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The Wild Thornberrys is an animated series produced at Klasky-Csupo for Nickelodeon, which follows the adventures of a fictional wildlife-documentary-making family, the Thornberrys, and particularly of Eliza Thornberry, who can talk to animals. It premiered in October 1998, and was not only the first show to feature a female main character, but was also the first Nicktoon to exclusively use 30 minute stories (previously, other Nicktoons mostly used the two-fifteen-minute-stories format). At the time, the series was quite dark in tone for a Nicktoon (with Eliza having been close to death in Nigel Knows Best and Operation: Valentine).
Nigel and Marianne Thornberry (voiced by Tim Curry and Danielle Harris), a typical teenager who longs for a normal suburban life;
Also travelling along is Darwin (Tom Kane), a chimpanzee that travels with the family, who "belongs" to Eliza. He has a craving for cheese crunchies, especially newly discovered "swiss" cheese crunchies. He was found by Eliza, and was the first animal she ever talked to. Tyler Tucker (Jonathan Taylor Thomas), Eliza's cousin, also travelled with them in five episodes.
Despite being nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award in 2001, the show has its share of detractors, mostly those bothered by main character Eliza's look (pigtails, glasses, freckles, and
Besides the aforementioned telefilm, in 2002 and 2003, Nickelodeon released two cinema films featuring the family: The Wild Thornberrys Movie (subsequently nominated for an Academy Award for Best Song for "Father and Daughter" by Paul Simon) and Rugrats Go Wild (a crossover with the Rugrats), both of which earned around a modest (at best) $40m at the US box office.