and age, you know? There's so much political fighting. There's so much pandering to businesses. So much is about opposites or about tearing people apart or tearing people down. And that really happens in the show. The show is about the natural disaster that takes over a town and how people deal with it. And at the end of the day, it comes down to community and how people react to each other and how people can build each other up rather than blame one another or point the finger at somebody else."

Cooley says the "SpongeBob" Broadway cast has been "incredibly supportive" of the tour cast. He said the tour can't wait to watch "The SpongeBob Musical: Live on Stage!," which was recently filmed with most of the original cast reunited. The show is set to air at 7 p.m. on Dec. 7 on Nickelodeon.

Cooley loves that so many young people come to see "SpongeBob" on tour, including a lot of children seeing their first musical.

"When I took the contract, that's one of the things that I was really adamant about. I said that I never want to give a bad performance because there's always the person in the back of the balcony who this is their first time seeing a show ... I don't want to let anyone down. And that's really important to me."

For tickets to "SpongeBob" at the State Theatre, visit stnj.org.

Also coming up next week in the State Theatre's Broadway Series is "Jersey Boys," which hits the stage for two performances on Dec. 3 and 4.

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From phindie:

Visiting Bikini Bottom with Tristan McIntyre, star of THE SPONGEBOB MUSICAL


Tristan McIntyre

Among his many other skills, Tristan McIntyre can proudly add “planktonic copepod” to his list of theater roles. McIntyre joins SpongeBob and the proud residents of Bikini Bottom in the heartwarming production of The SpongeBob Musical. McIntyre is starring as Sheldon Plankton, who runs the unsuccessful Chum Bucket restaurant, with his wife. The show is based on the Nickelodeon TV show and features original songs from John Legend, Lady Antebellum and many more!

The SpongeBob Musical runs December 3-15, 2019, at the Forrest Theatre [1114 Walnut Street, Philadelphia]. Visit kimmelcenter.org for ticket information.

Debra Danese: How would you describe your character, Sheldon Plankton?

Tristan McIntyre: Deliciously evil! Small in stature, but big in intellect, presence, voice, and every other sense of the word. He may be the villain of the story, but I find him to be quite admirable. For Plankton, failure is never an option. No matter how many of his schemes fail, he always persists. He is misunderstood in a community of sea creatures who, both figuratively and literally, look down on him. In fact, Plankton had to overcome odds that could have limited his desirability to rise beyond himself: he’s small, comes from an idiotic family, possesses an intelligence far superior to other residents in Bikini Bottom, has been betrayed by his comrades, and has still succeeded. He’s established his own establishment, the Chum Bucket, built his own wife, Karen the Computer, and has created inventions that, although don’t always work, are quite brilliant. What others perceive as unfriendliness is no more than a defense mechanism. Plankton is capable of care until the animosity and idiocy of others forces him to retreat back to his own ways.

DD: Sheldon is plankton. What exactly is that?

TM: It is one-celled microorganism with a cylindrical-like body and prominent antennae. The way our Tony award winning costume and set designer, David Zinn, translates this onto the stage is magical. It consists of a polished, textured green suit with an eye patch to represent Plankton’s one eye and a slicked-back black wig with two braids to depict his two antennas. It’s brilliant. Plus, I get to wear custom made Nike air forces…so yeah, best costume I’ve ever worn!

DD: You say that you “accidentally” graduated a year early from school. I’m sure many students would like to know how that happened! Can you explain?

TM: Ha! Yes! I enrolled at the University of Southern California for theater with the intention of completing my degree in four years, but I actually got out in three! I walked into my junior advisement meeting last year, around this time, and my adviser said I could graduate in the spring if I wanted to. I came in with a bunch of AP credits and ridiculously took 21 units a semester, but I never considered this an option. I initially said no, but then a week later, I woke up with an epiphany to start working so I emailed him back and said, “I changed my mind…put me on the fast-track!” I had no plans whatsoever. I happened to audition for SpongeBob on my last day of college classes for the one day they were auditioning in LA and got the news that I booked the job a week after graduation. So it truly was an accident!

DD: You are a recipient of the John Ritter Memorial Award. Tell us about that honor.

TM: Sure! At USC, our renowned faculty at the School of Dramatic Arts provides select awards to distinguished performances from the season. The John Ritter Memorial was founded in honor of the late comedian John Ritter, alum of USC, and honors the dramatic arts student who has given the most outstanding comic performance during the season. I received the award for my performance as Tisiphone, a fury and fabulous drag queen, in Roberto Aguirre-Saccassa’s play, Rough Magic. From the award, I received scholarship money that I am able to use towards my student debt. It is also from this performance that a faculty member referred me to the managers that I am now signed with, so I am truly grateful for this performance and honor.

DD: What has been the most unexpected part of touring so far?

TM: How much of a family you become with these people, because all you really have is each other. Also, I’m constantly surprised by how exhausting the nature of touring really is! I have the same response to all my friends who ask me how it’s going: “Tiring. Stressful. Frustrating. Rewarding. Incredible. Enriching. Amazing. All of the above and so much more.” I’m the baby of the cast, so it may be expected that I’d be the one going out every night and exploring each city we’re in, but I surprise myself in regards to how boring I actually am. Most days, I sleep in, have a late breakfast, binge watch a TV show (currently Breaking Bad,) go the gym, warm-up for the show, do the show, shower, and unwind in my hotel room. Eight shows a week is demanding, so I often don’t feel the need to go out and utilize all the energy I need for the show. With that said, fresh out of college, I have also never done eight shows a week before. It’s definitely a test of my stamina, but I’m happy to discover that I absolutely love it. I have something to look forward to doing every single day, especially in a production where our main mission is to scatter joy and in a role I have grown to love so much.

DD: What is your favorite all-time musical soundtrack?

TM: A Chorus Line!

[National tour at Forrest Theatre, 1114 Walnut Street] December 3-15, 2019; kimmelcenter.org

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From The Philadelphia Sunday Sun:

U Arts graduate Lorenzo Pugliese stars as SpongeBob in ‘The SpongeBob Musical’

“Who lives in a pineapple under the sea? SpongeBob SquarePants!”

The opening line of the “SpongeBob SquarePants” theme song brings a smile to most faces. The Nickelodeon animated series, “SpongeBob SquarePants” tells the adventures of a yellow sponge SpongeBob, his pet snail Gary, his starfish best friend Patrick, his squirrel friend Sandy and a host of other characters including Squidworth, Mr. Krabs and Plankton. SpongeBob and his aquatic friends, find themselves in hilarious situations as they navigate life in their home, Bikini Bottom.

In 2017, SpongeBob premiered on Broadway at the Palace Theatre. Since its opening, “The SpongeBob Musical” has earned 12 Tony nominations. Scranton native Lorenzo Pugliese stars as the title character in the shows North American tour, which opened in September of this year. Pugliese spoke with The SUN about playing the beloved character.

When Pugliese was a child, he dreamed of becoming a professional athlete. After a teacher encouraged him to audition for a musical, he realized his calling.

“When I was younger, I was more of a sports kid, but my dad was making me take piano lessons,” he said. “My piano teacher asked me to audition for a youth theater production of High School Musical. I auditioned and got the lead role. When I got on stage for the first time and sang that first song, I knew it was something special.”

Pugliese went on to pursue his passion for performance by attending The University of The Arts (U Arts) in Philadelphia.

“I really liked U Arts and I really liked Philadelphia,” he said. “To be able to go back to the place I just graduated from, where I found myself as an artist, where so many of my friendships and my relationship with my girlfriend blossomed… to do this show there is a dream come true! Philadelphia feels like a second home to me, so this really feels like my homecoming for this tour.”

Not long after graduation, a week to be precise, Pugliese landed the lead role of SpongeBob in the North American tour.

“It feels like I won the lottery! It really is such a gift to be able to bring such an iconic character that brings so much joy to audiences across America.,” he said.

“The SpongeBob Musical much like the television series offers audiences an engaging and entertaining story.

“It takes place in the iconic Bikini Bottom,” Pugliese said. “It’s just a normal day and then it’s announced that this long-standing volcano of doom that’s been lying dormant for many years is set to erupt the following evening. There’s widespread panic and the show follows the different ways that the citizens react to this news. Of course, someone has to try to save the day… I wonder who that could be.”

The SpongeBob Musical also features an incredibly diverse soundtrack written by some of the biggest artists in music such as Sara Bareilles, John Legend, Yolanda Adams and more.

“My favorite song to sing in the show is “I Guess I Miss You” by John Legend. It’s a really beautiful song… a duet between SpongeBob and Patrick. They’re apart and they’re realizing for the first time what it feels like to miss someone. It’s genuine and a really nice change of pace for the show. It’s also the one song in the show where I get to sit down and sing and I’m not running all over the place.”

Although the show brings a lot of joy to its audiences, it also requires a deal of preparation.

“This role is the hardest role I’ve ever had to play,” Pugliese said. “Every day before the show I have to warm up for an hour… physical and vocal. Most of the preparation comes from the incredible work that Tina Landau (director), Chris Gattelli (choreographer) and all of the creative team have done to create this world. The physicality and language of this show really feels like it does the work for you. Once you absorb all of the information, it’s just about trusting that you know it… staying connected with your fellow actors and staying in the present moment.”

Pugliese shared his gratitude in being a part of this show in such a huge capacity.

“Seeing the amount of joy that this show brings people has been a gift. It really affects people of all ages… kids, millennials and older people as well,” he said. “Everyone that comes to see the show leaves with a smile on their face. The effect that this show has on people is super rewarding.”

Be sure to follow Lorenzo Pugliese on Instagram @lorenzo_m_pugliese. “The SpongeBob Musical” will be at The Forrest Theatre December 3 through December 15. For more information on tickets and showtimes, visit www.kimmelcenter.org.

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From The Star:

How ‘The SpongeBob Musical’ brought director Tina Landau back to her avant-garde roots

NEW YORK CITY—He might live in a pineapple under the sea. His best friends might be a starfish and a squirrel. He might be named after his unsophisticated fashion choices. But SpongeBob SquarePants runs much deeper than most Broadway fans expected when “SpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical” premiered in late 2017.

In a big-budget market saturated with film and TV adaptations and pop music catalogues, something as transparently kitschy as a stage version of the Nickelodeon cartoon series appeared, at first, like another product in the assembly line.

“All I could imagine was some big arena show with big prosthetic costumes and puppet heads; I just assumed that that’s what they wanted to do,” director Tina Landau told the Star about her immediate reaction to Nickelodeon’s call for proposals for a “SpongeBob” musical.

Landau is an estimable name from New York’s experimental theatre scene of the 1980s and ’90s; a long-time director at Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre; and a frequent collaborator with playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney (“The Brothers Size, “Moonlight”).

Her interest in “SpongeBob” was piqued when she heard that Stephen Hillenburg, the late creator of the cartoon series, was “only interested in doing the musical if it can somehow have the ‘indie spirit’ with which he created the show in the first place.”

“I said I don’t know what that means, but it sounds more intriguing.”

So Landau pitched three main components that still remain pivotal to the production, which comes to Toronto next week: an immersive setting; the characters are humans, not puppets or mascots; and the score echoes the original series’ mash-up of artists and styles.

Whereas traditional musicals features one or two composers and lyricists, the soundtrack for the “SpongeBob” musical features original songs by the Flaming Lips, John Legend, Aerosmith, T.I., They Might Be Giants, and David Bowie and Brian Eno among others (nearly everyone on the wish list of Landau and book writer Kyle Jarrow said yes, as nearly everyone was already a “SpongeBob” fan).

The result brought 12 Tony nominations with one win for scenic design, plus six Drama Desk Awards in 2018, including Outstanding Musical and Outstanding Director of a Musical for Landau.

While her earliest encounters with theatre involved the kind of Broadway musical she would later direct, like “Fiddler on the Roof” and “Cabaret,” Landau gravitated to the avant-garde scene in her early career, working with playwright Edward Bond and Anne Hamburger’s En Garde Arts, where she first staged immersive experimental productions in New York City.

“I think the experience of growing up, feeling somehow like a misfit in terms of any number of things in my life from being a woman, to being Jewish, to being gay, drew me to a world where there were entirely other ways of looking at how reality is constructed,” she said.

“What the more avant-garde experimental world offered me was a place where otherness, be it in human form or in theatrical conceit, was embraced. It’s interesting looking back at it now … because I could trace the seeds of ‘SpongeBob’ right to there.”

The musical developed slowly over about nine years, but it began with a room of Landau’s colleagues: “performers and clowns and dancers and designers and contortionists and musicians,” she said. And as she dove deeper into Hillenburg’s underwater world of Bikini Bottom, she discovered more parallels between the cartoon and her formative years in the experimental scene.

“One of the ‘SpongeBob’ artists in L.A. said that it’s an homage to (the art movement) Dada and it’s really true … The visual world of Bikini Bottom is really, I think, fundamentally based on putting things that don’t fit together, together.

“You end up with a kitchen sponge who lives in a pineapple, who has a pet snail that says ‘Meow.’ So I was really intrigued by the notion of looking at things not for what we know them to be, but for how they might be used, or used to invent something new, and that guided everything,” she said.

“I think the world is very contemporary and a mash-up of culture, and there’s a whole level of how it operates conceptually that little kids of a certain age wouldn’t catch but is of endless fascination and amusement for adults.”

Now that Landau has been immersed in “SpongeBob” for over a decade, she still can’t watch more than an episode or two at a time: its pace is a little too frenetic for her taste. But she says that creating the stage version has been worth the earworms despite her early hesitation, which she sees echoed in its audiences.

“I wish there was a more open-hearted embrace from the get-go. But even to this day, I think the general pattern of response is, ‘Oh, I don’t want to go see that.’ ‘Oh, I loved it.’ People have all sorts of doubts, which I understand, but folks come out of that theatre on some kind of SpongeBob high,” she said.

“It’s the antithesis of everything I expected and was skeptical about, and it really proved to be one of, if not the most, artistically fulfilling processes I’ve ever had.”

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From KARK.com:

“The Spongebob Musical” comes to UCA’s Reynolds Performance Hall Jan. 21

CONWAY, Ark. (News release) — The University of Central Arkansas’s Reynolds Performance Hall will welcome the critically acclaimed, award-winning production “The Spongebob Musical” on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2020, at 7:30 p.m.

Based on the hit animated series “SpongeBob SquarePants,” the musical features an original pop- and rock-infused score by a legendary roster of Grammy Award-winning songwriters. This one-of-a-kind musical event, which was the 2018 Best Musical winner of both the Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards, includes original songs by Yolanda Adams; Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith; Lady Antebellum; Cyndi Lauper and Rob Hyman; John Legend; Panic! at the Disco; David Bowie; and others.

Since premiering on Nickelodeon in July 1999, “SpongeBob SquarePants” has emerged as a pop culture phenomenon. The series has reigned as the No. 1 kids’ animated television show for the past 17 years and boasts a global fan base, with episodes appearing in more than 208 countries and territories. The show has been translated into more than 55 languages and averages more than 100 million total viewers every quarter.

“Wonders pour from the stage in a ravishing stream of color and invention,” wrote Time Out New York, as Broadway’s best creative minds reimagine and bring to life the beloved Nickelodeon series with humor, heart and pure theatricality. Audiences of all ages will celebrate friendship and cooperation and learn the power of unity and inclusion.

“Our college students grew up on ‘SpongeBob,’ and they are delighted to see their beloved childhood characters come to life on the Reynolds stage,” said Amanda Horton, director of Reynolds Performance Hall. “We are elated to be able to present a musical that was just very recently on Broadway, with the last performance being Sept. 16. This show is filled with gigantic set pieces, bold costumes, colorful characters and a witty score.”

Tickets are $30 to $40 for adults and $10 for children and students. Tickets may be purchased online at uca.edu/reynolds, at the Reynolds Box Office between 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by calling UCA Ticket Central at (501) 450-3265 or toll-free at (866) 810-0012.

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From Chron:

Actress’ childhood prepared her for ‘SpongeBob Musical’ role


Daria Pilar Redus will be portraying Sandy Cheeks in the “The SpongeBob Musical.” Photo: Jeremy Daniel.

The one Texas tie to “The SpongeBob Musical” would be Sandy Cheeks. Sandy probably hails from Houston, although her Texas twang might place her more in East Texas, according to actor Daria Pilar Redus, Sandy’s a squirrel.

In its first national tour, Redus, 23, plays Sandy Cheeks in the Broadway musical version of the popular cartoon “SpongeBob SquarePants.” The musical comes to the Wagner Noel Performing Arts Center on Monday as part of the Broadway in the Basin series.

Redus is no stranger to the character.

“‘SpongeBob’ was a bit part of my childhood. I grew up with her and so for myself and a lot of people my age, they are like our friends,” she said.


“SpongeBob SquarePants,” which has aired on Nickelodeon since 1999, follows the adventures of the title character, a fry cook at the Krusty Krab, and his friends Patrick, a starfish, Squidward Tentacles, an octopus, and Sandy.

When Redus first heard about the show being turned into a stage musical she was both perplexed and delighted.

