The book had been adapted into film and television beginning in 1926 and since 2008,
Belgium-based production company
Studio 100 owned the franchise when its German distribution division Studio 100 International (known as Studio 100 Media at that time) had brought the film rights to
Maya the Bee when they brought the series' owner EM.Entertainment alongside the
Zuiyo library from Sport1 Medien (which was known as EM.Sport Media AG at the time). Studio 100 Media later brought out the remaining film and television, development and worldwide rights of the franchise from the Waldemar Bonsels Foundation one year later in July 2009. Rights to the adaptations of the
Maya the Bee books had switched hands in October 2025, when the franchise's parent Studio 100 via its German international distribution arm Studio 100 International entered a strategic alliance with French digital-first kids' entertainment company Animaj to reimagine Studio 100's most famous children's brand
Maya the Bee to shape the future of the franchise. As part of the deal, French entertainment company Animaj had acquired Studio 100's rights to the property including the 1975, 1979 (excluding Japan) and 2012 TV series outside of Belgium and German-speaking countries as part of Animaj's international strategy to acquire international IPs and turn them into global franchises with Studio 100 partnering with Animaj to expand the brand to digital & international footprint using the latter's GenAI animation production tools that would lead the franchise's future series content development and international expansion. Studio 100 retained the production, international sales and feature film rights to the
Maya the Bee films that they produced including its spin-off
Arnie & Barney and would continue overseeing global theme park rights to the franchise in its home country Belgium and German-speaking countries.
Screen 1926 film German director Wolfram Junghans made a 1926 silent version ("starring" real insects). The film was lost for decades until the only original copy of the film was found in
Finland. The material was restored in 2005 with a new musical score and released on DVD in 2012, in collaboration with the
KAVI and the
Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv, and the film was screened in both
Hamburg and
Helsinki. and screened on television in various territories. The Japanese TV series was preceded by
Tokyo Kodomo Club's
musical play based on the short story, presented as
Mitsubachi Māya ("Maya the Honeybee"), distributed on an
LP album. The original theme was composed by
Karel Svoboda and sung by
Karel Gott in the German, Czech and
Slovak versions, and
Zbigniew Wodecki in the
Polish version.
2012 TV series In 2012
Studio 100 Animation produced a 78-episode,
13-minute TV series. The series was rendered in
CGI animation. A second 52 episode season aired in 2017.
Film series A
2014 film adaptation based upon the 2012 series was released. In 2018, a sequel to the 2014 film, titled
Maya the Bee: The Honey Games, was released on 1 April in Germany and 1 May in United States. A third film, titled
Maya the Bee: The Golden Orb was released on 7 January 2021, in Australia. It was delayed from its original 2020 release date due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. An upcoming
spin-off film titled
Arnie & Barney will be released in early 2026, with
The Umbilical Brothers reprising their roles as the titular duo.
Stage Opera Maya the Bee also served as the basis for a children's opera written by the Croatian composer
Bruno Bjelinski in 1963. In 2008 it was staged in
Villach, Austria, as part of their Carinthian Summer Music Festival. This performance was distinguished by having the "bees" played by children and not professional opera singers as it is usually the case.
Puppet musical Singer-songwriter
Nancy Harrow created a jazz-musical version of the story, called
The Adventures of Maya the Bee, that featured puppets by Zofia Czechlewska. Harrow's adaptation was produced in New York City by The Culture Project in 2000, and was revived in 2012.
Musical In October 2016, Belgian company Studio 100 created a Flemish stage musical called
Maya en de Pollenbollen based on the 2012 series that has the people dressed in costumes for the characters from the show. The show contains songs made by Studio 100 with a few new songs created exclusively for the show. The musical centers around Maya alongside Flip and Beatrice celebrating Willy's birthday. The musical later returned in the Spring of 2017. Since 2016, live actors from the original stage show make numerous appearances at numerous stage shows and special events held by Studio 100. Notably Studio 100's annual "De Grote Sinterklaasshow" held from late November till early December featuring
Sinterklaas and Zwarte Pieten watching various Studio 100 characters such as Kabouter Plop, and
Piet Piraat (including Maya and friends) perform musical numbers on stage. The same actress that portrayed Maya in the musical is also the official Flemish voice of the character and reprised her role for Studio 100's "De Liedjestuin" where Maya is singing various Dutch children's songs and nursery rhymes. In the French and Walloon version "Le Jardin des Refrains", Maya is played by a different actress.
