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| Craig Bartlett | |
|---|---|
| Born | Craig Michael Bartlett October 18, 1956 Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
| Occupation | Animator |
| Known for | Rugrats (1991–1994) Hey Arnold! (1996–2004) Dinosaur Train (with Jim Henson Productions; 2009-current) |
| Spouse(s) | Lisa Groening |
Craig Michael Bartlett (born October 18, 1956 in Seattle, Washington) is an animator best-known for creating the television series Hey Arnold!. His first job, after graduating from Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington, was at Will Vinton Studios in Portland, Oregon, where he learned the art of stop-motion animation. Bartlett moved to Los Angeles in 1987 to animate the Penny cartoons for Pee Wee's Playhouse on CBS.
Bartlett went on to make several world's fair films and special venue films for BRC Imagination Arts from the end of the 80s into the early 90s, including Expo 90 in Osaka, Japan, Expo 92 in Sevilla, Spain, and Expo 93 in Taejon, Korea. These films were all specialty formats, including BRC's "Holavision" technique for "Roboshow" in Osaka, a single-camera 360 degree film about the Basque country for "Mi Pais Vasco" in Sevilla, and a nine-camera Circlevision film "Postcards" for Taejon that was shot in 7 countries around the world including Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Botswana, Bali, the Bugaboo mountains in Canada, the Grand Canyon, and Korea. In 1993/1994 Bartlett directed BRC's permanent attraction "Mystery Lodge" for Knott's Berry Farm, his second "Holavision" show, which involved traveling to northern Vancouver Island to work with the Kwak'wala speaking Indians of Alert Bay, Canada.
Bartlett met the Nickelodeon execs while story editing Rugrats in its first seasons. He pitched Hey Arnold! to them in fall of 1993, produced a pilot in spring of 1994, and the series was greenlit in January 1995. Hey Arnold! was in production continuously from 1995 to 2001, culminating in a TV movie originally titled "Arnold Saves the Neighborhood," but which Nickelodeon decided to release theatrically as Hey Arnold! the Movie, in June 2002.
Bartlett then left Nickelodeon to write and produce a TV movie for Cartoon Network called Party Wagon, a story set in the 1850s that featured Sean Astin as Randall P. McDuff, a young man who flees his own shotgun wedding and wanders west, eventually joining up with a band of other misfits whose wagon is continually getting kicked out of various wagon trains on the Oregon Trail.
In 2005 Bartlett returned to BRC to make a multi-media simulator attraction for NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, called the Shuttle Launch Experience. In the course of the 3-year project, Bartlett interviewed 26 astronauts to gather their experiences from launch to orbit. One of the astronauts Bartlett interviewed was four-time shuttle flier and commander Charles F. Bolden Jr., who ended up being selected to host of the Shuttle Launch Experience. Bolden was later selected by President Barack Obama to be chairman of NASA in 2009.
After developing various pilots and feature scripts, Bartlett moved to the Jim Henson Company, where he co-wrote the computer animated film Unstable Fables: 3 Pigs and a Baby. Bartlett stayed at Henson to work as Story Editor on a PBS Kids pre-school show called Sid the Science Kid with PBS executive Linda Simensky, whom he had worked with at Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network.
In September 2008, a show for pre-schoolers called Jim Henson's Dinosaur Train was picked up by PBS Kids; produced by Henson, this was his first show created by Bartlett to be picked up since Hey Arnold!.[1] The series debuted on PBS stations on September 7, 2009.[2]
He is married to Lisa Groening, sister of The Simpsons and Futurama creator Matt Groening, after whom Lisa Simpson is named.[3]
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