DreamWorks Animation Buys Classic Media for $155M

DreamWorks Animation will pay $155 million to buy “Casper the Friendly Ghost” brand owner Classic Media.

DreamWorks Animation will pay $155 million to buy Casper the Friendly Ghost brand owner Classic Media, according to a report by C21Media.

Californian studio DreamWorks Animation (DWA) has been seeking a new stream of characters around which to create TV and feature films.

It today announced a multimillion-dollar takeover of New York-based Classic, which also counts Where’s Waldo?, Noddy, Lassie, and The Lone Ranger among its brands.

The deal will see DWA pay Classic’s owner Boomerang Media Holdings, part of Chicago private equity group GTCR, $155million in cash. The move gives the studio a total of 450 filmed entertainment titles and 6,100 episodes of animated and live-action programming, including Christmas specials featuring Frosty the Snowman and Santa Claus.

Classic’s other assets include Big Idea Entertainment, the production company behind Christian-themed toon series VeggieTales; comic book library Golden Books; and Olivia and Noddy, both of which it bought from Chorion earlier this year. It employs about 80 staff in offices in New York, London and Nashville.

“Classic Media brings a large and diverse collection of characters and branded assets that is extremely complementary to DreamWorks Animation’s franchise business, and we plan to leverage it across our motion picture, television, home entertainment, consumer products, digital, theme park and live entertainment channels,” said DWA CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg.

Classic and DWA were already working on one project together, a 3D animated feature film based on the Mr. Peabody & Sherman franchise, which is due to arrive in cinemas on Christmas Day 2013.

Classic co-founders Eric Ellenbogen and John Englelman will remain with the company after the deal is completed. They, along with GTCR, reacquired the company in its current form in 2009 by taking over Entertainment Rights, which had bought Classic three years before.

Classic posted an operating profit of $19.2 million for the year, with net revenue of $82.2 million. The acquisition would combine “our hit-driven business with Classic Media’s extensive and sustainable library revenue stream,” according to DWA’s chief financial officer Lew Coleman.

DWA is behind a string of hit animated feature films such as Shrek, Madagascar and How to Train Your Dragon. It has also produced TV series for the likes of Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network.

The deal is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to go through before September 30. JPMorgan advised DWA, while Jefferies & Company did the same for Classic.

Jennifer Wolfe's picture

Formerly Editor-in-Chief of Animation World Network, Jennifer Wolfe has worked in the Media & Entertainment industry as a writer and PR professional since 2003.