“I saw the show on Broadway and I just remember watching this gorgeous show but also wondering if it was going to be based on an episode or would it have the same songs,” she said.

What she knew for sure is that she was going to be in the show.

“I said to my friend ‘I’m gonna be a part of this,’” she said. “And here I am. I really can’t believe it has come to fruition.”

Sandy is the Cleveland native’s first role on a grand scale and high exposure. With more than 100 shows in already, she’s still taking it all in stride.

“I wake up every morning and I’m genuinely excited to do this show. The great thing about touring is it always feels fresh with a new venue, city, audience and that always keeps us on our feet,” she said.

Once she landed the role of Sandy Cheeks, Redus prepared for the part -- even though she wasn’t required to do so. Sandy Cheeks is a thrill-seeking animal and that was going to demand some physicality on Redus’ part.

“Sandy is a martial artist and a weightlifter, so yeah, this is quite a physical role. I did hit the weights, and I’m also a dancer and former cheerleader so that helped me. Plus, I had the benefit of watching my brothers grow up doing tae kwon do,” she said. “I loved to take those things that I love and turning them into tools for my character.”

Redus said that while “SpongeBob” may be a children’s cartoon character, the musical -- which was nominated for 12 Tony awards in 2018 -- is as much for adults as it is for younger audiences.

“It really is an experience for all ages, and the music alone is a reason to see it, but I think there’s a storyline that kids can follow and adults can appreciate,” Redus said.

IF YOU GO:
“The SpongeBob Musical,” 7:30 p.m. Monday, Wagner Noel Performing Arts Center, 1310 N. Farm-to-Market Road 1788, $57-$97, broadwayinthebasin.com.

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From the Las Vegas Review-Journal:

Buoyant ‘SpongeBob Musical’ sails into Las Vegas

Because when seeking to bring to musical life the take-charge ethos of an animated, sea-dwelling, anthropomorphic squirrel skilled in karate and various rodeo pursuits, of course you turn to the Flaming Lips.

“You just felt like anything was possible,” Pulitzer Prize- and Tony Award-winning composer Tom Kitt says on the phone. “You get to just really use your imagination.”
Kitt is explaining what it was like helping orchestrate and arrange “The SpongeBob Musical,” the hit Broadway show based on the batty, beloved Nickelodeon cartoon series that earned 12 Tony Award nominations in 2018 — tied for the most that year — and is now a touring production.

The show’s music supervisor, Kitt both penned original material and contributed to the production’s novel way of generating its musical numbers: A bevy of artists, including David Bowie, rapper T.I. and Vegas’ own Panic! at the Disco, were recruited to write songs for the lively, full-throated romp. It follows SpongeBob and his crew of grumpy squids, affable starfish, cheapskate crab bosses, conniving plankton and more as they confront a potentially cataclysmic volcano that threatens their hometown of Bikini Bottom.

There’s the bluesy bluster of “Bikini Bottom Boogie,” courtesy of Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler and Joe Perry; the banjo-enhanced swing of “Chop to the Top,” written by Lady Antebellum; the exultant soul of “Super Sea Star Savior,” penned by gospel star Yolanda Adams; and more in the musical’s diverse, high-spirited score.

The way the process worked: Artists would submit songs in various states of completion and Kitt would arrange and orchestrate them for the show’s cast of actors to give them voice.

A Legend, and then some

“When I first came in, there were maybe seven original songs that had been contributed,” says Kitt, a Broadway veteran who’s worked on acclaimed productions from “High Fidelity” to “Next to Normal” to Green Day’s “American Idiot.” “They’d arrive in very different states. Some of them were produced demos; some of them were just piano scratch recordings. One artist was on tour in Europe and sang along with a track into their phone. We really got it in all different forms, and there were things that I would take and run with it.

“You’re wowed that you have this gem that no one has discovered yet,” he continues, “and you get to actually put it in rehearsal and work on it. You knew that these artists were going to bring something really inspired to the table, but because, in the moment, you’re hearing something that’s sort of blowing you away, it’s definitely a feeling of discovery.”

Some songs required more work than others. Take John Legend’s beatific ballad “(I Guess I) Miss You,” which he sent in as a demo.

“I think he was on tour, and it had this sort of raw quality, like he had just been performing a bunch and went into this side room and recorded it,” Kitt recalls. “I was so obsessed with the demo, because it’s such a window into the artist. It had an aching quality that was so personal that he brought to the song. I just wanted to stay out of the way. I added some strings on top of it, but we really wanted John’s beautiful piano arrangement to come through. I think I pretty much just sat down and transcribed what he had written.”

Musical mirth

For Kitt, presenting the show on Broadway, where it debuted in December 2017, provided another challenge: The production’s 18-piece orchestra was the biggest he’d worked with up to that point.

“It was thrilling,” he says of opening night. “The numbers really all just crackled, they all had scope, and each one was landing. I’ll never forget the final performance: All those numbers stopped the show. The audience just couldn’t stop applauding for them.”

As Kitt speaks, he doesn’t try to contain the awe that lingers in his voice.

That’s the thing about SpongeBob — the cartoon, the musical, the movie — the joy at the root of the character.

And so you do as a sponge does: Soak it up.

“I just love that it’s in the world and people get to feel the emotion of this story,” Kitt says of the musical, “which I think, at the end of the day, is about humanity and, when we face adversity, how we need to rally and champion one another — or even when we’re not facing adversity.

“It’s about understanding, and people that believe in one another,” he adds. “I think the themes in this story are really quite beautiful.”

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More Nick:Nickelodeon Marks 20 Years of "SpongeBob SquarePants" with the "Best Year Ever"!

Originally published: Wednesday, August 21, 2019.

Original sources: Playbill, Broadway World.

Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and The SpongeBob SquarePants Musical News and Highlights!

Funko Announces 'The Legend of Korra' Pop! Figures

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Funko has announced the very exciting news that they are expanding their popular Nickelodeon range with brand-new Pop! figures inspired by the iconic animated series The Legend of Korra! The new lineup of figures includes a spectacular new Korra Pop figure, plus Mako, Amon, and Asami Sato.


The company revealed the news as part of their London Toy Fair 2020 line-up.

The new line of Pop! figures includes Korra in her Avatar state, which is a limited-edition glow-in-the-dark variant available only at Hot Topic. The figure depicts one of Korra's alternative outfits from the show. The Legend of Korra line also features a Pop! figure of Korra displaying her fire- and water-bending powers, as well as three other major characters: Mako, Asami and Season 1's villain Amon, all in standard poses.

You can pre-order all of these new The Legend of Korra Funko Pops here on Entertainment Earth, with shipping slated for June 2020. Each figure measures approximately 3 3/4-inches tall and comes packaged in a window display box. Each figure currently carry a price tag of $10.99. Take a closer look at the figures below!:


Funko's new line of The Legend of Korra vinyl figures join the company's previously released Avatar: The Last Airbender line, which includes Pop! figures of Aang, Katara, Sokka, Zuko, Appa, Toph and Iroh, and Funko Avatar: The Last Airbender FunkO's Cereal with Pocket Pop! Appa Cereal.

The mythology of the beloved animated franchise from Avatar: The Last Airbender creators, Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, continues with The Legend of Korra. The series centers around a new Avatar named Korra, a 17-year-old headstrong and rebellious girl who continually challenges and bucks tradition on her quest to become a fully realized Avatar in a world where benders are under attack.

The Legend of Korra takes place 70 years after the events of Avatar: The Last Airbender and follows the next Avatar after Aang – a girl named Korra (Janet Varney) who is from the Southern Water Tribe. With three of the four elements under her belt (Earth, Water and Fire), Korra seeks to master Air. Her quest leads her to Republic City, the modern “Avatar” world that is a virtual melting pot where benders and non-benders from all nations live and thrive. Korra quickly discovers that the metropolis is plagued by crime as well as a growing anti-bending revolution that threatens to rip the city apart. Under the tutelage of Aang’s son, Tenzin (J.K. Simmons), Korra begins her airbending training while dealing with the dangers at large.

The Legend of Korra cast includes Janet Varney (Stan Against Evil) as Korra, David Faustino (Married…with Children) as Mako, P.J. Byrne (Horrible Bosses) as Bolin, J.K. Simmons (The Closer) as Tenzin, Steve Blum (Cowboy Bebop) as Amon, Lance Henriksen (Aliens) as The Lieutenant, Mindy Sterling (Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery) as Chief Lin Beifong, Daniel Dae Kim (Hawaii Five-0) as Hiroshi Sato, Seychelle Gabriel (Falling Skies) as Asami Sato and Eva Marie Saint (Superman Returns) as Katara. Joaquim Dos Santos served as co-executive producer.

The Legend of Korra premiered on Saturday, April 14, 2012, running for 52 episodes over four seasons ("books") until Thursday, 18th December 2014. The series is notable for ending with Korra and Asami about to embark on a same-sex relationship, one of the first times a same-sex relationship had been featured in a children's television series. The Legend of Korra's story continues on in numerous books and graphic novels. Korrasami 4eva!

The Legend of Korra is currently available to stream on CBS All Access.

The beloved series Avatar: The Last Airbender and the follow-up series The Legend of Korra got complete series Blu-ray sets in 2018 and 2016 respectively. Back in October, they were released as part of a single set that you can grab right here on Amazon for only $58.99 (40% off). Not bad for a 17-disc set that clocks in at 2672 minutes. The Avatar set is available individually for $26.28 (42% off) and the Korra set is available for $32.99.

Paramount Home Entertainment and Nickelodeon Home Entertainment are also set to released the Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Complete Series 15th Anniversary Limited Edition Steelbook Collection on February 18, 2020.

More Nick:Netflix to Host Open Casting Call for Live-Action 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Series!

Originally published: Monday, January 20, 2020 at 22:47 GMT.

Original source: ComicBook; Additional sources: Wikipedia, Pop Vinyl World, CBR.com.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Classic Nickelodeon, Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra News and Highlights!

The Bella Twins to Fool the School in New Episode of 'The Substitute', Premiering Friday, Jan. 31 on Nickelodeon

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Update - Below is Nickelodeon's official Press Release announcing the exciting news!:

THE BELLA TWINS GUEST STAR IN NICKELODEON’S
THE SUBSTITUTE, AIRING FRIDAY, JAN. 31, AT 8:00 P.M. (ET/PT)

New Episodes Featuring a Star-Studded Lineup Air Weekly

Share it: @Nickelodeon #NickSubstitute


Nickelodeon is bringing “Twin Magic” to The Substitute with WWE Superstars The Bella Twins tag-teaming to go undercover at Las Palmas Middle School in Covina, Calif. Nikki and Brie Bella guest star in the premiere of The Substitute on Friday, Jan. 31, at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT) on Nickelodeon, with new episodes featuring a star-studded lineup of celebrities airing Fridays at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT).


Using full costumes and prosthetics to hide her identity, Nikki Bella is transformed into three completely unrecognizable characters, and for the first time the Substitute gets some extra help as her sister Brie Bella directs from the control room.

Together they prank students as Nikki plays an eccentric gym teacher who brings her dog-training techniques to the field, an awkward speech teacher preoccupied by her upcoming maid of honor duties and a career counselor obsessed with clowns.


The Substitute features celebrities who are transformed by a team of Hollywood special effects artists to go undercover as a substitute, surprising unsuspecting kids in schools, camps and other locations. After a day full of ridiculous mayhem, the substitute reveals themselves and the featured school receives a donation for $25,000.

Nikki Bella is ‘The Substitute’ 👩‍🏫 Sneak Peek ft. The Bella Twins | Nick



When WWE superstars Nikki and Brie Bella go from smackdown to school teacher, things get CRAZY! 🎂 Check out this SWEET sneak peek of the new The Substitute episode! Catch more of the brand new The Substitute season, beginning January 31st on Nick.

Additional guest stars set to appear in upcoming episodes of The Substitute are Rico & Raini Rodriguez, Asher Angel, Shaun White, JoJo Siwa, Johnny Orlando, Kel Mitchell, and Cooper Barnes. The season previewed in October with guest star and international superstar John Cena, and was followed by a holiday-themed episode guest starring Grammy Award-winning artist and performer NE-YO in November.


The Substitute is produced by Industrial Media’s The Intellectual Property Corporation. Eli Holzman, Aaron Saidman and Todd Hurvitz (Punk’d), serve as executive producers, with Hurvitz also serving as the showrunner. Jessica Brown, Nickelodeon’s Vice President of Current Series, also serves as an executive producer. Production of The Substitute for Nickelodeon is overseen by Rob Bagshaw, Executive Vice President, Unscripted Content.

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More images from the Bella Twins' episode of The Substitute, courtesy of TheWrap!:


Original post:

Total madness: Total Bellas stars and former WWE Superstars the Bella Twins are set to guest star on the return of Nickelodeon’s hit hidden camera prank show The Substitute, TheWrap has revealed! And to celebrate, TheWrap has unveiled a first look at Nikki Bella’s undercover looks, and news of the guest stars to come!

Using costumes and prosthetics to hide her identity, Nikki Bella transforms into three unrecognizable characters to prank the children at Las Palmas Middle School in Covina, California. First up, she’s an eccentric gym teacher who brings her dog-training techniques to the field. Next, Nikki plays an awkward speech teacher preoccupied by her upcoming maid of honor duties. Finally, the woman who used to put away her opponents with the Rack Attack embodies a career counselor obsessed with clowns.

And for the first time in the prank show’s history, the Substitute brings a tag-team partner: Brie Bella will help her twin sister navigate the nonsense from the control room.

The Substitute features celebrities who are transformed by a team of Hollywood special effects artists to go undercover as a substitute, surprising unsuspecting kids in schools, camps and other locations. After a day full of ridiculous mayhem, the substitute reveals themselves and the featured school receives a donation for $25,000.

Additional guest stars set to appear in upcoming episodes of The Substitute are Rico & Raini Rodriguez, Asher Angel, Shaun White, JoJo Siwa, Johnny Orlando, Kel Mitchell (All That, Kenan & Kel, Good Burger), and Cooper Barnes (Henry Danger).

Previous celebrity guests on the show have been Jace Norman (Henry Danger), John Cena (Playing with Fire), Lilly Singh and NE-YO.

Following the Bellas’ episode, which airs two weeks from today, new The Substitute episodes will roll out weekly on Friday nights on Nick.

The Substitute is produced by Industrial Media’s The Intellectual Property Corporation. Eli Holzman, Aaron Saidman and Todd Hurvitz are executive producers; Hurvitz is showrunner. Jessica Brown, Nickelodeon’s vice president of current series, is also an executive producer. Production of The Substitute for Nickelodeon is overseen by Rob Bagshaw, executive vice president of unscripted content.

See Nikki and Brie from The Substitute below, courtesy of TheWrap!

The Bella Twins’ episode of The Substitute airs Friday, Jan. 31 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Nickelodeon.

More Nick:'Dancing With the Stars' Pro Witney Carson to Guest Star on 'All That' with Kel Mitchell!

Originally published: Friday, January 17, 2020 at 19:39 GMT.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and The Substitute News and Highlights!

'Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story' Documentary to Receive World Premiere at 2020 Sundance Film Festival

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The Sundance Institute has announced that the 2020 Sundance Film Festival will host the world premiere of Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story, a brand new documentary exploring the rise and fall of the groundbreaking animated series The Ren & Stimpy Show and its controversial creator, John Kricfalusi - whose abusive relationship with an underage woman destroyed his once-celebrated career - through archival footage, show artwork and interviews with the artists, actors and executives behind the show.

Update (1/18/2020) - Deadline has released a sneak peek from the documentary, which you can watch on Deadline.com.


“It’s wild and disturbing,” said Sundance director John Cooper. “It’s not trying to make the show separate from the creator. That’s what we hoped to see in it.”


From production industry veterans Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood, Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story is a crowdfunded documentary that has been in development for a couple of years, before Ralph Bakshi acolyte Kricfalusi's highly inappropriate behavior came to light. When the docu was first pitched, it was set to "delve deep into the world of Ren the rage-fueled chihuahua and Stimpy the simpleton cat. The filmmakers’ goal is to show that the creativity that fueled the animated series is akin to the intrepid genius and controversial merit of Banksy and Warhol."

Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story is produced by Ron Cicero, and features the cast of: John Kricfalusi, Robyn Byrd, Vanessa Coffey, Chris Reccardi, Richard Pursel, and Bobby Lee.

Ren & Stimpy premiered on August 11, 1991 as one of the original Nicktoons, alongside Rugrats and Doug, and followed the chaotic adventures of a psychotic Chihuahua (Marland “Ren” T. Höek) and dimwitted Cat (Stimpson “Stimpy” J. Cat). The series ran on Nickelodeon for 5 seasons and spawned the spin-off Ren & Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon in 2003.


The 2020 Sundance Film Festival takes place between Jan 23 - Feb 2, 2020 in Park City, Utah. For more information, visit: https://www.sundance.org.

