Long Live the Royals | |
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Poster depicting the family; from left to right: Rosalind, Rufus, Eleanor, Peter, and Alex (bottom)
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Genre | Animated sitcom |
Created by | Sean Szeles |
Story by | Shion Takeuchi Sean Szeles |
Directed by |
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Voices of | |
Narrated by | Peter Serafinowicz (Intro) |
Theme music composer | Scot Stafford Sean Szeles |
Composer(s) | Scot Stafford |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 4 (+ Pilot) (list of episodes) |
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Executive producer(s) | Sean Szeles |
Producer(s) |
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Running time |
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Production company(s) | Cartoon Network Studios |
Release | |
Original network | Cartoon Network |
Picture format | 1080i (HDTV) |
First shown in | May 16, 2014 (Pilot) |
Original release | November 30 – December 3, 2015 |
Long Live the Royals is an American animated miniseries created by Regular Show's writer and storyboard artist Sean Szeles. The miniseries, which aired from November 30 to December 3, 2015 on Cartoon Network, consists of four episodes, each following a member of a fictional British Royal Family as they celebrate the annual Yule Hare Festival.
Set in a contemporary world in a medieval kingdom, Long Live the Royals follows a fictional British Royal Family—King Rufus and Queen Eleanor and their children Peter, Rosalind, and Alex—as they honor the annual Yule Hare Festival. The family must battle having to rule their kingdom while maintaining a normal family at the same time. Meanwhile, the festival continues with the parties and feasts that comprise it.
Long Live the Royals was created by Sean Szeles. The miniseries, announced in February 2015, is a production from Cartoon Network Studios. It is the third miniseries to air on Cartoon Network, following Over the Garden Wall a year earlier, in November 2014, and Stakes earlier in the month, in November 2015. The miniseries was adapted from a pilot released online in May 2014. Developed by Szeles in collaboration with the studios' developmental program for animated series, the pilot won him an Emmy Award at the sixty-sixth annual Primetime Creative Arts ceremony. Preceding the nomination, Szeles had worked as a supervising producer on Regular Show, another Cartoon Network production.
Four episodes of the show were produced, each lasting eleven minutes; they are set at night and follow a different character individually. Michael Ouweleen, the chief marketing officer for Cartoon Network, explained that the miniseries format allows for different artistic qualities to flourish in their shorts program and for existing pilots put on hold to come to fruition. A number of comedians were hired as the voices of primary and secondary characters. Jon Daly, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Gillian Jacobs and Nicki Rapp reprised their roles from the pilot as King Rufus, Queen Eleanor, Rosalind and Alex respectively, whilst Kieran Culkin will take over from Jeremy Redleaf as the voice of Peter. Additional characters were voiced by Fred Armisen, Ellie Kemper, Ken Marino, Alfred Molina, Horatio Sanz, and Peter Serafinowicz.