Andy Lee is used to doing things at his own pace – which is to say, pretty fast. But his latest project has moved at a crawl. And he doesn’t mind it one bit.
“It takes so bloody long, but there’s something nice about that,” he says of the process of turning his best-selling children’s book series, which began with Do Not Open This Book in 2016, into an animated TV series for the ABC.
“I compare it with my podcast, which Hamish [Blake] and I knock out in around 45 minutes and it goes out overnight. I love how quick and creative it is. But on this, an individual drawing of how someone’s hair or eyebrows might look, depending on what vowel shape they’re making with their mouth … it’s a different type of intricacy, which is also good.”
The nine books in Lee’s series have sold more than 3.5 million copies globally, and have been translated into 38 languages. Recently, he was invited to a book fair in Portugal, where he spent hours signing books for hundreds of people. He was stunned to learn he’s a big deal there and in Brazil (“the translators must be really good”, he observes), even if the US has proven a tougher nut to crack. “But there’s about to be a new launch there in the coming months,” he says optimistically.
It all bodes well for the prospects of the animated series, which will be made in Victoria, with funding support from VicScreen and Screen Australia. Leo Baker, who worked on Shaun Tan’s Oscar-winning short animation The Lost Thing, will direct the 12 x 11-minute episodes of Do Not Watch This Show, which is expected to take about a year to make, with a crew of about 70 and a cost of about $5.3 million.
VicScreen chief executive Caroline Pitcher said the success of Lee’s books internationally proved “Victorian creative ideas can resonate with global audiences”, while adapting them for the screen at home was confirmation that “quality Australian children’s content is so important to our culture”.
It might well have not happened here, though.
About 2018, Lee was in talks with DreamWorks Animation about a big-budget Hollywood studio adaptation of the book he wrote as a first birthday present for his nephew George (now aged nine). He went through three development workshops in about six months, but soon realised he was unlikely to retain the degree of creative control he wanted if he pursued that path.