From sundance.org:

Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story

In the early 1990s, the animated show Ren & Stimpy broke cable ratings records and was a touchstone for a generation of fans and artists. Creator John Kricfalusi was celebrated as a visionary, but even though his personality suffused the show, dozens of artists and network executives were just as responsible for the show’s meteoric rise. As Kricfalusi’s worst impulses were let loose at the workplace and new allegations about even more disturbing behavior have surfaced, his reputation now threatens to taint the show forever.

With clips recognizable to any Ren & Stimpy fan and interviews with Kricfalusi and his fellow creators whose work has been both elevated and denigrated by their connection to him, this film is a complex look at a show that influenced the history of television, animation, and comedy. More than a celebration, Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story forces us to consider the role of media creators and how we reckon with the reality of who they are versus what we see on the screen.

YEAR: 2019

CATEGORY: Documentary Premieres

COUNTRY: U.S.A.

RUN TIME: 104 min

COMPANY: INVADER

WEBSITE https://getinvader.com

EMAIL reception@getinvader.com

PHONE (323) 601-5939

Credits
Directors
Ron Cicero
Kimo Easterwood

Screenwriters
Ron Cicero
Kimo Easterwood

Produced By
Ron Cicero

Director Of Photography
Kimo Easterwood

Editors
Sean Jarrett
Christina Burchard
Kevin Klauber
Kimo Easterwood
Ron Cicero

Executive Producer
Ron Cicero

Co-Executive Producers
Peter Wade
Ryk Maverick
Casey Dobson
Jason Anders

Story Consultant
Christina Burchard
Title Design
Simon Clowes

Colorist
Gabe Sanchez

Sound Editor
Patrick Cicero

Sound Mixer
Tom Efinger

Principal Cast
John Kricfalusi
Robyn Byrd
Vanessa Coffey
Chris Reccardi
Richard Pursel
Bobby Lee

Related Media
- Official Website
- Twitter / @RenandStimpyDoc
- Official Facebook Page

Artist Bios
Ron Cicero
Throughout his 15-year producing career, Ron Cicero has produced a long list of commercials, branded shorts, and experiential installations. He has partnered with industry-leading creatives including Judd Apatow, Aaron Ruell, and Jesse Moss, as well as experience company Magnopus, led by Academy Award–winners Ben Grossmann and Alex Henning. This is Cicero's first feature documentary as a producer and director.

Kimo Easterwood
Kimo Easterwood started his career as a tour photographer counting Chris Rock, Bon Jovi, Christina Aguilera, Usher, and ZZ Top among his clients. Since 2015, Easterwood has filmed content for a variety of Fortune 500 brands. His fine art has been featured in galleries in New York and LA. This is Easterwood's first feature as a director.

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From Deadline:

‘Happy Happy Joy Joy’ Clip: First Look At ‘Ren & Stimpy’ Documentary Headed To Sundance


EXCLUSIVE: How to describe The Ren & Stimpy Show, that bizarre, you-had-to-be-there ’90s animated series that carved a niche for itself on the kid-friendly Nickelodeon channel without being all that kid-friendly itself? (Well, depending on what kind of kid you were…)

In this exclusive clip from the upcoming Sundance Film Festival documentary Happy Happy Joy Joy, comics (including Bobby Lee) and fans try to describe the outrageous, grotesque and very funny series in one sentence. One or two come close.

Premiering at this month’s Sundance as part of the Documentary Premieres section, Happy Happy Joy Joy (a catchphrase from the series) is co-directed by Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood, who set themselves the task of illuminating “the joy, beauty, and lasting impact of Ren & Stimpy” while also examining the cartoon’s creator John Kricfalusi, a man described as a brilliant animator and storyteller as well as a deeply flawed person. Press materials for the documentary say Kricfalusi “both caused and experienced trauma that deeply affected his work and relationships.”

Through archival footage, show artwork, and interviews with the artists, actors, and executives behind the show, Happy Happy Joy Joy explores what happens when “artistic genius goes awry.”

Written and directed by Cicero and Easterwood, Happy Happy Joy Joy is exec produced by Cicero, with Easterwood as director of photography. Kevin Klauber produces.

The doc will have its press and industry screening January 24 at the Park Avenue Theatre before its world premiere Tuesday, January 28 at the Library Center Theatre.

Check out the exclusive clip [on Deadline.com].

###

From io9:

Happy Happy, Joy Joy - The Ren and Stimpy Story

Despite what the title suggests, this documentary about the cult Nickelodeon show isn’t all positive. It goes through the history of the show but will focus heavily on recent accusations of underage sexual abuse by its creator John Kricfalusi.

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From TheWrap:

‘Happy Happy Joy Joy’ Film Review: ‘Ren & Stimpy’ Doc Celebrates Animation But Shies Away From Darker Subjects

Sundance 2020: Sexual misconduct accusations against creator John Kricfalusi have forever tainted the legacy of this cult series, but the movie avoids that topic as much as possible

Don’t be fooled by the title: “Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story” may be the story of “Ren & Stimpy,” but it’s not a happy, happy story documentary, nor does it evoke joy or joy.

Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood’s film about the smash hit Nickelodeon animated series and its many artists, and series creator John Kricfalusi in particular, features interesting behind-the-scenes stories but pads the running time with redundancies. Worse, it never adequately engages with the most horrifying elements of this tale.

To watch cartoons in the early 1990s was to watch “Ren & Stimpy,” a trailblazing series about an emotionally abusive chihuahua named Ren, a good-natured doormat of a cat named Stimpy, and their gross, non-sensical, censorship-defying adventures. “Ren & Stimpy” was a critical and commercial success, crass in its subject matter but beautiful in its execution. It smashed expectations of TV animation, which had hitherto been relatively low on American networks. Plus, it was really, really, really gross.

It’s nothing short of amazing that a show like “Ren & Stimpy” — a series for little kids with episodes about pectoral replacement surgery and weepy relationships with anthropomorphic farts — got made at all. That’s the story that “Happy Happy Joy Joy” is happiest-happiest and most joyful-joyful to tell. For a long time, it’s a plucky, can-do story about a group of ambitious young artists who united under Kricfalusi to produce unique animation. A rags to riches story. A story of rock stars.

And, like any rock star biopic, the animators at Spümcø, Inc. were destined for a fall. Kricfalusi’s passion for animation, wild pitching style and extreme perfectionism, celebrated at the beginning of his career, led to abusive relationships with his employees and antagonistic relationships with Nickelodeon. He wasn’t the only artist to let his ego undermine his career but, as one of “Happy Happy Joy Joy’s” many interview subjects sums it up: “Nobody else worked harder to f–k it up than this guy.”

For nearly 90 minutes, “Happy Happy Joy Joy” is a sentimental look back at the history and significance of “Ren & Stimpy.” Cicero and Easterwood lay out the events that transpired and, just as importantly, the artistic innovations that “Ren & Stimpy” either pioneered or reimagined. Various scenes from multiple episodes are broken down in some riveting analyses of the craft, displaying how the animation geniuses at Spümcø, Inc. used elastic, off-model characterizations and extreme expressionistic storytelling to shock and engage the audience at the same time.

Unfortunately, not every aspect of “The Ren & Stimpy Story” is equally enthralling, and “Happy Happy Joy Joy” frequently resorts to sequences of multiple interview subjects saying basically the same thing, or sharing anecdotes that are redundant or go nowhere. Spümcø co-founder Lynne Naylor has one story about pickles that just gradually peters off into non-existence, which is somewhat whimsical but wholly off-topic.

What’s more frustrating is “Happy Happy Joy Joy’s” tendency to break from its narrative flow and occasionally just cut to more talking heads so they can rave about how great “Ren & Stimpy” was. That’s all well and good, but sheesh, we’re an hour into the movie and we’re all on the same page by now. The time has long since come to move on.

And the time to address the disturbing elephant in the room has long since passed by the time “Happy Happy Joy Joy” finally gets to John Kricfalusi’s disturbing relationship with an underage, aspiring animator. Ordinarily a development so incredibly shocking would be front-and-center in a documentary like this, but — perhaps in an effort to primarily focus on the “Ren & Stimpy” parts — the filmmakers haven’t just buried the lede, they’ve practically hidden the headstone.

It’s not that “Happy Happy Joy Joy” completely ignores the story; Robyn Byrd appears halfway through the documentary to talk about writing fan mail about the series, and the filmmakers pointedly leave in a candid moment where Kricfalusi lewdly licks his lips and makes uncomfortable remarks about the woman doing his makeup before an interview. But these foreshadowings don’t build organically to the film’s conclusion, nor does the film spend nearly enough time discussing how the history of “Ren & Stimpy” has been forever tainted by the actions of its credited creator.

In its final 15 minutes, at least, “Happy Happy Joy Joy” does ask some serious and significant questions about the cartoon’s legacy. Can a show with so many twisted, tasteless jokes still be enjoyed now that we know what we now know about John Kricfalusi? Robyn Byrd has a thoughtful answer, but the discussion probably demands a little more screen time than is given to Jack Black to talk about how neat “Ren & Stimpy” was when it first came out.

And since “Happy Happy Joy Joy” includes new interview footage with Kricfalusi, the filmmakers do confront him directly about his life, an opportunity he uses predominantly to excuse himself. The film concludes with a bizarre moment from the animator as he completely plays down the most disturbing parts of his life. It’s odd to give Kricfalusi the last word, and what he does with the opportunity is most unpleasant.

Cicero and Easterwood’s film plays a lot like a loving ode to a beloved children’s series that got hijacked all of a sudden by harsh reality, and it doesn’t handle the transition well. For “Ren & Stimpy” fans, the documentary has an enormous amount of value, taking us behind the scenes of a fascinating chapter in animation history. But for documentary fans, it’s a haphazardly paced and awkwardly structured film that struggles to organically incorporate each facet of the tragic “Ren & Stimpy” story, ultimately giving too short a shrift to the greatest tragedy of all.

###

From The Hollywood Reporter:

'Happy Happy Joy Joy — the Ren & Stimpy Story': Film Review | Sundance 2020

THE BOTTOM LINE

A cliched portrait of difficult genius undermines a layered portrait of a classic TV show. TWITTER

Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood's documentary covers the rise and fall of 'The Ren & Stimpy Show' and of creator John Kricfalusi.
Happy Happy Joy Joy — the Ren & Stimpy Story, a documentary premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, has a John Kricfalusi problem.

Based on watching Happy Happy Joy Joy — the Ren & Stimpy Story, "having a John Kricfalusi problem" seems to have been a common affliction for those working on and associated with the iconic animated series The Ren & Stimpy Show.

Happy Happy Joy Joy follows Kricfalusi and the supernova that was Ren & Stimpy, which arrived at a moment when animation had become a soulless, mechanized process driven by selling toys and not artistic considerations. Kricfalusi, as the story goes, somehow convinced Nickelodeon to bankroll an unconventional comedy about a sociopathic dog, an amiably addled cat and their adventures that veered into the grotesque, scatological and absurd. Kricfalusi restored an auteurist stamp to animation and, surrounded by a remarkable and demented team of artists, became a short-lived sensation before he was forced to abandon his creation and retreat into eccentric obscurity. Or that's the basic story.

As depicted by directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood, Kricfalusi was a troubled genius of the sort movies and television have been glorifying for decades. He was brilliant and unconventional and wildly ahead of his time, influential and uncontainable. He was also self-destructive and the reason we have so few episodes of Ren & Stimpy is because of his inability and his refusal to work within the system that brought him fame and to treat the employees who facilitated that fame properly. His is a tragic story, but one in which the victims were primarily viewers denied more greatness and Kricfalusi for his self-inflicted wounds.

If you believe that's the end of the conversation and if you love Ren & Stimpy, chances are good that you'll love Happy Happy Joy Joy. Cicero and Easterwood place Kricfalusi front-and-center and they have assembled an assortment of Kricfalusi's Ren & Stimpy collaborators that borders on all-encompassing. From background artists to character animators to some of the biggest names in the show's lore, including early partners like Bob Camp and Lynne Naylor, Nickelodeon's Vanessa Coffey and even the late Chris Reccardi, who died last year.

The insight into what made Ren & Stimpy unique is exceptional, delving into Kricfalusi's untrained vocal work, those ultra-disgusting cutaway close-ups and several specific episodes, like the notoriously banned "Man's Best Friend," which Kricfalusi links closely to his troubled relationship with his father.

Whether or not it's true, Happy Happy Joy Joy feels like it was deep into production when a 2018 Buzzfeed article accused Kricfalusi of befriending a 13-year-old Robyn Byrd, whom he groomed in sexual terms and moved into his apartment when she was only 16 — a "relationship" that continued with an undercurrent of psychological abuse and left Byrd with shattered confidence and unable to find employment in Hollywood. All signs point to Byrd as having not been the only underage girl in Kricfalusi's sphere and, both in the Buzzfeed article and today, Kricfalusi doesn't deny the generalities of the situation, only Byrd's darkest interpretations. So this part is not an allegation.

Cicero and Easterwood have no idea how to handle the information in that Buzzfeed story, even with Byrd as a candid, but not too candid, talking head in the documentary. As presented here, the "relationship" was almost a symptom of years of struggles after he was booted from Ren & Stimpy and not a part of a long-running pattern of behavior. Byrd's revelations aren't mentioned until nearly 90 minutes into the film and that's even after she was introduced as a 13-year-old fan sending letters to the series' creator. The directors gently push Kricfalusi for an unspecified apology, which he begrudgingly gives as part of a creepy plea for Byrd to contact him, positioning the entire situation as something unsavory and less-than-kosher, but far from borderline criminal. Make no mistake: Byrd's Buzzfeed allegations are borderline criminal. From there, the documentary barely gets into additional accusations from the Buzzfeed article of similarly groomed young women, as well as long-running workplace harassment and more.

Kricfalusi denied many of the charges in the Buzzfeed article and doesn't appear to have been asked to repeat those denials here, but it's hard to stomach how his workplace "crimes" are presented as nothing worse than intense, childish and hyperactive behavior and how sanitized the documentary is up until Byrd's on-camera accusations. And it's unsettling how the several celebrities who appear on camera lauding Ren & Stimpy — Iliza Shlesinger, Bobby Lee, Jack Black — are allowed to give their praise for the series and none of them can give even an "Eww" to any behind-the-scenes stories. I almost want footnotes to say which interviews were conducted before the Buzzfeed story broke and which were conducted after, who had incentive to reckon with the totality of the story and who talked when it was a generally less complicated story — because a lot of the shrugging about "Boys will be boys!" rambunctiousness at Kricfalusi's Spumco Studio plays mighty differently with this not insignificant context, context the filmmakers withhold until far later.

As Byrd says of Kricfalusi — and the bad-boy genius myth — point-blank, "It's not necessary for someone to be like that to create great art."

That should probably be the last word in this documentary. Probably it should be the first word as well. Naturally, it's not. Kricfalusi has to get the last word.

Even having read the Buzzfeed story two years ago, I spent the first hour of Happy Happy Joy Joy guiltily feeling like I needed a rewatch of Ren & Stimpy — it's an important series and there's no pretending otherwise — and the next 35 minutes feeling dirty about the whole thing and the last 10 minutes getting actively angry about how the entire story had been framed and reduced to "difficult genius" cliches.

Production company: Invader

Directors: Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood

Producer: Ron Cicero

Cinematographer: Kimo Easterwood

Editors: Sean Jarrett, Christina Burchard, Kevin Klauber, Kimo Easterwood, Ron Cicero

Venue: Sundance Film Festival (Documentary Premieres)

107 minutes

###

From the New York Post:

The chilling dark secrets behind ‘The Ren & Stimpy Show’

The show was a revolution, ending more than a decade of TV cartoon stagnation and inspiring the next generation of animators. But behind the scenes, the staff of Nickelodeon’s “The Ren & Stimpy Show” were feeling anything but “Happy Happy Joy Joy.”

A new documentary called “Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story,” which premiered Friday at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, reveals the culture of anger and fear at the new-defunct Spumco studios, led by the show’s fiery genius and scandal-plagued creator John Kricfalusi.

“He had this sort of rockstar status,” an animator says of Kricfalusi in the fascinating, if occasionally long-winded doc. Adds another: “The whole thing is tragic. It really is like a Shakespearean play.”

Animation was in a sorry state in the late 1980 and ‘90s, and shows were being churned out that were cheaply made and more concerned with selling toys — “My Little Pony,” “Strawberry Shortcake” — than artistry. During this time, Kricfalusi, a true believer in the classic styles of Hanna-Barbera and Looney Tunes, was enthusiastically shopping around ideas to major studios.

In the memorable pitch sessions, Kricfalusi would do full character voices and exaggerated, highly physical gestures. “His glasses hit somebody in the head once,” a colleague recalls. But his non-conforming, subversive story ideas left execs feeling uncomfortable, and the animator says he was escorted out by a security guard at least once.

And then came Nickelodeon. In 1991, the kids network that had been reliant on foreign cartoons for more than a decade, wanted to branch out into original animated programming to be called Nicktoons.

Vanessa Coffey, a then-producer at Nickelodeon, wasn’t the usual TV exec. She was interested in weird, out-of-the-box notions, like those of Kricfalusi. He pitched her a show called “Your Gang,” but she was enamored by just two of his creations, Ren, an irate dog, and Stimpy, a stupid cat.

