POTENTIAL
FRANCHISING AND EXPANSION
Treble, with its rich, complex characters, builds on history, tradition, pop-culture, music, dance styles & the continuously evolving world of Irish Dance.
Did you know that 31.5 million people identify as Irish-Americans?
Irish Dance today is bigger than ever, and Irish Films and actors are in demand.
Ex: Barry Keoghan (Saltburn, Banshees), Cillian Murphy (Oppenheimer), Molly Shannon (White Lotus, The Other Two, SNL), Saoirse Ronan (Little Women, Lady Bird)
There are several climatic events in Treble that can be developed into a single event movie, or longer specials such as the big journeys back to Ireland, training for a summer.
The unique sub-culture and pageantry has the potential to deliver various merchandise & Halloween costumes, video games, dolls, color forms, viral social media trends, and original modern music with Gaelic undertones.
The Irish film industry continues looking forward,
If the past few years are anything to go by, the Irish certainly have a reason to party. Not only does Ireland boast a Best Actor nomination for Cillian Murphy’s Oppenheimer performance, but half the Golden Globe nominees in the same category were also Irish (including Murphy, who ultimately won.) The other names read like a Google Trends search for Hollywood It-boys: Barry Keoghan. Paul Mescal. Andrew Scott. Last year Ireland hit a record 14 nominations at the Academy Awards, including the first ever for an Irish-language film.
20 years of ‘Riverdance’ by the numbers
Twenty years, 11,000 performances, 25 million viewers, gross revenue of over $1 billion: Is there anyone who hasn’t seen “Riverdance”? Or at least heard of it? Since this percussive, feet-flying Irish step-dancing show debuted in Dublin in 1995 — after a well-received intermission performance during the Eurovision Song Contest in 1994 — it’s been touring the world almost continuously, inspiring a number of spinoffs and turning its first lead dancer, Michael Flatley, into a megastar.