Derek Drymon (b. 1968 in Morristown, New Jersey, USA-) is an American writer & storyboard artist. He has worked on numerous Nickelodeon cartoon productions of the 1990s and 2000s, the most popular show being in ‘‘SpongeBob SquarePants.
Biography
Drymon was born in Denville, New Jersey, a small town in far northern New Jersey in 1968. He attended Jefferson Township Public School as a child, and supposedly he enjoyed drawing and making comic books. Drymon graduated from Jefferson Township High School in 1987. [1] He attended the School of Visual Arts in New York to become an illustrator. After college, he was recruited by Disney feature animation for their internship program. Upon finishing the program he returned to New Jersey and then on to California.
Early Nickelodeon Years
Drymon was discovered by Nickelodeon in 1993. He moved to California to work as a storyboard artist for Nickelodeon. In 1994, Drymon also began working as a storyboard artist and writer for Rocko's Modern Life. It was here he met two of his future employers, Tim Hill and Stephen Hillenburg, Hill was a writer, Hillenburg a co-producer and storyboard artist.
Drymon worked on Tim Hill's side project, the popular Kablam! skit Action League Now! As a storyboard artist. He also wrote the Emmy nominated episode of CatDog, "Doggone"
In 1997, Drymon's former "Rocko" co-worker Stephen Hillenburg created SpongeBob SquarePants. Drymon performed many duties on SpongeBob, including being a writer on all episodes, then supervising director and producer, and eventually creative director.
Diggs Tailwagger
Derek Drymon's new show Diggs Tailwagger was given a green light in 2007, but never made it to fruition.
Credits
- "Help Wanted" - Writer, Storyboard artist
- "Reef Blower" - Writer, Storyboard artist
- "Tea at the Treedome" - Animation director (DVD)
- "Bubblestand" - Writer, Creative director
- "Ripped Pants" - Creative director
- "Jellyfishing" - Creative director
- "Plankton!" - Creative director
- "Naughty Nautical Neighbors" - Creative director
- "Boating School" - Creative director
- "Pizza Delivery" - Creative director
- "Home Sweet Pineapple" - Creative director
- "Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy" - Creative director
- "Pickles" - Creative director
- "Hall Monitor" - Creative director
- "Jellyfish Jam" - Creative director
- "Sandy's Rocket" - Creative director
- "Squeaky Boots" - Creative director
- "Nature Pants" - Creative director
- "Opposite Day" - Creative director
- "Culture Shock" - Creative director
- "F.U.N." - Creative director
- "Valentine's Day" - Creative director
- "Walking Small" - Creative director
External links
This page uses content from Wikipedia (original • authors). Both Encyclopedia SpongeBobia and Wikipedia are licensed under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported license. |
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- ^ Jennings, Rob. "Jefferson native, SpongeBob go way back: Cartoonist an executive producer for animated film", Daily Record (Morristown), November 19, 2004. Accessed October 23, 2007. "But in Morristown, Drymon is perhaps best remembered as an offensive guard and defensive tackle on the high school's state championship football team in 1986.... At Morristown High School, when not playing football, Drymon was sketching comic books."