And thus “The Ren & Stimpy Show” was born.

Kricfalusi and his talented animator friends who had formed Spumco, Inc. in 1988 were tasked with delivering six episodes of the risky new program that consistently bordered on inappropriate. As dramatic as the documentary can be at times, it also admiringly delves into the off-the-charts creativity on display during that period. Bill Wray was painting museum-worthy backgrounds, and cartoon characters meant for kids were being modeled after Kirk Douglas (Ren) and Larry Fine from “The Three Stooges.” This was just not done.

When it premiered, “The Ren & Stimpy Show” became a major hit with critics and audiences alike. But despite the show’s boffo success — scoring a 4.0 (2.5 million viewers) in the ratings by episode 4 — Kricfalusi’s temper was on the rise.

The creator was known to furiously rip up his employees’ drawings, and to lock himself in his office for hours redoing already finished work.

“If they toned it down,” Kricfalusi says in the doc, “they’d get what people called ‘a beating.’”

One worker went further in the film, saying he was “a Hitler type.”

The man’s obsession with quality and pushing the envelope of censorship led to months-long delays and going hundreds of thousands of dollars over budget.

When he finally delivered the first episode of Season 2, a violent story called “Man’s Best Friend,” Coffey was appalled and rejected it. “He said that I ‘could go f–k myself’, he wouldn’t take notes anymore, that he made the network and that he was the star,” Coffey says in the doc.

Kricfalusi, who also was the voice of Ren, was fired after Season 2, and the show plummeted in many critics’ estimations. It was cancelled in 1995.

The creator never found the same success again, but in the ensuing years found himself in a #MeToo scandal. Director Ron Cicero’s film appropriately switches to a deeply serious tone.

In 2018, a Buzzfeed article revealed that in 1997 when Kricfalusi was 42, he started a sexual relationship with Robyn Byrd, a 16-year-old girl, and then later Katie Rice, another teen. Byrd says in the doc that she was a fan of “Ren & Stimpy,” and wrote a letter to Kricfalusi when she was just 14.

“I was falling in love with her letters,” Kricfalusi says in the doc. “She was too young. I freely admit that. But she was so convincing.”

Byrd interned with Kricfalusi, moved in with him and began a sexual relationship.

“I was isolated from everyone I know,” she says in the film, adding that her “entire adolescence from 14 to 21” was controlled by Kricfalusi.

Coffey says that when she read the article, she was deeply disturbed.

“It hurt that he used ‘Ren & Stimpy’ that way,” she says through tears in the doc.

Kricfalusi claims he didn’t realize the emotional havoc he’d wrought. “[I] felt like the lowest creature on earth,” he says of reading the story.

Today, while Byrd says she does not want fans of “The Ren & Stimpy Show” to abandon a cherished childhood memory, hers are forever scarred.

“I still have nightmares about him,” she says.

###

From Collider:

‘Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story’ Review: Never Meet Your Heroes

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story tells of the sudden rise and spectacular fall of one of the most influential animated series in television history. This story is about a group of ragtag artists who, through talent and dedication, brought to life two of the most beloved characters of all time–Ren & Stimpy–but it’s also balanced by a cautionary tale about the artistic genius of the series’ creator. The controversial John Kricfalusi, who both caused and experienced trauma that deeply affected his work and relationships, is as much a part of Ren & Stimpy‘s overnight success as its sudden and disastrous decline.

Through archival footage, incredible artwork from the show, and deeply personal interviews with the artists, actors, and executives behind the scenes, this in-depth documentary from co-directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood (who successfully crowd-funded the project) manages to be both balanced and earnest. The documentary artfully illuminates the joy, beauty, and lasting impact of Ren & Stimpy, as well as the dual sides of the show’s creator, a man who is both a brilliant animator and storyteller as well as a deeply flawed person. Happy Happy Joy Joy makes its Sundance premiere on Tuesday, January 28th, but our early review follows below.

Be sure to head to the doc’s IndieGoGo page (linked above) to check out some clips, and read along with the official synopsis below for a bit of background:

In the early 1990s, the animated show Ren & Stimpy broke cable ratings records and was a touchstone for a generation of fans and artists. Creator John Kricfalusi was celebrated as a visionary, but even though his personality suffused the show, dozens of artists and network executives were just as responsible for the show’s meteoric rise. As Kricfalusi’s worst impulses were let loose at the workplace and new allegations about even more disturbing behavior have surfaced, his reputation now threatens to taint the show forever.

With clips recognizable to any Ren & Stimpy fan and interviews with Kricfalusi and his fellow creators whose work has been both elevated and denigrated by their connection to him, this film is a complex look at a show that influenced the history of television, animation, and comedy. More than a celebration, Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story forces us to consider the role of media creators and how we reckon with the reality of who they are versus what we see on the screen.

ren-and-stimpyThat synopsis does a grand job of laying the groundwork for what you should expect with this Ren & Stimpy documentary. It’s tailormade for fans who grew up with the outlandish and boundary-shattering Nicktoon, but it’s also accessible for folks who’ve never seen an episode (though I’d imagine it’s even more surreal for the latter crowd). The animated series didn’t just knock down barriers in the animation industry, it whizzed all over them. To put Ren & Stimpy into context for our younger readers out there, it was basically the Rick and Morty of the early 1990s. Both R&S and R&M fans–a minority of them, I hope–have held the creators up as demigods and were more than willing to send death threats to creative forces behind the scenes who, in fans’ estimation, posed a threat to the creative vision. If R&M fans lost their collective shit over Szechuan Sauce, imagine what they’d do if Cartoon Network / Adult Swim fired Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon from the show and then pulled it altogether. Yikes.

But that’s exactly what happened to Ren & Stimpy. Kricfalusi and his team of avant garde-meets-anarchy artists were the animation rockstars of their time, but the rise of the show’s popularity was meteoric … and the crash was spectacular. Happy Happy Joy Joy handles both facets of the story incredibly well. The first third of the runtime is dedicated to the crazy team of artists and animators who bucked traditions and overcame long adds to bring a punk-rock approach to kids animation. It chronicles the early careers of Kricfalusi and introduces Lynne Naylor, Bob Camp, the late Chris Reccardi and many more creative talents who built Ren & Stimpy from the ground up. Kricfalusi’s art style and extreme dedication to the craft united and inspired this ragtag team to achieve something that no one in the industry had seen before. Ren & Stimpy pulled the animation business out of corporate-run decision-making based on toy sales, bland morality plays, and mass market appeal and sent it on a crash course toward unique, creator-driven content.

And then the wheels came off.

The second third of the documentary plays like the desperate crash after a breathtaking high. It tells, in detail, how Ren & Stimpy became a victim of its own success, specifically calling out Kricfalusi’s controlling, abusive practices in both the Spümcø studio and in Nickelodeon’s own production offices. All of the artists interviewed cite Kricfalusi’s signature genius and dedication, but they vary in just how much blame for the fallout they lay at his feet; he’s seen as anywhere from completely responsible for the fall, to an artist suddenly thrust into stardom who failed to manage his own success. The truth is certainly somewhere in that spectrum. The fact is that Nickelodeon fired Kricfalusi from the show after numerous altercations, and while they tried to keep production going under Camp, Ren & Stimpy itself folded a few years later.

It would take more than 20 years after that for the first underage sexual abuse allegations against Kricfalusi to gain worldwide attention. And that’s what the final third of the documentary addresses, complete with direct responses from Kricfalusi himself and a personal account from his former fan, flame, and protege, Robyn Byrd. I applaud the filmmakers who tackled this sensitive subject head-on, as I do both Byrd for telling her story on the documentary itself and Kricfalusi for addressing it. Filmmakers Cicero and Easterwood push Kricfalusi harder on their questions than they do his co-workers, who say they were surprised to learn that the artist’s inclination towards young, underage girls was more truth than just simple locker room talk. But it took more than 20 years for Byrd to find the courage to speak out thanks in part to the silence and averted eyes of everyone else in the studio and the industry; she is now seen as a shield and cautionary tale that defends other young female artists who might have otherwise given up on their dreams.

To paraphrase Byrd: Just because pain has brought art into your life as a way of coping with it, that doesn’t give you the right to impose pain on others.

So, what remains of the legacy of both Kricfalusi and Ren & Stimpy? For the man who holds the “Created by” stamp–itself a matter of contention since Nickelodeon executive Vanessa Coffey actually pulled those two specific characters out of Kricfalusi’s Our Gang pitch for development–his actions and behavior going forward will speak volumes and his full story has yet to be written. It’s more complicated for the Nicktoon itself. Dozens of talented people worked on Ren & Stimpy, so is it fair to demonize its brilliance and artistry because of the personal failings of its core creative influence? At the same time, can Ren & Stimpy ever manage to shake Kricfalusi from its history after embracing the self-imposed “Created by” badge? That’s a decision that each individual fan out there will have to make for themselves, but thankfully the documentary addresses that complicated issue, as well.

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story is at once a love letter to the classic Nicktoon that paved the way for creator-driven content over the last 30 years and is also an exploration of the personal demons that can drive an artist to both fame and failure. There is an absolute wealth of incredible behind-the-scenes stories, images, and trivia here for animation fans and Ren & Stimpy fanatics, but it’s all tainted with the hard truth of Kricfalusi’s difficult upbringing, abrasive personality, and abusive tendencies. And that’s exactly what you want in an objective documentary that deals with both a pop culture phenomenon and a divisive creator at its center.

Rating: A

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From The Utah Review:

Sundance 2020: Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren and Stimpy Story absorbing, sharp, potent, immaculately researched documentary

If there was one episode from The Ren & Stimpy Show, the cartoon which aired on Nickelodeon in the first half of the 1990s, which encapsulated its creator’s mindset, it was the Christmas season episode Son of Stimpy.

Stimpy breaks wind, convinced that he has given birth to ‘Stinky.’ Ren, of course, does not believe Ren. Stinky runs away and Stimpy desperately searches for his beloved fart.

The 1993 episode almost did not air because the network asked the cartoon’s creator John Kricfalusi (a/k/a John K) to make stories with more heartwarming notes than the usual fare with heavy adult and gross-out scatological undertones, which had made the children’s cartoon immensely popular. John K despised, as he describes it, the “fake pathos” generated in films by tricks with cinematography and music. To prove his point, he based the episode’s story on the nonsensical premise of Stimpy not being able to fart again, using precisely the tricks he despised to prove that one could inspire a viewer to cry even at a story’s most ridiculous premise.

A clip from this episode is featured in the absorbing, sharp, potent and immaculately researched documentary Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story, which has its premiere at Sundance this year. Making their feature-length debuts as director, Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood capture perfectly the essence of this cartoon classic’s status as a pioneer in the genre of animation. They also deftly handle the damaging self-inflicted consequences of John K’s legacy – the disparaging treatment of colleagues driven by his narcissistic compulsion for creative control and the underage relationships he had with young women in the 1990s, along with other stories of abuse and sexual misconduct.

However, this documentary’s genesis started out on a far more innocent note. Cicero (who had last seen a Ren & Stimpy episode at least 20 years before he began work on the film) and Easterwood (who says in an interview with The Utah Review, “I was not a cartoon fan as a kid so I never watched an episode”) initially set out to document comprehensively the creative team’s gifts that led to Ren & Stimpy. And, when the news broke in 2018 about John K’s relationship with Robyn Byrd (who is featured in the film), a young admirer who initially was inspired by his gifts as a cartoonist, the filmmakers were shocked. Cicero says, in an interview with The Utah Review, “it was a ‘Holy Cow’ moment for us. We realized the film at that point was ruined.” Just three days before, they had entered the credits for the completed film.

A still (John Kricfalusi) from Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story by Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood, an official selection of the Documentary Premieres program at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Kimo Easterwood.
In reworking the film with the news that had just broken, Cicero and Easterwood managed to obtain on-camera interviews from John K, who previously had refused their requests. “It was not an easy process,” Cicero says, adding it took negotiating six months to secure his appearance on camera. The directors worried that even after filming, John K might refuse to sign the release. “To his credit, he did,” Cicero adds.

Byrd, who also agreed to be interviewed, has traveled to Park City for the premiere. Now living in Illinois, she is “all but dissertation” on her Ph.D in applied linguistics. Her Twitter profile reads, in part, “reformed cartoonist/ESL teacher/scrappy AF, will kick in some knees.” A Jan. 23 tweet from Byrd reads, “I survived abuse at the hands of a man who thinks he’s a genius. Not only am I smarter than him (which is not that important)… but I have healthy, long-lasting, affirming, fun, giving relationships. Considering the trauma he caused, I feel like that is a miracle.”

In all of the instances where John K is featured in the documentary, the complex array of his skills as a cartoonist, the improprieties, the insincerity of his apologies, his penchant for sweeping generalizations and his lack of humility or self-effacement emerges in a clear yet disturbing portrait. In fact, his demeanor is pretty much the same as in a 1992 Film Criticism interview with Wheeler Winston Dixon. In that interview, when he was asked about if he is ever pressured by Nickelodeon or outside groups to be politically correct, he said, “No. I feel obligated to be politically incorrect! I think that’s the stupidest term I’ve ever heard in my life! Why is one person’s view politically correct when another person’s isn’t? Who decides that?”

However, in the documentary scenes regarding questions about his abuse and conduct, John K conveys the sense without words being spoken that he at least is aware of his guilt but he goes no further to account for the damage he has wrought. Again, this is consistent with his ‘apology’ that he posted on Facebook in 2018 to Byrd and Katie Rice (another victim who appears in the film). He described his behavior as “inappropriate.” He added, “There is some general truth in it, some things I remember differently, some not at all. The writer exaggerated and presented some things out of context for tabloid consumption.”

Cicero and Easterwood are meticulous and successful in handling the multilayered controversies that frame the telling of The Ren & Stimpy Story, which lead to the epiphany question for viewers to contemplate: Can one still value the art for its creative merit with the same previous devotion and acclaim even as the most damaging and disturbing details of the creative artist’s life are revealed?

The film’s research emanates in many magnificent moments, with artwork, clips and interviews featuring artists, actors, executives and fans. We learn about Spumco, the in-house production unit; the generous, visionary and risk-taking support of Nickelodeon executive Vanessa Coffey; the battles with Nickelodeon not just about having the episodes delivered late but also about the content that often was not advertiser-friendly, and fans such as comedians Iliza Shlesinger, Chris Gore and Bobby Lee. Even the film’s documentary score strongly echoes classical music elements heard in Ren and Stimpy episodes.

John K did not use scripts believing that they were outdated tools and insisted on figuring out the gags in a brief outline that was perhaps two or three pages. Likewise, the story and the dialogue would be filled out on the storyboard. And, the show relied heavily on acting. After auditing numerous professional voice actors for the role of the asthmatic chihuahua Ren, John K decided to take on the part himself, offering what he described as a bad impersonation of the actor Peter Lorre, whose voice frequently has been parodied by comics and other cartoons.

The episode that soured the relationship with Nickelodeon was Man’s Best Friend, which was pulled before it was scheduled to air and led to John K’s firing. It featured George Liquor, an abusive man who pushes Ren to beat George to a bloody pulp with an oar. The oddest thing is that of all the characters John K wanted returned to him, it was George Liquor. In the documentary, we learn that he based the character in part on his father.

In the aftermath John K refused to tone down the controversy, insisting on reaching beyond the boundaries that had led to his firing. He produced a half dozen episodes for Ren & Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon but they were considered in such vulgar taste that even Billy West, the voice actor of Stimpy, refused to do. Only three episodes were aired before the series was canceled for good.

Indeed, John K. destroyed a legacy that should have been a brilliant chapter in fearless creative work for a television genre that long had been constricted by tame, prissy conventions to avoid offending the commercial preferences of program advertisers. The film by Cicero and Easterwood lucidly portrays how he wasted the goodwill of a tremendously talented staff and crew, supportive executives, fans and industry peers and, more significantly, inflicted long-lasting trauma on young victims who initially had sought out his guidance as a creative mentor. It is hard to imagine how anyone can enjoy Ren & Stimpy with the same admiration and enthusiasm they had when the show first aired nearly 30 years.

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From Showbiz Cheat Sheet:

'Ren & Stimpy' Documentary Gets Answers from John Kricfalusi [Sundance]

The Ren & Stimpy Show was a groundbreaking animated series for Nickelodeon and ushered in a wave of edgy ‘90s animation. John Kricfalusi created the characters and the documentary Happy Happy Joy Joy depicts the difficulties both he faced and those who worked with him faced.

If you’re wondering about the 2018 allegations that he sexually abused teenage girls, the documentary addresses that too. The filmmakers confront Kricfalusi about it.

‘Ren & Stimpy’ in the history of animation
The beginning of Happy Happy Joy Joy sets the stage for the world Ren & Stimpy rocked. Animated shows in the ‘80s were all about selling toys. Nothing wrong with that. A lot of our childhood favorites were made to sell toys and we loved them whether we owned the toys or not.


