Buffy: The Animated Series


Buffy: The Animated Series is an animated television series concept based on Buffy the Vampire Slayer created by Joss Whedon. Initially greenlit by 20th Century Fox in 2002, it went ultimately unproduced and unaired when no network was willing to buy the series. The series would have taken place in the middle of Buffy season 1, as writer Jeph Loeb described the continuity as "Episode 7.5". However, it would have included the retroactive addition of Buffy's younger sister Dawn, who was created in Buffy season 5 and retconned into the memories of everyone in Buffy's life.
Whedon and Loeb would later revisit the style of the series in the Season Eight comic story "After These Messages... We'll Be Right Back!".

Production details

Development began on the show in 2001. Joss Whedon and Jeph Loeb were to be executive producers for the show, and most of the cast from Buffy would return to voice their characters. The series soon ran into problems. 20th Century Fox were going to produce the show, and it was initially planned that the show would air on Fox Kids, possibly as early as February 2002. When Fox Kids ceased operations, Fox shopped it to other networks. When no network was willing to purchase the series, production halted.
Two years later, in 2004, Fox once again showed an interest in developing and selling the show to another network. Various key actors, including Anthony Stewart Head, did voice work, and artwork was produced to make a four-minute presentation. That pilot was used to try to sell the series to a network. Once again no network was willing to take the risk of purchasing the show. Loeb explained that networks find the show difficult since it would be too adult to air with children's television, but not suitable to many people in a prime-time slot.
In a Q&A with The Hollywood Reporter on May 16, 2003, Whedon explained:
In an interview with TV Guide in September 2005, Whedon announced that the series was effectively dead.

Writing and acting

Writing staff

  • Jeph Loeb said that the series would have begun with the episode, "A Day in the Life" for which the script was completed by Loeb with Joss Whedon which "introduces the characters, sets up their dynamics and the show's premise."
  • Loeb mentioned that one of the episodes revolved around "Buffy getting her driver's license but dealing with a demon driver's ed teacher."
  • Jane Espenson wrote three scripts for the show: One of which was called "The Back Room", one was called "Lunch is Revolting!", and another called "Teeny". "Teeny" would have been about a shrunken Buffy.
  • Espenson revealed that "Steve DeKnight and Drew Greenberg wrote episodes, if I recall. And I believe Doug Petrie did too. I think there was a story set aside for Rebecca Kirshner that she never got to start." Joss Whedon and Jeph Loeb wrote the pilot. She said there had been eight scripts written in all, although two were incomplete.

Episodes

Jeph Loeb revealed that there are thirteen scripts of the animated series.
  • "A Day in the Life"
  • "Teeny"
  • "Lunch is Revolting!"
  • "The Back Room"
  • "Say Yo"
  • Untitled completed episode script
  • Untitled completed episode script
  • Untitled unstarted episode script

Cast

Sarah Michelle Gellar was not interested in returning to the role. Giselle Loren had already voiced Buffy in the Buffy video games, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Chaos Bleeds.

Leak

On August 1, 2008, the four-minute unaired presentation was leaked online via YouTube.

Support of members of the cast

On August 20, 2008, Nicholas Brendon said on his audiolog:
On August 26, 2008, Jeph Loeb declared in an interview to MTV:
During the Buffy EW reunion in 2017, the cast remarked that one of the few ways they would consider returning to the world of Buffy would be the animated series, to which Sarah Michelle Gellar expressed interest. However, all agreed that a revival of the series would be dependent on Joss Whedon, who remarked that he had moved on from producing Buffy media for television.

Quotes

Jane Espenson has revealed only two short extracts from the scripts on her website:Quote 1
  • '''Quote 2'''

Information

  • – Whedonesquers discuss Gellar's interview with scifi.com, October 2004
  • – Article on series and pilot video, August 2008

Interviews

  • – Interview with Jane Espenson, 2002
  • – Interview with Jeph Loeb, 2004
  • – Interview with Jeph Loeb, June 2004
  • – Interview with Jane Espenson and Eric Wight, 2004

Quotes and trivia

  • and .