Amusement parks After Studio 100's acquisition of the franchise,
Plopsa began expanding the franchise to its own theme parks.
Plopsaland De Panne opened an indoor children's area called "Mayaland" on 3 July 2011, before the CGI incarnation's begun airing on numerous television stations across Europe. Maya, alongside Flip and Willy, would also appear at other Plopsa owned parks such as
Plopsa Coo and Plopsa Indoor Hasselt. In Poland, Plopsa opened an indoor theme park called "Majaland Kownaty" which opened to the public on 28 September 2018, which is mostly themed to Maya the Bee but features other Studio 100's IPs (such as Bumba and Piet Piraat). A year after Mayaland opened in Plopsaland,
Holiday Park, Germany, a similar Maya the Bee children's area called "Majaland" opened on March 31, 2012.
Video games Video game background The origins of the
Maya the Bee video games originated from a
South Park video game for the
Game Boy Color developed by
Crawfish Interactive in development in 1998. The title was eventually cancelled due to
South Park creators
Matt Stone and
Trey Parker stating that the game's mature themes would be inappropriate for the Game Boy Color, whose major demographic was children. A year later in 1999, the unreleased game's engine and assets were reused for two additional Game Boy Color titles from Crawfish and Acclaim –
Maya the Bee & Her Friends, which was released exclusively in Europe, and
The New Adventures of Mary-Kate and Ashley, based on the
Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen franchise and was released in
North America, being the first of the various
video games based on the duo.
Games released •
Maya the Bee & Her Friends (Game Boy Color, 1999): developed by Crawfish, published by
Acclaim. •
Maya the Bee: Garden Adventures (Game Boy Color, 2000): developed by Neon Studios and
Kiloo, published by Acclaim and Plan-B Media. •
Maya the Bee: What a Thunderstorm (
PC, 2001): developed by Junior Interactive, published by Tivola. •
Maya the Bee: The Great Adventure (
Game Boy Advance, 2002): developed by
Shin'en Multimedia, published by Acclaim. •
Biene Maja – Maja auf Blütenjagd (Flash, 2004): published by
ZDF. •
Maya the Bee: A Wonderful Surprise! (PC, 2004): developed by The Web Production, published by Tivola. •
Maya the Bee: Sweet Gold (Game Boy Advance, 2005): developed by Shin'en Multimedia, published by
Midway. •
Wer hilft Willi? (PC, 2005): published by Tivola •
Flieg, Maja, flieg! (PC, Tivola): published by Tivola •
Maja auf Blütenjagt (Flash, 2005): published by ZDF. •
Maya the Bee and Friends (
mobile, 2006): developed by Kiloo and co-published by Plan-B Media. •
The Bee Game (Game Boy Advance,
Nintendo DS, 2007):
The Bee Game is an adventure video game released for Nintendo DS and Game Boy Advance, developed by German studio Independent Arts Software. The game lets players experience the adventures of Maya the Bee and her friend Willie as they search for their friends, lost from a strong storm that has blown through Corn Poppy Meadow. •
Maya (Nintendo DS, 2013): developed by Studio 100 and
Engine Software, published by Bandai Namco Games Europe. •
Maya the Bee: The Nutty Race (
iOS and
Android, 2019):
Mobile racing game, developed by Midnight Pigeon in cooperation with Studio 100. •
Maya the Bee RP (iOS, Android, PC, consoles, 2025):
Roblox Game, developed by FXFX Studios in cooperation with Studio 100. ==Merchandising==