Still, in that environment Ren & Stimpy was groundbreaking. It embraced the sort of scatalogical humor of bodily functions that entertained kids, but entertainment was its first and foremost concern. A few minutes into the film, they introduce John Kricfalusi. As an animation aficionado, it sounds like he wanted to make animation great again. He doesn’t say those words but he expresses frustration with the climate of animation at the time.

The troubled making of ‘Ren & Stimpy’
The bulk of Happy Happy Joy Joy documents the making of Nickelodeon’s show. Die had Ren & Stimpy or animation fans may already know much of this, like the episode delays and ultimate firing of John Krikfalusi. The filmmakers found photos and video of pitch sessions and signing, plus storyboards and clips to illustrate the narrative.

Kricfalusi was lively in his pitches. Those sorts of demonstrations probably helped sell Ren & Stimpy but also spoke to some of the turmoil brewing inside. Happy Happy Joy Joy points out some of the naughty elements of Ren & Stimpy you may have missed as a kid. The film introduces Robyn Byrd in this early section as a young animator who wrote to Kricfalusi. More on that later.

Happy Happy Joy Joy singles out a few significant Ren & Stimpy episodes, both for their emotional content and some that pushed too far and got banned. Kricfalusi is self-reflective about his influences and some of the most outrageous Ren & Stimpy shows were very personal.

John Kricsfalusi couldn’t quite deliver ‘Ren & Stimpy’
It seems episodes were coming in late from the very beginning. Fans certainly followed the frustrating randomness of new episode airings and questioned the ousting of Ren & Stimpy’s very creator. The documentary offers more details and gives the network a fair shake. There is the artist’s vision and then there’s the reality that you do have to produce shows. Yes, animation is difficult and time consuming, but other animated series meet their airdates.

Kricfalusi won’t quite own up to his role in the development problems. He concedes that 20 episodes a season was too much for them. Maybe it was, and in 2020 there are shows that can do 13 or less in a run, but a deal’s a deal. He tried to revive a more adult version of Ren & Stimpy for Spike TV in 2003 but only three of the six episodes even aired.

The heartbreaking story of Robyn Byrd

At this point, Happy Happy Joy Joy returns to Robyn Byrd, really the story you’ve been waiting 75 minutes for. The flimmakers dissolve Byrd’s descriptions of her time with John Kricfalusi overlapping. It’s a classy technique that covers a lot and conveys how pervasive it was, while avoiding rehashing all the details in the news. Katie Rice does not appear but the film addresses her story and others’.

The filmmakers ask Kricfalusi the right questions. They probably get the most answers anyone will. Kricfalusi is apologetic but won’t fully incriminate himself. Happy Happy Joy Joy is a worthwhile documentary about a monumental pop culture phenomenon and its problematic creator. It comes at just the right time to address the full scope of his personality, and the larger impact he had on the people in his wake.

How to get help: In the U.S., call the RAINN National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 1-800-656-4673 to connect with a trained staff member from a sexual assault service provider in your area.

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From Solzy at the Movies:

Sundance 2020: Happy Happy Joy Joy

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story takes us through the journey of Ren & Stimpy while also touching on creator John Kricfalusi’s dark side.

Ren & Stimpy was a hit for Nickelodeon when it first hit the airwaves. Outside of those working on the series, nobody could have ever guessed what happened beyond the scenes. No, not creator John Kricfalusi performing the storyboards while pitching his ideas. It’s worse than this to tell you the truth. His behavior is something that would get him fired under today’s #MeToo and Times’ Up movements. As it should.

If anything, this documentary serves as a wider exposure of John Kricfalusi’s dark side. It’s this dark side that would hurt relationships with people working on the show. Think of it this way–when Ren & Stimpy came back in an adult series on Spike TV, it didn’t hit with the same impact. The reason for this is new version was missing the dedicated artists that worked on the show’s previous incarnation. Honestly, the tragedy behind Ren & Stimpy is among the worst in television history.

Co-directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood underwent months of interviews to get the story. The story that they get? One that celebrates the show. Nobody could predict what would come next. Everything changed come 2018. Until this point, John Kricfalusi declined to be interviewed for the documentary. Naturally, you think you have a finished film and then BOOM! Breaking news happens and the film must go in a different direction. In this instance, allegations surfaced regarding John Kricfalusi’s relationship with an underage girl. So what happens? Kricfalusi finally speaks on camera. Better late than never, I suppose. One would think that most of this is to contain the PR damage.

When we talk about films having more than one cut, Happy Happy Joy Joy may become a new prime example. New footage means a very different cut of the film. This speaks to how important editing becomes in filmmaking. Not only does new footage need to be edited into the film but how does the previous footage connect with the new footage? Editing is truly everything. It really is!

Watching the documentary does beg the question of separating art from the artist. The beauty in this documentary is asking if we can celebrate the success of the show but recognize the flaws in creator John Kricfalusi. Can one still love the show or will it become a victim of “cancel culture?” There is no easy answer to the question. Honestly, there might never be.

After viewing Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story, you’ll never be able to watch Ren & Stimpy in the same way ever again.

DIRECTORS: Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story holds its world premiere during the 2020 Sundance Film Festival in the Documentary Premieres program.

Grade: 3.5/5
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From The Sun:

NO LAUGHING MATTER Dark secrets of ‘Hitler-type’ Ren & Stimpy Show creator who ‘preyed on teen fans’

A NEW documentary about Ren & Stimpy reveals alleged sexual and verbal abuse at the hands of the show's creator, John Kricfalusi.

Several former staffers claim he was verbally abusive and two women accuse him of preying on them as teens in "Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story," which premiered Friday at the Sundance Film Festival.

The risky cartoon debuted on Nickelodeon in 1991 and quickly became a major hit, appealing to critics with subversive story ideas and drawing in kids with childishly-drawn characters that had adult personalities.

But despite Ren & Stimpy's early success, Kricfalusi remained dissatisfied and often took his anger out on his staff.

He was known for allegedly tearing up his employees' drawings if they were too tame and locked himself in his office for hours to redo already finished work, the New York Post reported.

"If they toned it down, they'd get what people called 'a beating,'" Kricfalusi says in the film.

One employee went as far as to describe his former boss as "a Hitler type."

His obsession with quality and pushing the envelope of censorship created months-long delays in production, causing the show to go over budget by hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Former Nickelodeon producer Vanessa Coffey said the Canadian animator cursed her out after she rejected the season 2 premiere for being too violent and claimed he made the network, not the other way around.

"He said that I 'could go f**k myself', he wouldn't take notes anymore,that he made the network, and that he was the star," she says in the doc.

Kricfalusi, who also voiced Ren, was canned by the end of Season 2 - the show was eventually canceled after the fifth season aired in 1995.

In 2018, Robyn Byrd told Buzzfeed News she had sex with the animator for the first time at a nearby hotel in 1997, when she was just 16 years old and he was 42.

She moved in with him that year and began working at his studios as an intern that summer, a dream come true for the teenage fan.

Another fan and former employee, Katie Rice, told the news outlet that a then-49-year-old Kricfalusi would walk around "with his wiener hanging out of his pants" when she worked from his Los Angeles home.

He professed his romantic feelings to Rice in a work email he sent her when she was only 18 years old, she told the news outlet.

Kricfalusi, now 64, was never able to replicate the success he found with Ren & Stimpy, and eventually moved on to more behind-the-scenes collaborations on music videos and internet cartoons in later years.

In spite of the abuse allegations levied against him, Kricfalusi claims he didn't realize the emotional damage he caused in either of his accusers.

"[I] felt like the lowest creature on Earth," he said after reading the Buzzfeed exposé.

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From JoBlo.com:

REVIEW: HAPPY HAPPY JOY JOY (SUNDANCE 2020)

PLOT: The story behind Nickelodeon’s seminal “Ren & Stimpy”, and the complicated, sometimes predatory man behind it, John Kricfalusi.

REVIEW: For fans of “Ren & Stimpy”, HAPPY HAPPY JOY JOY is a mixed bag. On the one hand, it’s packed with enough clips to make you nostalgic for one of the most demented, cerebral and often brilliant cartoons ever made. On the other, it makes the series all but impossible to enjoy as by the end you’ll know its creator, John Kricfalusi, all too well. At his best a brilliant, but complicated man, Kricfalusi, who sits for a thorough interview, is a troubled soul. While undeniably talented, so much so that “Ren & Stimpy” had no chance whatsoever when Nickelodeon infamously showed him the door, he was also a toxic, abusive man who treated his employees, friends and especially his romantic partners with absolute disdain. And that’s not even getting into some of the more sordid aspects of his personality, such as the allegations of sexual harassment and his highly inappropriate relationships with former young fans, such as one woman who he reportedly groomed from the age of fourteen, and became his romantic partner when she turned sixteen.

One thing worth noting - these aren’t only accusations. Kricfalusi admits what he did in the documentary, even if he stops short of expressing real remorse over anything other than the fact that his actions cost him his career (he admits that he’s currently retired - but not by choice). It should also be noted though - directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood do not make this aspect of his life their focus, a choice that produces mixed results. Instead, the focus is on the cartoon itself, which isn’t a bad way to go, but the accusations only really come into the film about fifteen minutes away from the ending, making them feel like a bit of a footnote. That said, Cicero and Easterwood have clearly tailored their film towards “Ren & Stimpy” devotees, and if you’re a fan of the show, chances are you already know what he did and this gives you a little added context non-fans may not have.

Thoroughly entertaining throughout, it can’t be denied that the subject matter is incredibly compelling. “Ren & Stimpy” was a full-fledged cultural phenomenon, albeit briefly, and both it and the man behind it make for compelling subjects. The impact it made on pop culture is enlightening, especially to a person like myself, who watched it as an eleven year old Canadian (when it aired on Much Music) and knew little about the effect it had on animation in general. It’s argued that Kricfalusi, with his demand for creative control and an all-important “created by” title card, paved the way for the makers of “South Park” and other important cartoons.

For those of us who watched it as kids and wondered why it suddenly started to suck after the second season, you find out why here although this is perhaps the only time where you’ll sympathize the network over the artist. He comes off as so insufferable you’ll wonder how he lasted so long at the helm, even if his work was brilliant. The stories are fascinating, with it coming out that it was the reaction to one deeply personal episode that triggered his downfall. Watching the clips, it also seems amazing that Nickelodeon let so much slide, although this willingness to push the envelope has allowed it to stand the test of time, even if its creator makes it hard to appreciate now.

If you haven’t seen “Ren & Stimpy” in awhile, HAPPY HAPPY JOY JOY is a mixed blessing. It’ll no doubt trigger so legitimate nostalgia, but it’s also a tragic story about how one man couldn’t help but inflict his pain on others at every chance he got. It’s fascinating, but also deeply tragic.

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From 812filmReviews:

SUNDANCE 2020: HAPPY HAPPY JOY JOY – THE REN & STIMPY STORY

Rating: 3/4

In 1991, a cartoon debuted on Nickelodeon that would change cartoons forever. The Ren & Stimpy Show, born from the mind of John Kricfalusi and the artists of Spümcø, pushed the boundaries of acceptable child programming and the limits of animation to revolutionary results while inspiring a generation of animators and kids. Nevertheless, a shadow sketches across its storyboards because of the grotesque acts of its creator. Ron Cicero and Kimo Eastwood’s Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren and Stimpy Story charts the path of the show—detailing all of the artists who made the program special and their challenges—while examining the psychology components that led to Kricfalusi crafting the show and becoming a predator.

For Ren & Stimpy enthusiasts, the most thrilling portions of Cicero and Eastwood’s documentary comes in deconstructing the origins of the cartoon. The animators: Corey Yost, Scott Wills, Bob Camp, Bill Wray, Chris Riccardi, etc.—recount the influences of the characters, from black and white films to comedy trios. They also recount the early days of working with Kricfalusi, who they speak about in referential terms.

Described as the next “Walt Disney,” Kricfalusi was a flight of energy that had rarely been seen before. His acting of storyboards became legendary, much like Disney, and his quest for perfection toxic. Animators describe the verbal and emotional abuse they suffered under the creator while he perched himself as a God. And like most icons, the brilliance of their shine hypnotizes many for a time, until their acidic drops return their worshippers back to reality. They were outsiders ordained to take down the city walls of cable television, and they believed in their charge. Watching a band of creatives fight for artistic integrity and freedom, unspool themselves for a cause they believe in, invites the most uplifting portions of Cicero and Eastwood’s doc.

However, the Happy Happy Joy Joy doesn’t solely bow at the altar of Kricfalusi. Incredibly, the directors talked the Ren & Stimpy creator into appearing in the documentary. He chronicles much of his childhood, one filled with multiple instances of abuse, and how it formed his ethos for perfectionism. We also receive the behind the scenes spats between him and Nickelodeon producer Vanessa Coffey, who often is left devastated at multiple parts while holding a Stimpy plush doll during her interviews. Furthermore, Cicero and Eastwood show the disintegration of Kricfalusi relationship with Lynne Neyer and later Bob Camp, and airs significant portions of the banned Ren & Stimpy episode “Man’s Best Friend.”

Nevertheless, the most harrowing portions arrives when Happy Happy Joy Joy inspects Kricfalusi’s predatorial history of raping under-aged girls. Robyn Byrd, one of Kricfalusi’s victims, describes the acts of grooming perpetrated by the Ren & Stimpy creator. And shockingly, Cicero and Eastwood coax Kricfalusi into addressing the multiple allegations of pedophilia and abuse levied at him. The results are stomach churning and achingly horrifying, nearly destroying whatever affinity one might have for the cartoon, even as Cicero and Eastwood carefully divide the program from its creator over the course of 104 minutes. That division, which doesn’t allow for a deeper dive on allegations (they mostly take up 20 minutes) often seems one note. Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story is engrossing and gutsy, and tactfully executed, but could be more combative.

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From Celebrity Insider:

Alleged Misconduct Of Ren And Stimpy Creator Revealed In New Documentary At Sundance Film Festival

Ren And Stimpy has become one of the most influential cartoons of all time, however, after ten years of run-time, the staff behind the popular Nickelodeon series were not as happy as one might suspect.

The New York Post recently picked up on a new documentary that screened at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival called Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren and Stimpy Story.

The doc purports to explore the behind-the-scenes problems at Spumco Studios, helmed by the series’ creator, John Kricfalusi, who has since been accused of several transgressions. An animator said in the documentary that Kricfalusi had “rock-star status,” and how the show collapsed was “tragic,” like a “Shakespearean Play.”

Before Ren and Stimpy began, cartoon animation wasn’t doing well on the market, as many of them were cheaply made and concerned with marketing products. However, Kricfalusi, who was a true believer in cartoon animation, shopped around his show which later went on to great success.

One source claimed that Kricfalusi would pitch his ideas to executives sometimes in a dramatic manner, even forcing them to escort him out of the building on one occasion. In 1991, Nickelodeon began investing in cartoons, Nicktoons, and Vanessa Coffey, who was a producer at Nickelodeon at the time, became interested in his subversive ideas.

When the show finally premiered, it was an instant hit. Despite the cartoon’s success, Kricfalusi’s erratic behavior increased. Reportedly, he was known to angrily rip up his employee’s drawings and lock himself in his office redoing the work of others.

Another person in the film described him as a “Hitler type,” stating that his obsession with quality and perfection was out of control, sometimes even leading to month-long delays and hundreds of thousands of dollars spent over the pre-established budget.

During the first episode of the second season, Vanessa Coffey had to reject the first episode, titled, “Man’s Best Friend,” due to its violence. Kricfalusi was fired after the second season and the series plummeted in the ratings afterward. Nickelodeon canceled it in 1995.

Then, two years ago, a BuzzFeed article came out claiming that Kricfalusi had been in a relationship with a 16-year-old girl. Another girl, Katie Rice, sent him a letter when she was 14-years-old. She later interned with him and began a sexual relationship after moving into his home.

She claims she was isolated and her life was controlled by him from the age of 14 until 21. Through tears in the documentary, Rice claimed it was tragic that he “used Ren and Stimpy” in that way. In the doc, Rice claims that she still has nightmares about him until to this day.

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From Polygon:

The new doc Happy Happy Joy Joy questions Ren & Stimpy’s legacy

Aimed at fans, the film grapples with the art-vs.-artist debate

Logline: Happy Happy Joy Joy - The Ren & Stimpy Story looks back at the making of the influential cartoon and the career of creator John Kricfalusi, who multiple women formally accused of sexual misconduct in 2018.

Longerline: According to former executive Vanessa Coffey, Ren & Stimpy was everything Nickelodeon needed to combat the staleness of late ’80s/early ’90s cartoons, and the complete opposite of what the network wanted out of kid-friendly content. But the concept of “Nicktoons” was simple: Hire visionary animators to bring idiosyncratic concepts to the screen. As close collaborators testify in Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood’s feature documentary debut, there was no one more visionary or idiosyncratic than John Kricfalusi.

