Maya the Honey Bee
| Maya the Honey Bee | |
Japanese DVD cover | |
| みつばちマーヤの冒険 (Mitsubachi Māya no Bōken) | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Comedy, adventure |
| Created by | Waldemar Bonsels |
| Anime television series | |
| Directed by |
|
| Produced by | Yoshihiro Ōba |
| Written by | Niisan Takahashi |
| Music by | Takashi Ogaki |
| Studio |
|
| Original network | ANN (ABC, NET) |
| English network | |
| Original run | 1 April 1975 – 20 April 1976 |
| Episodes | 52 |
| Anime television series | |
| The New Adventures of Maya the Honey Bee | |
| Directed by | Mitsuo Kaminashi |
| Produced by | Sōjirō Masuko |
| Music by | Takashi Ogaki |
| Studio | Nippon Animation |
| Original network | MegaTON (TVO, TV Tokyo) |
| Original run | 1 September 1979 – 13 September 1980 |
| Episodes | 52 |
Maya the Honey Bee (Japanese: みつばちマーヤの冒険, Hepburn: Mitsubachi Māya no Bōken; lit. "The Adventures of Maya the Honey Bee"), also titled internationally as Maya the Bee is a Japanese anime television series produced first by Zuiyo Enterprise and Asahi Broadcasting Corporation of Osaka. After the first 6 episodes, Zuiyo Enterprise's animation studio division became Nippon Animation, which retained the rights of the series. The series consisted of 52 episodes and was originally telecast from April 1975 to April 1976 on all ANN affiliates. Loosely based on the classic children's book The Adventures of Maya the Bee by Waldemar Bonsels, the anime series has become extremely popular in continental Europe and has been rebroadcast in countries and languages all around the world since its premiere. A film edited from the first few episodes was released on 15 December 1977.
Two English-dubbed versions of the series exist, a South African version produced by Sonovision for the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), using a translated version of the theme tune used for the German dub, and featuring South African accents for the characters; and an American version with an entirely new theme tune, and a Canadian voice cast, produced by Saban Entertainment, which was broadcast from 1 January 1990 to 31 December 1992 on the children's television channel Nickelodeon. Maya the Bee aired alongside other juvenile-targeted anime such as Adventures of the Little Koala, Noozles and The Littl' Bits as part of Nickelodeon's Nick Jr. block of programming for young children. 65 episodes were dubbed.
A second Maya the Bee series, Shin Mitsubachi Māya no Bōken (新みつばちマーヤの冒険; The New Adventures of Maya the Honey Bee), was a co-production made in 1979 by Nippon Animation, Wako Productions and Austrian/German Apollo Film, Wien. The second series first premiered in Germany (ZDF) from September 1979 to September 1980. Different and cartoon-like second series, which lasted for 52 episodes, was not much popular and did not premiere in Japan until 12 October 1982, on TV Osaka, and aired through 27 September 1983.
Following the show's global success, Studio 100 Media purchased all propetiary rights to the Maya the Bee name from the Waldemar Bonsels Foundation in 2009, excluding publishing. Since then, Studio 100 Animation, a member of the Studio 100 group, produced a CGI series simply titled Maya the Bee in 2012, followed by a film trilogy. On October 1, 2025, French studio Animaj purchased all rights to the property, including the 1975, 1979 and 2012 Maya the Bee series outside of Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the Benelux, excluding film and theme park rights, which were all retained by Studio 100 International. Nippon Animation currently holds the Japanese rights to the 1975 and 1979 series.