Brown Bag Films

Irish animation studio From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brown Bag Films UC. (BBF) is an Irish animation studio owned by Canadian media company 9 Story Media Group[4][5] and based in Dublin, with 2D and 3D animation facilities in Bali, Los Angeles, Toronto, and formerly Manchester.[6]

Company typeDivision
IndustryAnimation
Founded1994; 32 years ago (1994)
Founders
  • Cathal Gaffney
  • Darragh O'Connell[1]
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Brown Bag Films UC.
Company typeDivision
IndustryAnimation
Founded1994; 32 years ago (1994)
Founders
  • Cathal Gaffney
  • Darragh O'Connell[1]
HeadquartersUnit 20, Block C, Smithfield Market, Smithfield Dublin 7, D07 PV06, Ireland [2]
Number of locations
4 (2020)
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Cathal Gaffney (COO)
  • Darragh O'Connell (Creative Director)[3]
  • Gillian Higgins (Head of TV Production)
  • Jennie Stacey (Director of Production Development)
Parent9 Story Media Group (2015–present)
Websitebrownbagfilms.com
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Founded in 1994 by Cathal Gaffney and Darragh O'Connell, the studio is well known for the production of computer-animated television series and short films, including Give Up Yer Aul Sins[7] and Granny O'Grimm's Sleeping Beauty. The studio has garnered a number of awards, including Academy Award nominations for Give Up Yer Aul Sins (Best Animated Short Film at the 73rd Academy Awards) and Granny O'Grimm's Sleeping Beauty (Best Animated Short Film at the 83rd Academy Awards),[8] 6 Emmy Awards for Peter Rabbit,[9] an Emmy award for Bing[10] and a number of BAFTA, Emmy and Annie Award nominations for their shows; Octonauts, Doc McStuffins, Henry Hugglemonster, and Vampirina.[8]

History

Independent era (1994–2015)

Brown Bag Films was established in 1994 by Cathal Gaffney and Darragh O'Connell, producing their first series Peig for RTÉ using hand-painted acetate celluloids shot on 35mm film. In 1995, the studio moved to an old Georgian house off Gardiner Street, producing a few commercials and illustrations. Wolves, Witches and Giants was created in 1996 for ITV Studios.

The studio moved to new premises in Dublin city centre in 1997, establishing Ireland's first digital ink-and-paint workstation. They worked on the Warner Bros.Entertainment feature film The King & I, coordinating European animation with LA via the a 56K modem. Barstool and Taxi were produced for RTÉ and they began to grow their commercials service.

In 1998, Brown Bag Films produced the series "Why?" for RTÉ which sold in over 100 countries worldwide.

In 1999, Brown Bag Films released their short film The Last Elk, directed by Alan Shannon. The film went on to win numerous international awards.

In 2002, Brown Bag Films was nominated for its first Oscar, Give Up Yer Aul Sins, directed by Gaffney and produced by O'Connell and the company grew to a staff of 22.

In July 2007, Brown Bag Films moved to a new studio in Smithfield Square, Dublin, designed by Douglas Wallace Architects, and began production on their first animated series, Olivia, for Nickelodeon. In the same year development began on Noddy in Toyland.

In 2008, the studio began working on Granny O'Grimm's Sleeping Beauty, directed by Nicky Phelan, landing a second Academy Award (Oscar) nomination.

In 2009, Brown Bag Films delivered 20 hours of animation to international broadcasters and was awarded European Producer of the Year at Cartoon Tributes, Norway. The studio has grown to more than 160 people and is equipped with a high-definition picture and 5:1 audio post production facility.

In July 2010, the company established an office in Los Angeles to produce animated feature films.

In 2011, they premiered Darragh O'Connell's short film, "23 Degrees, 5 Minutes", voiced by John Hurt. They began production on Doc McStuffins – the first show commissioned by newly re-branded Disney Junior which it would premiere on alongside Disney Channel. The Octonauts was nominated for a BAFTA award. Brown Bag Films began production on their own original series, Henry Hugglemonster, based on a book by Niamh Sharkey, for Disney Junior.

In December of that year, Brown Bag Films strike a deal with Sydney-based Australian animation & live-action production company Sticky Pictures and digital design studio Kyla May Production to jointly develop and produce a tween animated comedy series called Dream Factory created by Kyla May that follows dream-maker Tommy Winks working in the dream-making studio in the clouds called the Dream Factory with Brown Bag Films' Dublin-based animation studio and Sticky Pictures' Sydney-based animation studio would handle animation for the series.[11]

On 23 March 2012, the premiere of Doc McStuffins broke rating records for the most watched preschool premiere ever in the United States. Brown Bag Films continue production on it as well as Henry Hugglemonster following Disney Junior's announcement of their series renewals and a second season of the Octonauts, and are joined by a very special new staff member – Toby the Studio Dog.

In 2013, Brown Bag Films began production on a short film ANYA, made to raise awareness for the charity To Russia With Love. Brown Bag Films recruit 30 new staff and expand the studio into a third premises.

In February 2014, Brown Bag Films announced a television series adaptation of the Bing book series by author and illustrator Ted Dewan. Following series renewals by the host TV networks, they continued production on a second season of Henry Hugglemonster and Peter Rabbit, a third season of Doc McStuffins and a fourth season of The Octonauts. Brown Bag Films launched Brown Bag Labs, an online space for behind-the-scenes fun and tutorials from the studio. Octonauts was awarded with an IFTA for Best Children's Programme. ANYA was released online to raise funds for To Russia With Love charity. They announce the opening of their 2D studio in Manchester. Their short film An Ode To Love is awarded Best Irish Animation at Foyle Film Festival. They release the Christmas Special episode of their new online series Trouble in Paradise.

