Other than the original broadcast in Japan in 1965, the series has been broadcast in many countries around the world. In Asia, it was broadcast in
Indonesia on
Lativi,
antv and
SCTV (1995–96); in
Iran on
Channel 1; in the
Philippines on
ABC 5; in
Saudi Arabia on
Saudi TV and in
Sri Lanka on ART TV. In Europe, it was broadcast in
Bosnia and Herzegovina on RTVUSK; in
Croatia on ATV Split/
TV Jadran, Nezavisna televizija (NeT), TV Nova Pula and Gradska TV Zadar; in Germany 1977 in ZDF; in France on
ORTF (1972) and on
TF1; in Italy first in syndication from 1977 and lately on
Italia 1 (in 1999 and 2003 with the title
Una giungla di avventure per Kimba [literally "a jungle of adventures for Kimba"]) and
Boing (2010) and in Spain on
TV3. In North America, it was broadcast in Canada on
Knowledge; in
Mexico on
Boomerang. It was broadcast, with English-dubbed voices, in the United States and other English-speaking markets, beginning on September 11, 1966. It was first commissioned for U.S. development by NBC Enterprises (the original version, now part of
CBS Television Distribution) and adapted by
Fred Ladd, for syndicated broadcast, with Kimba voiced by
Billie Lou Watt. In 2005 the original 1965 dub of
Kimba the White Lion was released as an 11-disc DVD set by Madman Anime of Australia and Right Stuf International of the U.S. It was a best seller. The series was re-dubbed into English in 1993, featuring the voice of Yvonne Murray as Kimba and having a new opening, with an all new soundtrack composed by
Paul J. Zaza. In 2012
BayView Entertainment/Widowmaker releases "Kimba the White Lion: The Complete Series" 10 DVD box set of the original 1965 series. It was broadcast several times in the United States: on
KHJ-TV (1965–67;
Billie Lou Watt dub), on
NBC (1965–77, re-runs until 1980;
Billie Lou Watt dub), on
syndication (1965–77;
Billie Lou Watt dub; 1993, re-runs until 1995; Yvonne Murray dub), on
Kids & Teens TV (1993 re-runs; 2005–2009) and on Inspiration Life TV (1993 re-runs; 2005–2009). The series was (partially) dubbed to Spanish and published in the United States on several cartoon-compilation DVDs by East West DVD Entertainment in the mid-2000s, bearing the titles
Kimba y sus amigos,
Kimba y sus amigos 2, and
Kimba y sus amigos 3. On the DVDs, the episodes were presented alongside other unrelated, Spanish-dubbed cartoons. It is unknown if these DVDs together contain the entirety of the series.{{cite web == TV sequel, films, remakes ==