The last decade has seen a rise in nostalgic “fan” documentaries, celebrating everything from movies (2015’s Back to the Future-praising Back in Time) to music (Taylor Swift’s own Miss Americana fits the bill) to comics (Dear Mr. Watterson, the ode to reclusive Calvin & Hobbes creator Bill Watterson). Happy Happy Joy Joy joins the crowd, interviewing animators who recall the exhilaration of working on the rebellious toon, and admirers, like Jack Black and Mad TV’s Bobby Lee, who were mesmerized by Ren & Stimpy’s painted close-ups of nipples. Littered with show clips and archival photos of the crew at work, including Kricfalusi delivering manic pitches in a tone that would make him the obvious candidate to voice Ren, the doc exalts the creator’s genius through the voices of those who knew him. Numbers back up the phenomenon status: Nick only ordered six episodes off of Kricfalusi’s pitch, but at the height of the series, one animator believes the show was producing nearly $4 billion in merchandising.

In what’s presented as something of a surprise, Kricfalusi also sits down for an interview. The animator walks Cicero and Easterwood through his childhood inspirations, early ideas for shows, character breakdowns of his infamous dog and cat (“Stimpy was an abject retard with a good heart”), and his philosophies on art, which range from the value of time-consuming caricature work to the importance of sneaking pieces of poop into frames where the censors would never catch them. Happy Happy Joy Joy presents the exploding Ren & Stimpy fandom through Kricfalusi’s eyes, and explores what those reactions meant to him. But only an hour and a half in do we realize Robyn Byrd, a young Ren & Stimpy devotee interviewed for the film who tells a story about mailing Kricfalusi a letter and actually getting a response, is the same person who accused him of abuse 20 years later.

Early on, one animator describes Kricfalusi as “the best drill sergeant you’ll ever meet, and drill sergeants do need to be cruel.” The full extent of that cruelty is the final note in Happy Happy Joy Joy. Chronicling the broad strokes of BuzzFeed News’ report from 2018, Cicero and Easterwood hear from both Byrd and Kricfalusi on how the Ren & Stimpy creator leveraged his standing in the industry to establish a romantic relationship. Kricfalusi does not deny courting a then-15-year-old when he was 41, but his reflection focuses more on mistakes made than apologies offered. Cicero and Easterwood leave the details of Byrd’s story, and the stories of his other accuser Katie Rice, out of the picture.

The quote that says it all: Grappling with Kricfalusi’s influence and his abusive behavior, Robyn Byrd tells the documentarians, “Pain does create great art, but you don’t have to keep inflicting pain to create great art.”

What’s it trying to do? Cicero and Easterwood chart every moment in the Ren & Stimpy saga in a way that reassures fans that this gnarled, grotesque cartoon was just as artful as they remember. The documentary spends a good chunk of time in the weeds on the animation process, showing how Kricfalusi and his Spumco Studios crew pushed the limits in every frame. It’s not all positive; Coffey offers powerful insight into how Kricfalusi’s perfectionism and blue humor led to his firing and the implosion of the show.

But the way the documentary explores Kricfalusi’s personal life, and how he crossed the line with multiple young women, plays like an addendum. Was this the culmination of stewing in his genius for so many years? What should people think of Ren & Stimpy now? By letting Byrd tell her story, asking Kricfalusi to respond, and allowing for the other artists involved with the show to make sense of it all, Happy Happy Joy Joy reaches for an answer to whether we should separate art from artist.

Does it get there? The structure of Happy Happy Joy Joy makes for insufficient exploration of Ren & Stimpy’s legacy. The show was one of the first cartoons to carry a “Created by” card, meaning the story of Kricfalusi’s abuse is also the story of the celebrated Nicktoon. Though one animator admits in broad terms that the show is now “covered in shit paint,” none of Kricfalusi’s collaborators are asked about the abuse or his behavior beyond his tendency to be a boss with a “sadistic edge.” As the BuzzFeed story makes clear, “stories of how Kricfalusi sexually harassed female artists, including teenage girls, were known through the industry.” They are not chronicled in Happy Happy Joy Joy, save for one emotional follow-up interview with Coffey. (Worth noting: The film was produced and funded via Indiegogo in 2017, and it’s possible much of it was shot before BuzzFeed published the report on Kricfalusi.)

What does that get us? Happy Happy Joy Joy did not have to deliver a verdict on the art-vs.-artist debate, but a more successful documentary might demand conclusions from its subjects. Cicero and Easterwood seem to have an opinion, or one that fits with the first 90 minutes of the movie; even after Byrd’s emotional story, the film returns to animator interviews that remind us of Ren & Stimpy’s transformative power. That unspoken, authorial comment feels like the easy answer, and ultimately prevents the film from finding a bigger picture.

When can we see it? Happy Happy Joy Joy is an independent production that premiered at Sundance, and it’s currently seeking distribution.

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From Film Threat:

HAPPY HAPPY JOY JOY

SUNDANCE 2020 FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW! There are two animated shows on television today that have pushed the boundaries of decency and have been attacked because of their negative impact on the moral foundations of family-friendly cartoons on TV. They are The Simpsons and South Park. But arguably, there should have been one more (really many more), but for this review, I’m talking about Ren & Stimpy in Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood’s documentary Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story.

While Happy Happy Joy Joy starts as your typical how-did-this-get-made-type documentary, it becomes something very different in the end. The doc opens with Hollywood industry types, including a certain rebellious and mildly famous film magazine editor, gushing over Ren & Stimpy’s influence on modern animation today, and how amazing it was for a radical show like this ever made it on children’s television.

“…starts as your typical how-did-this-get-made-type documentary, it becomes something very different in the end.”

Beginning in 1991, Ren & Stimpy ran for five seasons on Nickelodeon, but the documentary focuses primarily on the first. The primary subject of the documentary is Ren & Stimpy’s creator John Kricfalusi. As docs do, Happy Happy Joy Joy goes over his childhood love of animation, his disdain of the limited-animation-style appearing on television at that time, and his dream to change the landscape of the genre.

Getting on Nickelodeon wasn’t easy, and both Kricfalusi and Nickelodeon’s Vanessa Coffey go into detail about how John pitched a show about a gang of kids. However, Coffey noticed the pets of one of the kids—a chihuahua and a cat. She wanted the series to be about them, and off they went. Kricfalusi established Spümcø with other artists and animators, many of whom appear in the doc. John would voice Ren, and Billy West would be Stimpy.

Not only did Kricfalusi produce an artistically beautiful and creatively unique style of animation, but he was also insistent on pushing the boundaries of network standards and practices. The stories of the war between creatives and networks are legendary, and the stories behind Ren & Stimpy are no different. The show had two things going for it. First, was an executive in Coffey, who believed in Kricfalusi’s vision and was the only one who could manage him, and of course, the ratings. Ren & Stimpy produced the highest ratings for Nickelodeon at that time.

As the documentary continues, you soon realize that while the film is about Ren & Stimpy (the show), it becomes about the rise and fall of a mad, creative genius. There’s no denying that Kricfalusi was a creative genius. He demanded artistic perfection in his product, which meant that artists at Spümcø worked long hours under a leader and father-figure, who was never pleased with your work. At the same time, Kricfalusi was always the first one in the office and the last to leave…if he ever left.

After the first season, the pressure got to everyone, and Kricfalusi started to become sort of a megalomaniac, and this is where you need to see the doc. Sometimes one’s genius, especially if you believe your own press, can be your downfall, and it was. The show’s success meant Kricfalusi was untouchable, and the show’s success said that in his mind, he was the one solely responsible for keeping it at the top of the ratings. But he was out of control and ultimately fired by Nickelodeon, two episodes into the second season. His second episode would never air for decency-sake.

“This is the film’s Catch-22.”

As Kricfalusi’s career begins to sputter, the documentary goes into a dark secret that, as of recent, slowly emerged after principal photography was completed. After his downfall from Nickelodeon, Kricfalusi began a series of inappropriate relationships with teenage fans. This creative genius now turned into a Svengali, stealing the hearts of young teen women, then manipulating and controlling them for his ego and pleasure. While the documentary doesn’t overtly cast judgment upon Kricfalusi, it does present the facts. Those facts overwhelmingly conclude that Kricfalusi became a serial abuser and pedophile.

This is the film’s Catch-22. You go through all the trouble of putting a fantastic documentary together about one of the most controversial children’s television shows in history and paint the creator as a creative genius, only to find out he’s a real scumbag. In the end, the story of the show Ren & Stimpy is a fascinating one, especially for fans and anyone who wants to push boundaries in Hollywood. It also doesn’t make a hero out of John Kricfalusi, who still desires admiration and sympathy. In fact, when given a chance to redeem himself, he sort of blows it…big time.

Happy Happy Joy Joy – The Ren & Stimpy Story screened at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival.

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From The Moveable Fest:

Sundance 2020 Review: An Animator Who Didn’t Play By the Rules Gets His Due, For Better and Worse, in “Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story”

The groundbreaking Nickelodeon show gets the warts and all treatment it deserves.

It may sound like an obvious observation when someone can be heard saying at the top of “Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story,” that the show’s creator John Kricfalusi sees ”everything in his life through the lens of a cartoon,” but a necessary one when it becomes evident that he believes the same laws apply to the real world and the one he created with a pen and paper, where the odder the character the better they could fit in, the infliction of pain would only hurt until the next commercial break, and one could spend an eternity being exactly the same age as when they stepped into the frame. Of course when “Ren and Stimpy” became a cultural phenomenon in its first season on Nickelodeon, this belief was affirmed and largely unquestioned when everyone invested in the show’s success weren’t about to point out the flaws in this logic or the resulting reprehensible behavior, but for anyone watching the show, with its gleefully deranged sense of humor and diseased character design that separated itself from anything else on television, let alone kids’ programming, there was a disturbed mind at work and as the saying goes, when people show you who they are, you ought to pay attention.

Directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood do that and and then some in “Happy Happy Joy Joy,” which is impressive as an engaging and exhaustive oral history of a groundbreaking show, but more so for being able to hold multiple truths about someone as simultaneously admirable and repulsive as Kricfalusi, from advancing the cause of animators as artists by crediting himself in the boldest title card possible while denying the collective work that was crucial to the success of “Ren and Stimpy” by singling himself out, keenly understanding how to build a team while not knowing how to work well with others, and most significantly to his downfall, the notion that his extended adolescence blinded him to the impropriety of having sexual relationships with teenagers who worshipped him when he likely saw himself as not being much older.

There are limited resources at play, visible in the reuse of archival footage because there surely wasn’t more available, but the number of people willing to go in record isn’t one of them, including Kricfalusi, now exiled but still proud, and while the film can feel slightly repetitive with so many talking heads, no stone is left unturned about the unlikely development of Ren and Stimpy from minor characters in another show Kricfalusi was working on, the wild workplace culture that turned toxic at his company Spumco, and eventually his relationship with the 13-year-old Robyn Byrd, who would spend seven years with him in an abusive relationship where she saw her dreams of becoming an animator die.

Many of the people in “Happy Happy Joy Joy” likely haven’t spoken to each other in years and aren’t destined to do so again, but they appear to hold little back in front of the filmmakers, seemingly adamant about creating a definitive record of both work they believe is important as well as breaking a cycle of how it was created when so often unconscionable behavior in the name of art is lauded as being crucial to its creation. As vivid as their experience still clearly is in their mind, it’s conveyed just as vibrantly in a cultural climate where “Happy Happy Joy Joy” reminds of all the behind-the-scenes drama on so many sets revealed in the wake of the #metoo movement as well as reevaluations of autobiographical work veiled as entertainment. While it’s frightening to think of this story as part of an open-ended cycle that persists to this day, the film holds considerable power as a closed loop charting Kricfalusi’s rise and fall, intriguingly celebrated for the same qualities that he would become vilified for when the pretense of artistic expression was dropped, making its preview for what’s perhaps to come for those predatory artists whose exploits have become known a fitting tribute to a show that was always ahead of its time.

“Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren and Stimpy Story” will screen at the Sundance Film Festival on January 28th at 3:30 pm at the Library Center Theatre in Park City, January 29th at 11:30 am at the MARC Theatre in Park City, January 30th at 11:30 pm at the Prospector Square Theatre in Park City, February 1st at 6:30 pm at the Rose Wagner Center in Salt Lake City.

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From Black Girl Nerds:

Sundance 2020 Review: ‘Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story’

As a millennial, I vividly remember the ’90s being the prime decade for some of the greatest animation including the hit Nickelodeon series Ren & Stimpy.

The ’90s brought us a different cream-of-the-crop of animated shows. It wasn’t Looney Tunes, Disney, or even Don Bluth. It was something a bit darker, more sinister, a bit grittier, and most certainly ahead of its time. If you switched the TV channel over to MTV at the time, you might have caught a TV show called Liquid Television, a barrage of animated clips from comic strips to claymation to a little-known show of two slackers watching music videos in their living room called Beavis and Butthead.

For us, these weren’t cartoons; this was so much more. Ren & Stimpy, albeit a show on a kids’ network called Nickelodeon, was ostensibly a TV show for a mature audience. Although I was 11 years old when Ren & Stimpy premiered in 1991, I got most of the adult jokes that were supposed to go over my head and loved every second of it.

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story, which premiered at Sundance, breaks down the origin story of how the characters of Ren and Stimpy came to life and dives into the mind of the show’s complicated creator John Kricfalusi, the visionary whose rise and fall changed the course of the show and its artists forever.

The documentary features commentary from comedian Bobby Lee, who says, “If Tom and Jerry and had a portal to hell it would be Ren and Stimpy.” Other featured interviews are from Jack Black and Chris Gore of Film Threat Magazine. Artists and animators of Spümcø, the production company founded by John Kricfalusi and Stephen W. Worth, also spoke on their experience working with both John and on the show.

And although they each had their own separate experiences, collectively they all had one thing in common — John Kricfalusi was difficult to work with. He was a man who was passionate about his work, but he also had high expectations of his artists and wanted to be perfect. His temper got the best of him, which stood in the way of what could have made him great. According to John, his philosophy is, “If you make it funny, you win and become popular.”

He did make Ren & Stimpy popular, so much so that it broke cable rating records and was #1 in its time slot — which, for an animated series at the time, was almost unheard of. The animated duo became a pop culture icon in a relatively short time. The documentary also explores the origin of how he created each character; Ren (the dog), which resembles a chihuahua who hasn’t slept in days, was based on Peter Lorre’s voice and characterization. John Kricfalusi himself provided the voice of Ren, which was quite rare for a cartoonist to do at the time. Stimpy (the cat) was based on Larry Fein of The Three Stooges and was voiced by Billy West.

Kricfalusi would spend hours watching Kirk Douglas movies to study facial expressions for the characters. A lot of the wild and chaotic behavior of Ren & Stimpy mirrored John Kricfalusi’s own behavior. As his behavior spiraled out of control, he was let go out of his contract with Nickelodeon and fired from Spümcø in 1992. Bob Camp replaced Kricfalusi as director, and sadly the two have not seen each other since he took over the show in 1992.

The documentary takes a darker turn past Kricfalusi’s bad temper with his partners and into his private relationships with underage girls. There are two documented relationships featured in the documentary where he lived with two different girls and openly admits to it. Kricfalusi does not deny the claims and confesses to his mistakes. This sadly is what sealed the fate of these beloved characters and placed a permanent stain on the legacy of Ren & Stimpy, even bringing to tears a former Nickelodeon executive who believes he ruined their legacy and used those characters to lure young girls.

Kricfalusi tried to revive Ren & Stimpy on his own without his original team on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim, but it was quickly canceled after a few episodes. It sadly just didn’t carry the same flair as the original series did. In large part, it could have a lot to do with the missing magic of the original team as well as Kricfalusi’s own personal downfall.

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story is written and directed by Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood.

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From UPI:

'Ren & Stimpy' Sundance documentary addresses John Kricfalusi abuse charges

Jan. 28 (UPI) -- Directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood had finished a cut of their Ren & Stimpy documentary, Happy Happy Joy Joy, when sexual abuse allegations came out against show creator John Kricfalusi.

Ren & Stimpy, which ran from 1991 to 1996, starred a cat and a dog who engaged in a lot of scatological bodily function humor and sometimes adult innuendo. Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story profiles the Nickelodeon cartoon's creation and demise, including Kricfalusi's relationships with illustrators Robyn Byrd and Katie Rice when they were teenagers.

A Buzzfeed article, published in March 2018, recounted Kricfalusi's relationships with Byrd and Rice. Byrd wrote to Kricfalusi in 1994 when she was 13, hoping to pave the way for a career in animation. He responded, and by 1997, when she was 16 years old, she became his girlfriend. Rice wrote to him at 14 and alleged Kricfalusi had phone sex with her when she was no older than 15.

"It was done and it was a celebration of Ren & Stimpy, which now, of course, became outdated and potentially toxic once this news broke about the creator," Cicero told UPI before the Sundance Film Festival. "When the news broke, we then got John's interview and Robyn's interview and we completely restructured the movie."

Byrd contacted Cicero and Easterwood right before Buzzfeed published the article.

"Just before the news broke, Robyn actually reached out to me and said, 'Look, there's this whole other side of John that you're not aware of. I don't know where you're at with the documentary, but this story is going to break,'" Cicero said.

Byrd gave Cicero and Easterwood an interview. Rice already had declined an interview earlier when the directors saw a clip of her with Kricfalusi.

