Difference between revisions of "Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Series"
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# "[[Between the Lions]]" (WGBH Boston and Sirius Thinking, Ltd. for PBS syndication; 2001 new episodes, 2nd season, #31 - #55) | # "[[Between the Lions]]" (WGBH Boston and Sirius Thinking, Ltd. for PBS syndication; 2001 new episodes, 2nd season, #31 - #55) | ||
# "Disney's The Legend of Tarzan" (Walt Disney Television Animation for UPN and syndication; 36 episodes, September 3, 2001 to October 14, 2001 [episodes #37-#39 produced but unaired]) | # "Disney's The Legend of Tarzan" (Walt Disney Television Animation for UPN and syndication; 36 episodes, September 3, 2001 to October 14, 2001 [episodes #37-#39 produced but unaired]) |
Latest revision as of 16:33, 21 April 2024
The Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Series has been awarded since 2001. It is awarded to filmic series, whether animated or live-action of furry and anthropomorphic interest, and was, in 2004 and from 2006 to 2019, awarded to one-off short works. Since 2020, filmic shorts are awarded the Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Short Work.
Contents
List[edit]
2000[edit]
Awarded to series from prior years.
Best Live Action TV Series[edit]
- The Muppet Show (1976 – 1981)
- ALF (1986 – 1990)
- The Banana Splits Adventure Hour (1968 – 1970)
- Beauty and the Beast (1987 – 1990)
- Between the Lions (2000 – Present)
- Dinosaurs (1991 – 1994)
- H.R. Puffnstuff (1969 – 1971)
- Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp (1970 – 1972)
- Lassie (1954 – 1971)
- Mister Ed (1961 – 1966)
Best Animated TV Series[edit]
- Steven Spielberg presents – Animaniacs (1992 – 1998)
- Beast Wars: Transformers (1996 – Present)
- Disney’s Duck Tales (1987 – 1990)
- Kimba, The White Lion (1965 – 1966)
- Pokemon (1997 – Present)
- Road Rovers (1996 – 1997)
- Rocky & Friends/The Bullwinkle Show (1959 – 1973)
- SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron (1993 – 1995)
- Disney’s TaleSpin (1990 – 1994)
- Steven Spielberg presents – Tiny Toon Adventures (1990 – 1992)
2001[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic TV Series".
- "Between the Lions" (WGBH Boston and Sirius Thinking, Ltd. for PBS syndication; 2001 new episodes, 2nd season, #31 - #55)
- "Disney's The Legend of Tarzan" (Walt Disney Television Animation for UPN and syndication; 36 episodes, September 3, 2001 to October 14, 2001 [episodes #37-#39 produced but unaired])
- "Sabrina, the Teenage Witch" (Hartbreak Films, in association with Viacom, Inc.; 2001 new episodes January 12, 2001 [#108] through December 7, 2001 [#127])
- "Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat" (CineGroupe, in association with Children's Television Workshop and IF/X Productions for PBS syndication; 20 episodes, September 3, 2001 to September 28, 2001)
- . "Wolf Lake" (Big Ticket Television, in association with CBS Productions; 5 episodes, September 19, 2001 to October 24, 2001 [episodes #6-8 produced but unaired])
2002[edit]
- Between the Lions (WGBH Boston and Sirius Thinking, Ltd. for PBS syndication; 2002 new episodes, 3rd season, #56 - #65, September 16 - November 18)
- Dinotopia (Hallmark Entertainment and MAT I Production for ABC; 3 episode mini-series, May 12 - May 14). Dinotopia: The Series (Hallmark Entertainment and MAT I Production for ABC; 2002 new episodes, 1st season, #1 - #6, November 28 - December 26)
- Greg the Bunny (Steven Levitan Productions for 20th Century Fox Television; 13 episodes, March 27 - August 25, 2002)
- Redwall; a.k.a. Brian Jacques' Martin the Warrior: A Tale of Redwall (Nelvana Ltd. for Teletoon in Canada, December 2001 and PBS syndication in the U.S., 2002; 2002 U.S. new episodes, Redwall 3rd season #27 - #39; a.k.a. Martin the Warrior 1st season #1 - #13, April 14 - July 28))
- Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat (CineGroupe, in association with Children's Television Workshop and IF/X Productions for PBS syndication; 2002 new episodes, #21 (February 13) to #40 (October 5))
Other works listed in the ARR/VL for TV Series[edit]
- Digimon: Digital Monsters (Saban Entertainment/Toei Animation Company for the FoxKids/UPN network; 2002 new episodes, last part of Season 3 through first part of Series 4, #130 - ? [latest is #173], February 9 - [November 22])
- Inuyasha (The Ocean Group, in association with Viz Communications, for The Cartoon Network/Adult Swim; 2002 new episodes, Season 1, #1 (August 31) through #10 (November 2))
- Tokyo Pig (Miramax Television, in association with SME Visual Works, Inc., for ABC Family Channel; 2002 new episodes, Season 1, #1 (September 14) through #8 (November 2))
- The Wild Thornberrys (Klasky Csupo, Inc., for Nickelodeon; 2002 new episodes, Season 4, #82 (February 16) to #91 (postponed to just before movie's release))
2003[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Series"
- Between the Lions (WGBH Boston and Sirius Thinking, Ltd. for PBS syndication; 2003 new episodes, 4th season, #66 - #70, September 15 - September 19)
- Gary the Rat (Grammnet Productions for TNN/Spike TV; 2003 episodes, Season One, #1 (June 26) through #13 (Dec. 11)
- Lilo & Stitch: The Series (Walt Disney Television Animation for ABC Kids TV, 2003 episodes, 1st season, #1 (September 20) - #27 (December 29) [#28 shown out of sequence on December 12])
- Silverwing (Bardel Entertainment for Teletoon; 2003 episodes, Season One, #1 (September 6) through #13 (December 14)
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles [2003] (4Kids Entertainment Inc./Dong Woo Animation Co., Ltd. for 4Kids' FoxBox Saturday morning block on the FoxKids network; 2003 episodes, Season One, #1 (February 8) - #26 (November 1), Season Two, #27 (November 8) - #31 (December 6)
2004[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Short Work or Series"
- Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me (Music video performed by TISM, animation by Bernard Derriman, October 2004)
- Father of the Pride (DreamWorks SKG & Imagi International Holdings for NBC; 2004 episodes, #1 [August 31] through #11 [December 28])
- Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends (Cartoon Network Studios for The Cartoon Network; 2004 episodes, #1 [August 20] through #10 [October 22])
- Kaze, Ghost Warrior (Timothy Albee Animation for direct-to-DVD release, June 25, 2004)
- Wolf's Rain [English-language release] (BONES, Inc. for Fuji Television; 2003 episodes, #1 [January 7] through #26 [July 28]; [English-language release] (The Cartoon Network; 2004 episodes, #1 [April 24] through #30 [October 16])
2005[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Series"
- Cake Dance a.k.a. "There She Is!! Step 2" [Music video of the song "Happy Birthday to Me" by Bulldog Mansion] (SamBakZa, March)
- American Dragon: Jake Long (Walt Disney Television Animation for Disney Channel; episodes #1 [January 21] to #19 [December 15])
- Camp Lazlo (Cartoon Network; Episodes July 28 t0 November 25)
- Krypto The Superdog (Warner Brothers Animation for Cartoon Network; episodes #1 [April 4] to #52 [December 5])
2006[edit]
Awarded as "Dramatic Short Work or Series"
- Hammy's Boomerang Adventure
- Jane and the Dragon
- My Gym Partner's A Monkey
- Raccoon Daze
- Tom and Jerry Tales
2007[edit]
2008[edit]
- Big Buck Bunny, by the Project Peach team
- Nine Lives and Counting, by Publicis Mojo
- Presto, by Pixar
- There She Is, by SamBakZa
- Wallace & Gromit: A Matter of Loaf and Death, by Aardman Animations
2009[edit]
Awarded as "Best Short Subject or Series"
- The Penguins of Madagascar (produced by Dreamworks Animation for Nickelodeon)
- The Cat Piano (from the People’s Republic of Animation, directed by Eddie White and Ari Gibson)
- Partly Cloudy (from Walt Disney Pictures and Pixar Animation, directed by Peter Sohn)
- Prep and Landing (from Walt Disney Pictures Animation, directed by Kevin Deters and Stevie Wermers)
- The Secret Saturdays (produced by Cartoon Network)
2010[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Short Work or Series"
- TV series or one-shots, advertisements or short videos.
- Adventure Time
- Foxy Bingo
- Mongrels
- Orangina Naturally
- The Regular Show
- Wallace & Gromit's World of Invention
2011[edit]
- TV series or one-shots, advertisements or short videos. Awarded as "Best Dramatic Series or Short Work"
2012[edit]
- TV series or one-shots, advertisements or short videos.