In January 2015, their pilot episode of The Stinky and Dirty Show, based on the 'I Stink!' book series by Kate and Jim McMullan, debuted on Amazon Prime (now Amazon Prime Video) and was later greenlit for a full series. Bing is awarded for Best Writing in a Children's TV Episode by The Writer's Guild of Great Britain. Doc McStuffins received an award for Outstanding Children's Program at the 46th NAACP Image Awards and a Peabody Award at the 74th Annual Peabody Awards.

9 Story Media Group subsidiary (2015–present)

Brown Bag Films was bought by 9 Story Media Group on 18 August 2015 as a way of "re-introducing CGI animation to 9 Story" after "a failed first-attempt implementation", according to its president, Vincent "Vince" Commisso.[12][13][14] On 7 March 2016, they began work on a computer-animated series for Disney Junior, Vampirina, based on the Vampirina Ballerina series of children's books written by Anne Marie Pace and illustrated by LeUyen Pham[15][16] which debuted on 1 October 2017.

In October 2017, more than two years after Brown Bag was bought, it became one of 9 Story's two main divisions alongside 9 Story Distribution International, taking over all 2D and 3D animation across 9 Story's studios in Dublin, Manchester and Toronto. 9 Story also renamed its two animation studios in Bali (formerly BASE Animation Studios) and its base in Toronto after Brown Bag Films.[17][18]

Awards

At the 2014 Daytime Emmy Awards, Brown Bag Films bagged three awards and scored another five nominations for the series Peter Rabbit, earning the most nominations for an animated show that year.[19]

Filmography

Television

More information Title, Years ...
Title Years Network Notes
Wobblyland[20]2007–08Nick Jr.co-production with HIT Entertainment
Owned by Mattel Studios
Olivia[21]2008–10Nickelodeonco-production with Chorion Limited
Owned by DreamWorks Animation
Noddy in Toyland2009Five
Octonauts2010–presentCBeebiesco-production with Silvergate Media
Owned by Sony Pictures Television
Doc McStuffins2012–20Disney Jr.
Peter Rabbit2012–16CBeebies
Nickelodeon (United States)
co-production with Silvergate Media
Owned by Sony Pictures Television
Henry Hugglemonster2013–15Disney Jr.
The Stinky & Dirty Show2015–19Amazon Prime Videoco-production with Amazon Studios
Owned by Amazon MGM Studios Distribution
Bing[22]2014–19CBeebiesco-production with Acamar Films and Tandem Films
Nella the Princess Knight2017–21Nickelodeon/Nick Jr. Channel/Paramount+co-production with Nickelodeon Animation Studio
VampirinaDisney Jr.
Butterbean's Cafe[23]2018–20Nickelodeon/Nick Jr. Channelco-production with Nickelodeon Animation Studio
Let's Go Luna![24]2018–22PBS Kids
TVOKids (Canada)
co-production with 9 Story Media Group
Sadie Sparks[25]2019Disney Channel
Disney Channel France (France)
co-production with Cyber Group Studios
Xavier Riddle and the Secret Museum[26]2019–presentPBS Kidsco-production with 9 Story Media Group
Blue's Clues & You![27][28]2019–24Nickelodeon/Nick Jr. Channel/YouTube
Treehouse TV (Canada)
co-production with 9 Story Media Group and Nickelodeon Animation Studio[29]
Owned by Paramount Global Content Distribution
Powerbirds[30]2020Universal Kidsco-production with Sprout Media Productions
Owned by NBCUniversal Global Distribution
Chico Bon Bon: Monkey with a Tool Belt2020Netflixco-production with Silvergate Media
Owned by Sony Pictures Television
Ridley Jones[31]2021–23co-production with Netflix Animation Studios and Laughing Wild
Ada Twist, Scientist[32]co-production with Netflix Animation Studios, Higher Ground Productions, Laughing Wild and Wonder Worldwide
Karma's World[33]2021–22co-production with 9 Story Media Group and Karma's World Entertainment
Eureka![34]2022–23Disney Jr.
Sago Mini Friends[35]2022–presentApple TV+co-production with Spin Master Entertainment
Rosie's Rules[36]2022–presentPBS Kids
TVOKids (Canada)
co-production with 9 Story Media Group
Lu & the Bally Bunch2023Cartoonito
CBC Kids (Canada)
co-production with 9 Story Media Group
Eva the Owlet2023–presentApple TV+co-production with Scholastic Entertainment
A Kind of Spark2023–24CBBC
BYU TV (United States)
season 2 onwards
co-production with 9 Story Media Group and LS Productions
Dee & Friends in Oz[37][38]2024Netflixco-production with 9 Story Media Group
Dylan's Playtime Adventures2024–presentCartoonito
CBC Kids (Canada)
co-production with Scholastic Entertainment
RoboGobo[39][40][41]2025–presentDisney Jr.
Dr. Seuss' Horton![42]2025–presentNetflixco-production with Dr. Seuss Enterprises and Netflix Animation Studios
Sam Witch[43]2026Disney Jr.In development
Dragon Girls[44]TBATBAco-production with 9 Story Media Group; in development
Harry and His Bucket Full of DinosaursTBATBAIn development
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Film

More information Title, Release date ...
Title Release date Distributor Notes
Angela's ChristmasNovember 30, 2018Netflixco-production with 9 Story Media Group
Angela's Christmas WishDecember 1, 2020
Blue's Big City AdventureNovember 18, 2022Paramount+co-production with Nickelodeon Movies, Nickelodeon Animation Studio, 9 Story Media Group, Boxel Animation and Line by Line Media
The Sneetches[42]November 3, 2025Netflixco-production with Dr. Seuss Enterprises and Netflix Animation Studios
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See also

References

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