Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Arlene Phyllis Klasky (born May 26, 1949) is an American animator, graphic designer, producer and co-founder of Klasky Csupo with Gábor Csupó. [1] In 1999, she was named one of the "Top 25 Women in Animation" by Animation Magazine. She is most known for her work with Nickelodeon in the 1990s and 2000s.
Klasky-Csupo, Inc. (/ k l æ s k i ˈ tʃ uː p oʊ / KLAS-kee CHOO-poh) is an American animation studio located in Los Angeles, California. [2] It was founded in 1982 by producer Arlene Klasky and her then-husband, Hungarian animator Gábor Csupó [3] (hence the company's name) in a spare room of their apartment and grew to 550 artists, creative workers and staff in an animation facility in ...
Santo Bugito is an American animated television series produced and developed by Klasky-Csupo for CBS and created by Arlene Klasky. [2] [3] It ran for thirteen episodes and revolved around the goings on in a fictional community of insects. [4] The show was advertised as the first Tex-Mex cartoon.
Karen Rosenfelt is producing, along with “Rugrats” co-creators Arlene Klasky and Gábor Csupó. “Rugrats” premiered on Nickelodeon in 1991 and ran for several seasons. The series inspired ...
Rocket Power is an American animated television series created by Arlene Klasky and Gábor Csupó and produced by Klasky Csupo and Nickelodeon Animation Studio for Nickelodeon. The show centers on the daily lives of Otto, Reggie, Twister and Sam, four pre-adolescent children with an interest in extreme sports such as skateboarding and surfing ...
The Wild Thornberrys is an American animated television series created by Arlene Klasky, Gábor Csupó, Steve Pepoon, David Silverman, and Stephen Sustarsic for Nickelodeon. The series portrays the zany hijinks of a family of nomadic wildlife documentary filmmakers known as the Thornberrys, which consist of the nature documentary television ...
The series, created by Arlene Klasky, Gábor Csupó and Paul Germain, also spawned a trio of movie spin-offs: The Rugrats Movie (1998), Rugrats In Paris (2000) and Rugrats Go Wild (2003).
After the box-office success of The Rugrats Movie in 1998, Arlene Klasky, Gábor Csupó and Peter Gaffney, the creators of the show decided to making a theatrical adaptation of the animated television series Aaahh!!! Real Monsters after the series finale, to be produced by Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures.