MIRA, ROYAL DETECTIVE
(Disney Junior, Disney Channel, DisneyNOW, March 20, 2020-June 20, 2022)
Wild Canary
Animation, Technicolor Animation Productions
(Disney Junior, Disney Channel, DisneyNOW, March 20, 2020-June 20, 2022)
Developed
by Elena of Avalor story editor Becca Topol, Mira, Royal
Detective was a CGI-animated mystery series that took place in the
fictional kingdom of Jalpur; which resembled 19th century India.
Mira (Leela Ladnier) was appointed the royal detective by Queen Shanti (Freida Pinto) after solving a
mystery involving Prince
Neel (Kamran Lucas). Mira
traveled around the kingdom helping out royals and commoners with the aid of
her two mongoose sidekicks, Mikku (Kal Penn) and Chikku (Utkarsh Ambudkar).
Sometimes aiding her was Neel, a talented inventor in his own right, and her
cousin, Priya (Roshni Edwards), who was
clever and creative. The series was designed to highlight critical thinking and
encourage deductive reasoning.
Mira,
Royal Detective debuted on Disney Junior on March 20, 2020; the first to
feature a South Asian protagonist. The series was highly influenced by South
Asian design and culture, with IW Group’s
Shagorika Ghosh Perkins
serving as a cultural consultant. Producer Sascha Paladino had stated that
they watched a lot of Bollywood
films to prepare for the show, and decided to emulate the musical numbers often
featured in them. Bollywood choreographer Nakul Dev Mahajan coordinated
and recorded the dances for those musical numbers with assistants, and the
animators would then work off of these to render the routine on screen. Deepak Ramapriyan and Amritha Vaz composed the music for the
show. Art director Dorothea
Gerassimova took great inspiration from Indian art and architecture in
designing the look of the series. Further adding authenticity to the series was
that the cast was of South Asian descent. The characters were designed by Michelle Lin and David A. Cardenas B. Animation was
handled by Wild Canary Animation and Technicolor
Studios.
The series
ran for two seasons, with the majority of episodes containing two segments
each. For the final four episodes, the series switched over to full
single-story episodes that were even more influenced by Bollywood films. In press-releases,
these were touted as being the show’s third season, but ended up being just
included as part of the second’s count. The series was nominated for a National Association for
Multi-Ethnicity in Communications Vision Award, two Annie Awards, an ASCAP Film
and Television Music Award, and a Television Critics Association
Award. The series was made available to stream on Disney+.
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