"We had seen that clip, which is in the movie, the DVD extra where John says, 'Hey, this is Katie Rice and she draws girl characters,'" Cicero said. "[We] reached out to her and she said, 'Look, I don't want to talk about John. It wasn't a great part of my life.'"

The directors didn't have to scrap the first cut. The story of Ren & Stimpy -- which explores Nickelodeon's foray into animation with executive Vanessa Coffey and animators who worked with Kricfalusi -- still proved relevant in examining the abuse for which Kricfalusi is accused.

"If we're going to understand John, we have to understand the show," Kricfalusi. "If you don't know the show, you have to understand the importance of the show to understand why we're even talking to John and why he's our lead character."

Cicero and Easterwood said it was complicated confronting Kricfalusi on camera.

"We feel that because we sat down with him off-camera for that length of time, we developed a sense of empathy for him," Cicero said. "By that, I don't mean a sense that we condone what he did or we're trying to be apologists for what he did. That's not what I'm saying at all."

Cicero hopes that by prompting Kricfalusi to take stock of his actions, Happy Happy Joy Joy can provide insight into what leads to such abuse.

"Unless you have that access and unless you have that trust and somebody's going to open up to you, you're never going to quite figure out the why," Cicero said. "I think both what John said and what he didn't say provided a window into that trauma and some broad answers."

Simply convincing people involved with Ren & Stimpy to discuss it proved challenging even before news about Kricfalusi broke. The documentary also addresses Kricfalusi's hostility toward collaborators and the show's struggle to even meet air dates.

"It was very difficult to get everybody because the show ended on such a bad note -- it was like a divorce," Cicero said. "So, when we called up the initial artists, they were like, 'Why are you wanting to dig up this divorce that happened in my creative family 25 years ago?'"

Cicero said Ren & Stimpy animators Bill Wray and Scott Wills were among the first to agree. They convinced other collaborators to talk to Cicero and Easterwood. At that point, they didn't have Kricfalusi to interview, so sought archival footage to represent him in the film. Some of that footage remains in the final cut.

"Nowadays, everyone's got a cell phone," Easterwood said. "At least 100 pictures a day are taken at someone's work, but back then, nobody was walking around with cameras. We had to scrape and beg and borrow and steal from a lot of the artists that maybe took some pictures at a birthday party one night."

The most helpful find was a collection of VHS tapes, including behind-the-scenes footage recorded at the animation studio while they were producing Ren & Stimpy.

"That really helped us out a lot because you got to see what the actual studio looked like back then," Easterwood said. "We really, really had to ask, beg and make people go into their garage and pull out boxes they haven't touched in 20 years."

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story premieres Tuesday at the Sundance Film Festival.

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From Salt Lake City Weekly:

Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story ***1/2 [Documentary Premieres]

“Warts and all” documentaries have an inherent intrigue, but there’s a particular jolt that comes from what this story ultimately explores. On the most basic level, it’s the story of the groundbreaking 1990s Nickelodeon cartoon series The Ren & Stimpy Show, focusing on creator John Kricfalusi and his team of innovative animators. There’s plenty of material simply involving the show itself, from its near-immediate popular and artistic success, to Krisfalusi’s firing from the show, to the many other creators influenced by its style. But the ability of directors Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood to get Kricfalusi himself on camera makes it possible to dig into the perfectionism and abusiveness towards collaborators that led to the show’s implosion, as well as the stories that ultimately emerged about his grooming of and long-term sexual relationships with underage girls. It’s a rare #MeToo-era film that allows us not just to look into the face of a sexual predator as he responds to what has been said about him, but to wrestle with how we are supposed to think about wildly creative works once we know the darkest truths about those who created them. (Scott Renshaw)

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From MovieMaker:

Ren & Stimpy Doc Makers Explain Why They Didn’t Tell a #MeToo Story

The directors of Happy Happy Joy Joy, a Sundance documentary about the ’90s cartoon Ren & Stimpy and its creator, John Kricfalusi, thought they were done with their film two years ago. Then BuzzFeed broke a story about Kricfalusi and two underage girls.

The directors, Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood, knew they needed to address the BuzzFeed report — and Kricfalusi’s admission that he had what he considered a boyfriend-girlfriend relationship with Robyn Byrd when she was 16 and he was in his early 40s. But Cicero and Eastwood were also committed to their original concept for Happy Happy Joy Joy.

“We always knew that we were not going to make a #MeToo documentary,” Easterwood told MovieMaker. “We had to stick to our original plan, which was a Ren & Stimpy documentary. … We just couldn’t get that deep into it because we wanted to stick to our original idea for a film.”

That decision has led to some criticism of Happy Happy Joy Joy, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival Tuesday and traces the rise and fall of Ren & Stimpy, a grotesquely beautiful cartoon about an abusive chihuahua and co-dependent cat.

Kricfalusi lost control of his creations in a series of clashes with Nickelodeon, which aired the cartoon in the early 1990s. Cicero and Easterwood spend about 90 minutes on that story before turning to Kricfalusi’s involvement with the two girls.

“Cicero and Easterwood have no idea how to handle the information in that Buzzfeed story, even with Byrd as a candid, but not too candid, talking head in the documentary,” reads the Hollywood Reporter‘s review of the film. “The directors gently push Kricfalusi for an unspecified apology, which he begrudgingly gives as part of a creepy plea for Byrd to contact him, positioning the entire situation as something unsavory and less-than-kosher, but far from borderline criminal. Make no mistake: Byrd’s Buzzfeed allegations are borderline criminal.”

The Buzzfeed story, which we recommend reading in its entirety, says Kricfalusi had inappropriate relationships with both Byrd and Katie Rice when they were teenagers who wanted to break into animation.

Byrd says she was 13 when Kricfalusi first wrote to her, and that he first touched her in a sexual way when she was 16. Rice told BuzzFeed that Kricfalusi made graphic sexual remarks to her during phone calls when she was underage, and sexually harassed when she became his intern.

Kricfalusi says in Happy Happy Joy Joy he would “definitely apologize” to Byrd and “admit to what I shouldn’t have done, that I did do.” He also expresses guilt and adds that he always had what he believed to be her “best interests at heart.” He tells the filmmakers he didn’t realize how hurt Byrd was, and adds that he wishes he could apologize to her in person, adding, “Give me a call, please.”

The directors told MovieMaker they decided to make the film after someone suggested Ren & Stimpy as a rich subject for a documentary — long before the BuzzFeed story.

“It actually started out as a documentary celebrating the show,” Cicero said. “Neither of us were fans. Kimo hadn’t even seen an episode before.”

When the story broke, Cicero says, they suddenly realized: “We have a toxic movie.” The dilemma was what to do about it. Abandon the project, or rework it to address the revelations? The film was self-financed, and they were “devastated,” Cicero said.

“This is our first film, this was supposed to be our calling card. And now it’s tainted,” he says he thought at the time.

Byrd’s willingness to talk with them helped get the project back on track, he added. Kricfalusi, who had previously declined to participate, agreed to talk with them as well.

But that led to questions about how to approach him, and how much to press him for a detailed response to the BuzzFeed story.

Cicero said he and Easterwood were careful “not to take a side.”

“First of all, we got John to talk on camera about these allegations,” Cicero said. “Several of them we addressed with him and asked him about, and as you saw in the film, he said, look, I don’t want to get into a lot of it, but he did ultimately talk about what happened with Robyn and for us it was really important not to take a side — not to say, oh, we’re condoning this — no.”

Cicero continued: “What we’re doing is, we’re presenting all the facts, which right now, by not taking an opinion and saying, ‘This guy is awful’ and spending two hours just pillorying him, is almost revolutionary, because these days, it’s like, either you’re a CNN person or you’re a Fox person, you’re giving your opinion, and we kind of felt that it’s led to this intellectual laziness. And obviously we’re not condoning pedophilia and we’re not condoning his behavior and we address it in the film. What’s kind of the bigger issue is how do you separate, or do you separate, the art from the artist?”

He added: “We wanted people to make up their own mind.”

Rice was invited to take part in the film, but declined, Cicero said.

In a statement for the BuzzFeed article, an attorney for Kricfalusi said: “1990s were a time of mental and emotional fragility for Mr. Kricfalusi, especially after losing Ren and Stimpy, his most prized creation. For a brief time, 25 years ago, he had a 16-year-old girlfriend. Over the years John struggled with what were eventually diagnosed mental illnesses in 2008.”

The attorney’s statement also said that “for nearly three decades [Kricfalusi] had relied primarily on alcohol to self-medicate,” but that he has since “worked feverishly on his mental health issues, and has been successful in stabilizing his life over the last decade.”

No one expects Happy Happy Joy Joy to be the last documentary to struggle with whether or not to become a #MeToo story. The situation sets off a debate about documentary ethics that will only become more pressing as we look at once-celebrated artists with increased scrutiny and awareness.

Happy Happy Joy Joy, Ron Cicero and Kimo Easterwood’s documentary about Ren & Stimpy and creator John Kricfalusi, premiered Tuesday at the Sundance Film Festival. It does not yet have distribution.

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H/T: Black Girl Nerds; Additional source: IndieWire.

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Mundo Avatar con la Pereztroica: Después del beso | Latinoamérica | Nickelodeon en Español


¿Hay nuevos códigos de amor creándose en los sistemas de Kral y Kósnica? ¡Solo la Pereztroica puede descubrirlo!

¡Conoce todo sobre el mundo Avatar y así prepárate para la llegada de Noobees2, muy pronto por Nick!

Más Nick:Viacom International Studios and The Mediapro Studio Wrap Production for 'Noobees 2'; To Premiere on Nickelodeon Latin America During Early 2020!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Latin America and Noobees 2 News and Highlights!

Mundo Avatar com la Pereztroica | Perguntas Incômodas | Brasil | Nickelodeon em Português

Kira Kosarin's New Music, Support, and LEAKING OWN SONGS | Backstage interview | The Scoop by Nickelodeon UK

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Kira Kosarin's New Music, Support, and LEAKING OWN SONGS | Backstage interview | The Scoop by Nick


Kira Kosarin talks about transitioning from The Thundermans to being a recording artist! Kira and The Scoop discuss performing "Poison"&"Take This Outside", her new favourite song "Simple", leaking her own music for fan input, and being a supportive human being!

More Nick:Nickelodeon Big Base Camp to Open Easter 2020 in Greenwich, London - Making Kids Stars of the Show!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon UK and The Thundermans News and Highlights!

'Cave the Date' | Trailer | Henry Danger | Nickelodeon

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Henry (Jace Norman) and the gang give the secret underground Man Cave a culinary makeover - complete with world-class chefs, the perfect ambience and a piano player - for Charlotte's (Riele Downs) private dinner with music superstar Jack Swagger! When word gets out that Jack Swagger is in town and visited the restaurant, some unwanted guests crash the party. Sacré bleu! So "Cave the Date" for the brand new Henry Danger episode (#534), premiering Saturday, February 1, 2020 at 8:00 p.m. (ET/PT), followed by an All New All That at 8:30, only on Nickelodeon USA!





View this post on Instagram

adding a little sunshine to your feed today

A post shared by Nickelodeon (@nickelodeon) on



More Nick:'Henry Danger' Wraps Production

Originally published: Sunday, January 26, 2020.

Additional source: Google.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon and Henry Danger News and Highlights!

NewBe, Splendid Film and Nickelodeon Benelux Collaborate on New Slime-Themed Movie 'De Grote Slijmfilm'

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NewBe and Splendid Film, in collaboration with Nickelodeon Benelux, have announced the release one of the world's first-ever theatrical movie about slime!


Titled De Grote Slijmfilm, the movie will star Slime Queen Bibi in the lead role. Slime Queen Bibi is a popular actor who is well-known for her cheerful sketches and DIY slime making videos on YouTube.

Nickelodeon has been synonymous with slime since the number-one entertainment brand for kids introduced the green semi-viscous substance to kids in the 1980's, and Slime is the ultimate symbol of free-spirited mess and the physical embodiment of Nickelodeon's unconventional spirit.

In recent years, slime has become one of the hottest trends with kids around the world, with many videos on YouTube teaching children how to make their own slime. De Grote Slijmfilm will be first time a Dutch movie dedicated to the global slime trend. The adventurous family film is all about friendship, cheerfulness, creativity and slime - a lot of slime!

De Grote Slijmfilm will be released in Dutch cinemas on Wednesday 5th February 2020.

Update (14/1/2020) - To celebrate the release of De Grote Slijmfilm, Bibi will be taking over Nickelodeon during February 2020 with special afternoon marathons of her favourite Nick shows! It all starts Sunday 2nd February 2020 at 11:30 uur!

In De Grote Slijmfilm, Indy (Bibi) and her BFF Olivia (Rómeycia Valentine), like all children around the world, love slime! On international slime day they participate in a competition to make the most original slime. The only one who hates slime is Dominicus Duff (Géza Weisz), the country's biggest toy boss. He no longer sells any of his own toys because of slime's popularity, so he wants to ban and confiscate all the slime in the world. Will Indy and Olivia be able to save slime?

In addition to Bibi's leading role, De Grote Slijmfilm will also star: Géza Weisz (Wiplala, Alleen Maar Nette Mensen), YouTube star Djamila (Misfit 2), Vincent Visser (Brugklas, GTST) and Sarah Nauta (Elvy’s Wereld: So Ibiza!)

The winner of the Youth News Competition 2019, Rómeycia Valentijn, has taken on her very first acting job with her role in the film. Ferdi Stofmeel (De Regels van Floor), Tina de Bruin (Dokter Tinus, Het geheime dagboek van Hendrik Groen), Edson de Graça, comedian and presenter Willem Wever, Belgium actor Tine Embrechts, Belgium presenter Sarah Mouhamou and Nickelodeon star Kate Bensdorp (Evie in Hunter Street) will also feature in the movie.

De Grote Slijmfilm is directed by Hans Somers (Hart Beat, De Ludwigs, Hunter Street) and produced by NewBe in collaboration with Nickelodeon. Splendid Film will handle distribution in the Benelux region.

Via het YouTube en Instagram-kanaal ​De Grote Slijmfilm​ is exclusief beeldmateriaal te vinden en kan iedereen op de hoogte blijven van de film. De Grote Slijmfilm draait vanaf woensdag 5 februari in de Nederlandse bioscopen, de Belgische bioscopen volgen later in februari.

Exclusive footage from De Grote Slijmfilm and well as news and updates from the movie can be found on the film's official YouTube channel and Instagram page.

De Grote Slijmfilm will be screened in Dutch cinemas from Wednesday 5th February 2019, with a release in Belgian cinemas following later in the month.

Below is Nickelodeon Nederlands official Press Release announcing the awe-slime news:

Eerste bioscoopfilm over slijm

18/11/2019

De Grote Slijmfilm
Vanaf 5 februari in de bioscoop

Vandaag hebben NewBe en Splendid Film in samenwerking met Nickelodeon bekendgemaakt dat er een nieuwe film over slijm wordt uitgebracht, namelijk De Grote Slijmfilm. De hoofdrol wordt vertolkt door Slime Queen Bibi, die bekend is als actrice en van haar vrolijke sketches en vele DIY- en slijmvideo’s op YouTube. Al jaren is slijm een begrip onder kinderen en via YouTube is een wereldwijde trend ontstaan waarbij kinderen zelf slijm maken. Dit is voor het eerst dat een Nederlandse bioscoopfilm inspeelt op de internationale slijmtrend. De avontuurlijke familiefilm staat in het teken van vriendschap, vrolijkheid, creativiteit en slijm, heel veel slijm! De Grote Slijmfilm is vanaf 5 februari is te zien in de Nederlandse bioscopen.

In De Grote Slijmfilm zijn Indy (Bibi) en haar BFF Olivia (Rómeycia Valentijn) zijn net als alle kinderen over de hele wereld gek op slijm! Op internationale slijmdag doen ze mee met een wedstrijd om het meest originele slijm te maken. De enige die een enorme hekel heeft aan slijm is Dominicus Duff (Géza Weisz), de grootste speelgoedbaas van het land. Door slijm verkoopt hij zijn eigen speelgoed niet meer en daarom wil hij al het slijm in de wereld verbieden en in beslag nemen. Lukt het Indy en Olivia om slijm te redden?

Naast de hoofdrol voor Bibi zijn andere rollen in de film weggelegd voor Géza Weisz (Wiplala, Alleen Maar Nette Mensen), YouTube-ster Djamila (Misfit 2), Vincent Visser (Brugklas, GTST) en Sarah Nauta (Elvy’s Wereld: So Ibiza!). De winnares van de Jeugdjournaalwedstrijd 2019 Rómeycia Valentijn heeft met haar rol in de film haar allereerste acteerklus te pakken. Ook Ferdi Stofmeel (De Regels van Floor), Tina de Bruin (Dokter Tinus, Het geheime dagboek van Hendrik Groen), Edson de Graça, comedian en presentator van Willem Wever, de Belgische actrice Tine Embrechts, Belgische presentatrice Sarah Mouhamou en Nickelodeon-actrice Kate Bensdorp spelen in de film.

