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Graz Entertainment
is an American licensing and distribution company, run by Jim and Stephanie Graziano, which obtains and provides programming and licensing rights for children's television animation. They currently control Z Blade, The Attic, Goliath, Tom Thumb, and others.
List of licensed/distributed shows
The Adventures of Corduroy (1996–1997, co-produced with Benjamin Productions, Lin Oliver Productions and Viacom Productions, distributed by Paramount Television)
Conan the Adventurer (1992, Season 1 only; co-produced with Sunbow Productions, distributed by Claster Television)
Conan and the Young Warriors (1994, co-produced with Sunbow Productions, distributed by Claster Television)
Darkstalkers (1995, co-produced with Capcom, distributed by The Summit Media Group)
G.I. Joe Extreme (1995, co-produced with Sunbow Entertainment and Gunther-Wahl Productions, distributed by Claster Television)
The Land Before Time II: The Great Valley Adventure (1994, co-produced with Universal Cartoon Studios, distributed by MCA/Universal Home Video
My Little Pony Tales (1992, co-produced with Sunbow Productions, distributed by Claster Television)
Ronin Warriors (1995, distributed by CINAR [Canada]/Claster Television [USA])
Sgt. Savage and his Screaming Eagles (1994, co-produced with Sunbow Productions, distributed by Claster Television)
Skeleton Warriors (1994–1995, co-production with Landmark Entertainment Group, distributed by Westinghouse Broadcasting International)
Stone Protectors (1993, co-production with Sachs TV Entertainment)
Street Fighter (1993, Season 1 only, co-produced with USA Studios and Capcom, distributed by ADV Films)
The Tick (1994–1996, co-produced with Sunbow Productions and Fox Children's Productions, distributed by 20th Television)
X-Men (1992–1997, co-produced with Saban Entertainment[1])
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graz_Entertainment
Jim and Stephanie Graziano: An Interview
Last November, Jeffrey Katzenberg asked Jim and Stephanie Graziano to head up production for DreamWorks' new television animation division. While the offer was not surprising, given the Graziano's track record, what was surprising is how readily they accepted. After all, their company, Graz Entertainment, noted for such hit shows as X-Men and The Tick, was one of the hottest studios in town.
DreamWorks Television Animation is the newest and so far least clearly defined of DreamWorks SKG, Hollywood's newest super studio. The division's mandate extends beyond only television to also include direct-to-video productions and interactive animation. The operation itself falls under the aegis of Steven Spielberg, whose previous TV efforts in collaboration with Warner Bros. (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, etc.) helped revolutionize broadcast animation. Spielberg was known for his hands on involvement in these shows, which is likely to continue in the new venture. (In addition, former Disney Television Animation President Gary Krisel has been brought in to oversee the whole operation.)