Mr. Warburton

Animator

Birthday August 31, 1968

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Age 55 years old

Nationality United States

#58467 Most Popular

1968

Thomas Edward Warburton (born July 23, 1968), better known as Mr. Warburton, is an American animator, producer, screenwriter, and character designer.

He is best known for creating the animated television series Codename: Kids Next Door.

He also created the animated short Kenny and the Chimp.

Prior to that, he served as production designer on the first season of Beavis and Butt-Head and was the lead character designer for the animated series Pepper Ann.

He is also the author of the book A Thousand Times No.

1971

The story involved the KND's plot to stop the local swimming pool's seemingly endless adult swim guarded over by lifeguards Mr. Wink and Mr. Fibb (characters loosely based on Mr. Wint and Mr. Kidd from the 1971 James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever).

In addition, the character Professor XXXL, who was featured in "Diseasy Does It", became a recurring character in Kids Next Door.

Kenny and Chimpy both make a brief cameo in the pilot episode of Codename: Kids Next Door, "No P in the Ool".

Mo Willems was starting the second season of his Cartoon Network series Sheep in the Big City and asked Warburton to come aboard as a director at NYC-based Curious Pictures.

The two found they worked well together, each feeding off each other's similar and differing talents.

Sheep's second season proved to be its last and the series was canceled.

1992

Originally signing on as JJSP's first staff artist in 1992, Warburton spent five years working as an animator on dozens of commercials for clients like Levi's, Converse, Slim Jim and 7 Up.

He also animated, designed, and directed on Saturday Night Live's TV Funhouse, directed new episodes of Schoolhouse Rock! (including the award-winning "The Tale of Mr. Morton"), and served as production designer on the first season of MTV's groundbreaking and controversial series Beavis and Butt-Head.

While working on 7 Up commercials at the studio, Mr. Warburton met Fido Dido creator Sue Rose and the two found that their similar art styles might work well together in the future.

While at JJSP, Warburton did freelance work helping Sue Rose design characters for a series about a quirky and imaginative girl named Pepper Ann.

The show was initially in development at Nickelodeon, but was later picked up to series by Disney Television Animation.

Even though the production was based in Los Angeles, Warburton remained in NYC, working as lead character designer and faxing his drawings at night.

The series ran for five seasons on Disney's One Saturday Morning block.

Eventually, Warburton left JJSP to work solely on Pepper Ann and to develop his own projects.

Kenny and the Chimp was an unproduced animated series planned by Warburton.

It was about an unlucky boy named Kenny who was constantly accompanied by an unintelligent chimpanzee named Chimpy, who would regularly create trouble for him in the various situations they experienced.

Produced by Hanna-Barbera, the episode "Diseasy Does It" was the only one made.

Its alternative title was "Chimp-N-Pox".

Warburton also provided the voice for the chef in that short.

There is also another episode called "Got Your Nose", and it was about to also be produced, but never released.

After realizing that Cartoon Network was not going to make Kenny and the Chimp into a series, Warburton began developing the recurring characters, the Kids Next Door, a group of children who would often get Kenny into trouble, into a series.

Instead of just being five troublemakers, the five kids became a "multi-ethnic team of experts battling against evil adult super villains bent on raising the drinking age of soda up to 13 and making Summer school year round".

Cartoon Network commissioned a pilot so Warburton temporarily moved to Los Angeles to make the short at the newly opened Cartoon Network Studios in Burbank.

2001

This coincided with Codename: Kids Next Door winning Cartoon Network's 2001 Big Pick Weekend and being greenlit to series.

After finishing Kids Next Door, Warburton pitched his first children's book to Laura Geringer Books, an imprint of HarperCollins.

2009

Since moving to Los Angeles in 2009, he has worked at Disney Television Animation serving as creative director on Fish Hooks, co-executive producer on The 7D and executive producer on Muppet Babies.

Warburton was born in Philadelphia, the son of Charles Warburton Jr. and Vesna (née Krajacic), and grew up in Ambler.

He attended Kutztown University, where he studied graphic design.

After graduating from Kutztown University, Mr. Warburton moved to New York City to work at Buzzco Associates.

The studio, run by NYC animation veterans Vincent Cafarelli and Candy Kugel, primarily took on commercial work to help fund their own independent films like the award-winning short A Warm Reception in LA.

Warburton learned the basics of animation production from the ground up and got to meet many people in the industry that he remains friends with today.

After working at Buzzco Associates, Warburton went to Jumbo Pictures to work as an assistant layout artist on the first season of Nickelodeon's new series Doug.

The show premiered alongside Rugrats and The Ren & Stimpy Show, which ushered in a new creator-driven approach to cartoon-making.

Warburton also provided assistant animation to the end credit sequence for the show.

1000 Times No was released on April 28, 2009 to positive reviews.