De door Hans Somers (Hart Beat, De Ludwigs, Hunter Street) geregisseerde film is geproduceerd door NewBe in samenwerking met Nickelodeon en Splendid Film verzorgt de distributie in de Benelux.

Via het YouTube en Instagram-kanaal ​De Grote Slijmfilm​ is exclusief beeldmateriaal te vinden en kan iedereen op de hoogte blijven van de film. De Grote Slijmfilm draait vanaf woensdag 5 februari in de Nederlandse bioscopen, de Belgische bioscopen volgen later in februari.

###

DE GROTE SLIJMFILM - TEASER TRAILER | Het Grote Filmkanaal



YES! De trailer van DE SLIJMERIGSTE FILM van het jaar is NU te zien op het YouTube kanaal van Bibi! 🙀 Kijk hem snel via deze link: https://bit.ly/2XXHhc6

Laat in de reacties weten wat je ervan vindt! 🤗 WE 💚 SLIJM.

Volg ons op andere kanalen:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/degroteslijmfilm
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/degroteslijmfilm

DE GROTE SLIJMFILM trailer - 5 februari in de bioscoop



YES! Dit is de trailer van De Grote Slijmfilm! Vanaf 5 februari in de bioscoop.

Indy (Bibi) en haar BFF Olivia (Rómeycia Valentijn) zijn net als alle kinderen over de hele wereld gek op slijm! Op internationale slijmdag doen ze mee met een wedstrijd om het meest originele slijm te maken. De enige die een enorme hekel heeft aan slijm is Dominicus Duff (Géza Weisz), de grootste speelgoedbaas van het land. Door slijm verkoopt hij zijn eigen speelgoed niet meer en daarom wil hij al het slijm in de wereld verbieden en in beslag nemen. Lukt het Indy en Olivia om slijm te redden?

Volg ons op andere kanalen:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/degroteslijmfilm
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/degroteslijmfilm

NIELS LEZER INTERVIEWT STIEKEM ACTEURS?



Niels Lezer, de nieuwslezer van NieuwsTV heeft deze keer stiekem allemaal acteurs gesproken. Vincent en Bibi weten natuurlijk helemaal niet dat hij undercover is! ben jij ook zo nieuwsgierig wat hij te weten is gekomen? Gelukkig hebben wij de beelden! Kijk snel mee naar aflevering 2.

ZOVEEL SLIJM HEBBEN WE NOG NOOIT GEZIEN!



Deze nieuwe aflevering van Nieuws TV gaat over het aller-aller-allerbelangrijkste in De Grote Slijmfilm: SLIJM! Wel 5000 liter!! Maar waar is al dat slijm verstopt? Hopelijk kan de verslaggever het vinden..kijk je mee? Spannend!

BIBI VINDT MYSTERIEUZE VLOGCAMERA OP DE SET!



Bij deze aflevering van Nieuws TV pakt de nieuwslezer het anders aan, hij plant namelijk een geheime vlogcamera op de set. En die wordt gevonden door.. Bibi! Wil jij ook een geheime rondleiding achter de schermen? Kijk dan snel mee!

BIBI KRIJGT EEN HELE VREEMDE ASSISTENT?!



Deze week heeft Bibi zo ineens wel een hele vreemde assistent! 🤣Hij rent maar heen en weer en hij heeft ook nog eens een camera?! 🕵️ Hij lijkt wel een beetje op die verslaggever van NieuwsTV. Hmm.. zou hij het zijn? Kijk snel mee om meer te weten te komen! 💚

DJAMILA GAAT UNDERCOVER ALS TESS!



Deze week krijgt de nieuwslezer concurrentie 🔍. Hij komt erachter dat er nóg een verslaggever op de set is: Tess Purperhart 💜. Maar wat hij niet weet is dat Tess eigenlijk Djamila is.. gaat ze haar geheim verklappen? 😱 SPANNEND!

EEN SUPERMEGA XXL SLIJMCHALLENGE MET BIBI?



😱 WOW! WAT ZOU DIT ZIJN?! 😱 🎨 Bekijk supersnel deze SUPERMEGA XXL SLIJMCHALLENGE in Bibi's nieuwste video: http://bit.ly/SuperMegaXXLSlijmchallenge

BIZAR! 2 METER HOOG SLIJM MEESTERWERK MAKEN binnen 1 UUR CHALLENGE - Bibi



HELP! DIT IS ONMOGELIJK!! Ik heb de moeilijkste opdracht EVER gekregen!! Ik moet een MEGA Meesterwerk van 2 meter hoog maken van SLIJM!! En...ik mag er maar een uur over doen!!! HELP, dit is TE BIZAR!!! Ga ik het redden denk je? Veel kijkplezier! xoxo Bibi ♥♥♥

WINT BIBI OF SARAH DE SELFIE CHALLENGE?



WOW! De nieuwslezer heeft een speelgoedcamera uit de film gevonden, een super toffe KidiZoom Pixi van VTech!📸 Bibi en Sarah gebruiken de camera om een supervette selfie challenge te doen 🤳, maar de nieuwslezer wil stiekem gewoon weten wie er allemaal op de set is! 🔍 Kijk je mee?

Pssst... wist jij dat je deze camera ook zelf kan kopen: http://bit.ly/VTechCamera

WOW! BIBI ZINGT DE TITELSONG VAN DE GROTE SLIJMFILM!



YES! 🌟 Het is EINDELIJK zover: de titelsong van De Grote Slijmfilm is LIVE! 💚💚💚 En weet je wat nog veel cooler is: hij wordt gezongen door niemand anders dan Bibi! 😻 Wil je graag het hele nummer horen? Ga dan snel naar het kanaal van Bibi om te Zwemmen in Slijm!

ZWEMMEN IN SLIJM - Bibi [OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO]



STEM OP MIJ iN DE KiDS TOP 20: http://kidstop20.nl

Stream/download ZWEMMEN IN SLIJM hier:
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/0RENL4MJBQzlIHrEvqZSdD
Apple: https://music.apple.com/us/album/zwemmen-in-slijm-single/1495340777?ls=1

Titelsong van De Grote Slijmfilm met Bibi

YESSS mijn nieuwe liedje ZWEMMEN in SLIJM is uit! Samen met mijn vriendinnen Cyrille en Pien heb ik de videoclip opgenomen!! Het was weer mega vet en ik hoop heel erg dat jullie mijn liedje en de videoclip MEGA SUPER DE BOM vinden!! Want zeg nou zelf zwemmen in een zwembad met slijm dat is toch ieders droom?!? Veel kijkplezier! xoxo Bibi ♥♥♥

ZWEMMEN IN SLIJM [MUSIC VIDEO]
Productieleider: Nilton de Bodt
Producer: Anna Ruiter
Productie-assistent: Maxine van Kesteren
Regie: Christy van de Riet
Cameraman: Daan Schuurmans
Licht: Daan Schuurmans
Edit: Daan Schuurmans
Visagist: Shirodj Bholasingh

Met dank aan mijn vriendinnen:
Cyrille en Pien

ZWEMMEN IN SLIJM [MUZIEK]
Muziek en Tekst: Joachim Vermeulen Windsant & Maarten ten Hove
Productie en Mix: Future Presidents
Backingvocals: Bibi & Kirsten Michel
Mastering: Will Borza at Borza Mastering, Los Angeles

ZWEMMEN IN SLIJM [ARTWORK]
Thumbnail: Alwin.K Designs

OMG! DEED MEESTER MITCHELL DAT ECHT?!



OMG! LIET MEESTER MITCHELL EEN SCHEET? 💩Grapje, het was gewoon slijm. 💕 Bij wie zou jij dit grapje maken? Laat het weten in de comments. 🙈

ZUCHT, WAAROM ZIJN BROERS SOMS *ZO* IRRITANT?



Indy haar favoriete slijmvlogger Fie Valentijn geeft een SUPERVETTE prijs weg voor het allerbeste slijmrecept! 💕Natuurlijk wil Indy winnen, maar waarom begrijpen Daan en haar vader dat gewoon niet?! 🙄

WAT? SPEELT DEZE PERSOON IN DE GROTE SLIJMFILM?!



Deze week is de verslaggever van Nieuws TV wel iets heel spannends van plan! 🔍 Hij wil namelijk meespelen in de laatste scène van de film. 😱 Zal het hem lukken? Kijk snel mee! 💜

Meer Nick:'De Ludwigs' Returns with a Sixth and Final Season on Nickelodeon Benelux!

Originally published: Wednesday, November 20, 2019.

Additional sources: DeepL Translator, Google Translate, Anime Superhero Forum /@Lkoui.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nickelodeon Netherlands and De Grote Slijmfilm News and Highlights!

Nickelodeon OFF épisode #2 : coulisses de Fresh w/ Michelangelo (Tortues Ninja) | Nickelodeon France

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Nickelodeon OFF épisode #2 : coulisses de Fresh w/ Michelangelo (Tortues Ninja) | Nickelodeon France


Anna continue à te faire découvrir les coulisses de NICKELODEON dans NICKELODEON OFF

Dans cette vidéo, découvre comment est créée l’émission FRESH avec Anna et Michelangelo des Tortues Ninja.

Plus Nickelodeon:Nickelodeon OFF, épisode #1 : Anna et Lincoln Loud répondent à vos questions ! | Nickelodeon France !
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Top 21 Weirdest Scenes! 👻 SpongeBob SquarePants

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Top 21 Weirdest Scenes! 👻 SpongeBob SquarePants


SpongeBob is obviously very funny, but ever had a moment where you just went "HUH?" Yeah, things can get a little odd in Bikini Bottom! Here are Nick's top 21 moments that SpongeBob got WAY too weird!

Watch more SpongeBob SquarePants on Nickelodeon!

CALLING ALL GOOFY GOOBERS! (ROCK!) Are ya ready for a deep dive into the world of SpongeBob SquarePants? The SpongeBob YouTube channel is THE PLACE for all fan-favorite SpongeBob moments! We’re serving up everything from legendary scenes to remixes of classic songs to deep dives into Bikini Bottom lore. Be sure to check back every week for Music Mondays, Wumbo Wednesdays, and Flashback Fridays! Subscribe now at https://www.youtube.com/SpongeBobOfficial!

Join the OFFICIAL SpongeBob SquarePants Facebook Group here!: https://www.facebook.com/groups/SpongeBobSquareFans

More Nick:'The SpongeBob Musical' National Tour Announces Cast & Dates!
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Nickelodeon Cringe Compilation: Crush Edition 🤦 w/ Henry Danger, The Loud House & SpongeBob | Nickelodeon

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Nickelodeon Cringe Compilation: Crush Edition 🤦 w/ Henry Danger, The Loud House & SpongeBob | Nick


Making a fool of yourself in front of your crush? Cringe. Over-the-top couple names? Cringe. Mom talking about having a crush on dad? Double cringe. This Nickelodeon Crushes: Cringe Compilation might just convince you that it’s actually better to stay a ~lone wolf~ this Valentine’s Day. 😜 You can catch more Henry Danger, The Loud House, SpongeBob SquarePants, and ALL your favorite shows on Nickelodeon!

Jace Norman Interviews Jace Norman! 😮| Henry Danger


When it comes to getting juicy details about Jace Norman’s life, who better to ask the real, hard-hitting questions than… Jace Norman? Time to double up with this Jace-on-Jace interview! Wait… what?

Catch more Henry Danger everywhere Nickelodeon is available!

More Nick:Nickelodeon USA's February 2020 Premiere Highlights!
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Valentine's on Nickelodeon News and Highlights!

Blue's Clues & You: Planets Song, Find The Snail Game & Mailtime! (Vlog # 6) | Nick Jr.

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Blue's Clues & You: Planets Song, Find The Snail Game & Mailtime! (Vlog # 6) | Nick Jr.


Welcome to another Blue’s Clues and You vlog! In this episode, Josh and Blue head to outer space to sing along with the Sun about the planets in our solar system! After that, Josh and Blue play an exciting game of ‘Find The Snail’ and check the mail!

Watch more vlogs from Blue and Josh!: http://nickalive.blogspot.com/search?q=blue%27s+clues+and+you+vlog&max-results=20&by-date=true

Did you hear? Blue's Clues & You! has been renewed for season two!

Kids can watch their favorite Nick Jr. shows weekdays on Nickelodeon and all week long on the Nick Jr. channel: http://nickjr.com/tvschedule/

Preschoolers can watch full episodes online, play games, and discover silly surprises in the free Nick Jr. App and at NickJr.com. Stream Nick Jr. for free in the Nick Jr. App on Roku and Apple TV or download full episodes for offline viewing on iTunes or Google Play.

You can also download premium apps featuring your child's favorite Nick Jr. shows on iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon, including Nick Jr. Draw and Play and Nick Jr. Let’s Learn!

Watch more Nick Jr. everyday for FREE on Nick Jr. Pluto TV!

More Nick:Nick Jr. Live! "Move To The Music" U.S. Theatrical Tour Dates!
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Henry Danger: The Final Season | Back to Back New Episodes at Friday 6PM E/P | YTV

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Henry Danger: The Final Season | Back to Back New Episodes at Friday 6PM E/P | YTV


After countless criminals, a slew of secrets, and a whole bunch of bubbles... the final season is here to blow your mind...

Henry Danger: The Final Season Back to Back New Episodes at Friday 6PM E/P on YTV!

More YTV:Corus Launches Nick+ Amazon Prime Video Channel in Canada!
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Super Bowl Scavenger Hunt w/ the NFL & All That! 🏆 Nick

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Super Bowl Scavenger Hunt w/ the NFL & All That! 🏆 Nick


All That cast member Lex Lumpkin is at Super Bowl LIV in Miami on the most ridiculous scavenger hunt ever w/ Marquise “Hollywood” Brown from the Baltimore Ravens! How many tasks can he complete in the time limit!? Watch out for SLIME!

More Nick:Nickelodeon's 'Slime City' Immersive Slime Experience Heads to Miami, Florida!
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Amelie Bea Smith Cast as New Voice of Peppa Pig

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Entertainment One (eOne) and animation studio Astley Baker Davies have cast a new voice artist for the role of Peppa Pig.


Nine-year-old Amelie Bea Smith makes her debut voicing the title character of the beloved animated preschool series in new episodes that launch next month in the U.K., U.S., Australia and international territories that air episodes in English.

Smith is the fourth British voice artist to take on the role in English-speaking territories. Her voice will first appear in the Peppa Pig episode "Valentine’s Day", airing Friday, February 14, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. (ET/PT) on the Nick Jr. channel in the U.S.

Before voicing Peppa Pig, she appeared in several episodes of long-running British soap opera EastEnders in 2018 and 2019, and is set to appear in Netflix’s Haunting of Bly Manor.

Smith takes over from Harley Bird, now 18, who has voiced the cartoon pig for 13 years, since she was 5 years old, taking over in 2007 during its third season and voicing Peppa for 185 episodes, winning a BAFTA for the role in 2011. Bird is in her final year of school, and her acting credits also include feature film How I Live Now, alongside Saorise Ronan, Doctor Who, and Disney app series So Sammy, created by Miranda Hart.


Harley Bird, pictured, has voiced the character since she was 5.

Bird has been the voice of Peppa Pig in 185 episodes. As well as voicing episodes, Bird also performed songs for the recent “Peppa Pig My First Album” music release and the hit charity Christmas single "Bing Bong Christmas".

Previously, Lily Snowden-Fine and Cecily Bloom provided the voice for Peppa Pig, which first appeared on U.K. screens in 2004.

Peppa Pig co-creators Neville Astley and Mark Baker, added, “As our longest-standing Peppa, Harley’s award-winning contribution to the show over the past 13 years has been tremendous, making her a key part of the success of Peppa Pig.”

“We’re delighted to welcome Amelie to the Peppa Pig voice cast and are confident that she will continue the strong legacy of the previous Peppa voice actors,” they added.

Bird said, “Becoming the voice of Peppa Pig at the age of five was the start of an incredible journey, and I’ll never forget my time on the show. The people that work on Peppa Pig have become like a family to me and they’ve given me some unforgettable memories. I wish Amelie the best of luck in the role and am looking forward to starting the next chapter in my life.”

Smith's agent, Mark Jermin, said the 9-year-old was "thrilled" to be taking over the role. "Amelie has been a huge fan of the show since she was little, so voicing the title role is like a dream come true and she's thrilled to become part of the voice cast," Jermin added.

Peppa Pig first aired on the U.K.’s Channel 5 Milkshake and Nick Jr in 2004. It is now available in more than 180 territories and broadcast in more than 40 languages, including many Nickelodeon and Nick Jr. channels globally.

The show celebrated its 15th anniversary in the U.K. and Australia in 2019. There will be a total 381 episodes following the current production slate.

More Nick:VisitEngland Launches Peppa Pig Inspired Campaign to Encourage Families with Young Children to Take a Break at Home!

Sources: Variety, Deadline, CNN; Additional source: TVLine.
Follow NickALive! on Twitter, Tumblr, Reddit, via RSS, on Instagram, and/or Facebook for the latest Nick Jr. UK, Nickelodeon Preschool and Peppa Pig News and Highlights!
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