Former Office producer/director Ken Kwapis has sold two family-themed half-hour comedy projects to NBC, TVLine has confirmed.
The first, tentatively titled Fred and Marilyn, is inspired by the real-life relationship between writer Scott Prendergast (Kabluey) and his formidable mother.
The second is based on the best-selling Joey Pigza book series by Jack Gantos and is being billed as a high-definition family comedy. Claudia Silver (Jungle Junction) will pen the script.
Kwapis and Alexandra Beattie will shepherd the projects — both of which are only in the pilot script stage — through their In Cahoots production company.
The first, tentatively titled Fred and Marilyn, is inspired by the real-life relationship between writer Scott Prendergast (Kabluey) and his formidable mother.
The second is based on the best-selling Joey Pigza book series by Jack Gantos and is being billed as a high-definition family comedy. Claudia Silver (Jungle Junction) will pen the script.
Kwapis and Alexandra Beattie will shepherd the projects — both of which are only in the pilot script stage — through their In Cahoots production company.
- 8/31/2012
- by Michael Ausiello
- TVLine.com
Britain's most westerly town is home to Spider Eye, the animation firm behind the hugely successful Jungle Junction
Some fish for lobster and crab while others make a living off the land by working in the pasty bakery or helping service holiday homes. But a growing number of residents in Britain's most westerly town have less typically Cornish employment – creating cartoon animals with wheels for an award-winning Disney animation.
The success of Jungle Junction and other shows has made the Spider Eye studio in St Just the biggest employer in the town after Warrens bakery. Based in buildings around the green including the old police station and a one-time brothel (from the days when this was a busy mining town) the studio has more than 50 staff and uses another 40 or so freelancers in the area.
Morgan Francis, the founder of Spider Eye and director of Jungle Junction, said locals' eyebrows...
Some fish for lobster and crab while others make a living off the land by working in the pasty bakery or helping service holiday homes. But a growing number of residents in Britain's most westerly town have less typically Cornish employment – creating cartoon animals with wheels for an award-winning Disney animation.
The success of Jungle Junction and other shows has made the Spider Eye studio in St Just the biggest employer in the town after Warrens bakery. Based in buildings around the green including the old police station and a one-time brothel (from the days when this was a busy mining town) the studio has more than 50 staff and uses another 40 or so freelancers in the area.
Morgan Francis, the founder of Spider Eye and director of Jungle Junction, said locals' eyebrows...
- 7/10/2011
- by Steven Morris
- The Guardian - Film News
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