- winner: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, produced by Hasbro Studios (scripts) and DHX Media (animation)
Also nominated were:
- Crayon Dragon, directed by Toniko Pantoja at the California Institute of the Arts.
- My Little Brony, CollegeHumor.com
- Puss in Boots: The Three Diablos, produced by DreamWorks Animation.
- Simon's Cat, directed by Simon Tofield
2013[edit]
- TV series or one-shots, advertisements or short videos. Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Short or Series"
winner: My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (directed by James Thiessen & James Wooton; Season 3, episode 10 to Season 4, episode 7)
Also nominated were:
- Adventure Time (created by Pendleton Ward and produced by Larry Lechliter, Adam Muto, Nate Cash, David OReilly [a.k.a. O’Reilly], and Elizabeth Ito for Cartoon Network, Season 5 episodes 6 to 43)
- Bee and PuppyCat (directed by Natasha Allegri; episodes 1 and 2)
- Bravest Warriors (directed by Breehan Burns; Season 1, episode 7 to Season 2, episode 5)
- What Does the Fox Say? (original) (directed by Ylvis; September 3)
2014[edit]
- TV series or one-shots, advertisements or short videos.
- winner: Furry Force (CollegeHumor and Smiley Guy Studios, parts 1 and 2)
The runners-up were:
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (Directed by James Thiessen and Jim Miller for Hasbro, Season 4 Episode 8 to Season 4 Episode 26)
- Bojack Horseman (Created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg for Netflix, Aug 22)
- Littlest Pet Shop (Supervising Director Dallas Parker and Directed by Joel Dickie, Season 2 Episode 11 to Season 3 Episode 16)
- The Beach Bears (by MaxGoof, "The Trip to Alberta" Chapter 137 - 170)
2015[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Short Work or Series"
- Winner: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Season 5, directed by James Thiessen, Jim Miller, and Denny Lu.
- Runners up:
- We Bare Bears Season 1, directed by Manny Hernandez.
- Danger Mouse, Season 1 episodes 1-16, directed by Robert Cullen.
- Tiger's Eye episodes 1-25, directed by Alexander Shaw.
- Littlest Pet Shop, Season 3 episodes 17 through Season 4 episode 9, directed by Joel Dickie and Steven Garcia.
- Harvey Beaks Season 1 episodes March 29 to November 15, directed by C. H. Greenblatt.
2016[edit]
Awarded as "Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Work or Short Series"
- Winner: My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, season 6 episodes 1-143, directed by James Thiessen, Jim Miller, Tim Stuby, and Denny Lu.
- Runners up:
- The Lion Guard, season 1 episodes 1-22, directed by Howy Parkins.
- Bunnicula, season 1 episodes 1-8, directed by Jessica Borutski, Maxwell Atoms, Robert F. Hughes, Matthew Whitlock, and Ian Wasseluk.
- Littlest Pet Shop, season 4 episodes 10-26, directed by Joel Dickie, Steven Garcia & Mike Myhre.
- Petals, directed by Andrea Gallo and Alvaro Dominguez.
2017[edit]
- Winner: DuckTales [2017 reboot], directed by John Aoshima and Dana Terrace
- Runners up:
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, season 7 episodes 1-24, directed by Jim Miller, Tim Stuby, Denny Lu, Mike Myhre
- OK KO! Let's Be Heroes, episodes 1-42, directed by Hwang Ki-hoo, Chang-woo Shin, Sunjae Lee, Byungjae Oh, Eunyung Byun and Sunhung Kim
- Here's the Plan, directed by Fernanda Frick
- Mascot Fur Life, directed by Jens Wernstedt
- Doodle Toons, directed by Jack C
- Kouka and Bibi, by Dan Variano
2018[edit]
Awarded as "Best Dramatic Series or Short Work"
- Winner: Aggretsuko (Directed by Rarecho)
- Runners-Up:
- Bojack Horseman (Created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg)
- DuckTales (Developed by Matt Youngberg and Francisco Angones)
- Brush: A Fox Tale (Directed by Willi Anton and Faustina Arriola)
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (Directed by Denny Lu and Mike Myhre)
2019[edit]
Awarded as "Best Dramatic or Short Work"
- Winner: Beastars (Directed by Shinichi Matsumi)(Japan)
- Runners Up:
- Aggretsuko, Season 2 (Directed by Rarecho)
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, Season 9 (Directed by Denny Lu, Mike Myhre, and Gillian Comerford)
- Mao Mao: Heroes of Pure Heart (Written and Storyboarded by Phil Ahn, Allison Craig, Nathanael H. Jones, Griffith Kimmins, Alexandria Kwan, Nora Meek, Michael Moloney, Emily Oetzell, Parker Simmons, and Chris Ybarra)
- Amphibia (Directed by Bert Youn and Derek Kirk Kim)
2020[edit]
Awarded as "Best Dramatic Series"
- Winner: Beastars (US Release) (Directed by Shinichi Matsumi)
- Runners up:
- Helluva Boss (Directed by Vivienne Medrano; Episodes "Murder Family" and "Loo Loo Land",)
- Aggretsuko (Directed by Rarecho)
- BNA: Brand New Animal (Directed by Yoh Yoshinari)
- Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts (Created by Radford Sechrist)
2021[edit]
- Winner: Helluva Boss (Created by Vivienne Medrano; Season 1 episode 3 to episode 6)
- Runner up:
- Beastars, Season 2 (Directed by Shinichi Matsumi; January 7 to March 25)
- Centaurworld (Created by Megan Nicole Dong; July 30 to December 7)
- Chikn Nuggit (by Chikn Nuggit; videos January 1 to December 31)
- Odd Taxi (Directed by Mugi Kinoshita; episode 1 to 13, April 6 to June 29)
2022[edit]
- Winner: Bluey (Created by Joe Brumm; Season 3 (Part 2))
- Runners-Up (in descending number of votes)
- The Owl House (Created by Dana Terrace; season 2 episode 11 to season 3 episode 1)
- Helluva Boss (Directed by Vivienne "VivziePop" Medrano; Season 2, "The Circus" and "Seeing Stars")
- Zootopia+ (Directed by Trent Correy and Josie Trinidad, Season 1)
- Tuca & Bertie (Created by Lisa Hanawalt; Season 3)
2023[edit]
- Winner: Helluva Boss (Created by Vivienne "VivziePop" Medrano - Season 2 Episode 3 to Midseason Special)
- Runners-Up:
- The Owl House (Created by Dana Terrace; "For the Future" & "Watching and Dreaming")
- Bluey (Created by Joe Brumm - Season 3)
- Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake (Developed by Adam Muto - August 31 to September 28)
- Sonic Prime (Created by Man of Action - Season 2)
Ursa Major Award winners for Best Anthropomorphic Short Subject or Series | ||
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a.k.a. Best Anthropomorphic Dramatic Series (2001-2008, 2020-present)
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Sagwa, the Chinese Siamese Cat (2001) · Greg the Bunny (2002) · Gary the Rat (2003) · Father Of The Pride (2004) · "There She Is!! Step 2 - Cake Dance" (2005) · Hammy's Boomerang Adventure (2006) · Gridlock - Doctor Who episode (2007) · There she is!! episodes 3 to 5 (2008) · The Penguins of Madagascar (2009) · Wallace and Gromit's World of Invention (2010) · My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic (2011-2013, 2015-2016) · Furry Force (2014) · Duck Tales (2017 reboot) (2017) ·
Aggretsuko (2018) · Beastars (2019, 2020) · Helluva Boss (2021)
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Ursa Major Awards | ||
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Presented by the Anthropomorphic Literature and Arts Association · Partially based upon the Recommended Anthropomorphics List
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By year
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2000 (Confurence 12) · 2001 (ConFurence 2002) · 2002 (ConFurence 2003) · 2003 (C-ACE 2004) · 2004 (Anthrocon 2005) · 2005 (Rocket City Fur Meet 2006) · 2006 (Califur 3) · 2007 (Morphicon 2008) · 2008 (All Fur Fun 2009) · 2009 (FA: United 3) · 2010 (Morphicon 2011) · 2011 (Califur 8) · 2012 (Anthrocon 2013) · 2013 (Califur X) · 2014 (Morphicon 2015) · 2015 (What The Fur 2016) · 2016 (Anthrocon 2017) · 2017 (FurDU 2018) · 2018 (AnthrOhio 2019) · 2019 (YouTube) · 2020 (YouTube) · 2021 (YouTube) · 2022 (YouTube) · 2023 (Golden State Fur Con 2024)
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Nominees and winners
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Best Magazine · Best Comic Strip · Novel · Short Fiction · Motion Picture · Published Illustration · Game · Dramatic Series · General Literary Work · Graphic Story
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See also
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