Barbapapa is a 1970 children's picture book by the French-American couple Annette Tison and Talus Taylor, who lived in Paris, France. Barbapapa is both the title character and the name of his "species". The book was the first of a series of children's books originally written in French and later translated into over 30 languages.

Barbe à papa – literally "Daddy's beard" – is French for cotton candy or candy floss.

Several European publishers expressed interest in Barbapapa but did not wish to pay the publishing cost. Frank Fehmers, a Dutch publisher, subsequently set up a co-production, and the first editions were published in 1970. The original editions were published in French by L'École des Loisirs, in Dutch by Frank Fehmers Productions, in British English by the Ernest Benn Company, and in American English by the Henry Z. Walck Co.

Characters

The main characters in the books are the Barbapapa family, who are most notable for their ability to shapeshift at will. In their native form, Barbapapas are blob-shaped, with a distinct head and arms, but no legs. Male Barbapapas have rounder bottoms, whereas female Barbapapas have a more slender form. Each Barbapapa can adopt any form they choose, but they remain easily identifiable by always retaining their faces and their distinctive colour.

Adaptations

Television

A few years after the book's initial publication, and when more titles had been published, Fehmers expanded the project to television films in conjunction with Joop Visch of Polyscope-PolyGram and Japanese animation studio Topcraft Limited Company, with the storyboards designed by Taylor. After twelve years, Fehmers and Tison/Taylor discontinued their business relationship. The first animated series, simply titled , aired on French, British and Dutch TV in 1974, and premiered in Japan three years later, in 1977. One hundred five minute-long episodes, spanning two seasons, were produced and aired on television. The show was written by Alice Taylor and Thomas Taylor.

The Japanese version of the series, as aired on TV Asahi, features an entirely different theme song from the original series, composed by Chuuji Kinoshita with lyrics by Zenzo Matsuyama. The Italian version's song was sung by singer-songwriter Roberto Vecchioni.

The Spanish kids' group Parchis made a song about the characters of the cartoon, named "Barbapapá".

An Israeli song named "Barba'aba" (ברבאבא) was written by Yoram Taharlev and performed by Tzipi Shavit in 1978. It talks about Barbapapa being shunned by everyone for looking weird until he met Barbamama. The song became a kids' classic.

Comic book

A comic book version was also created. Both cartoons and comics sometimes show concerns about the environment and contain environmental messages.

Legacy

thumb|Barbapapa drinks

The Barbapapa cartoon is popular in many countries worldwide and has been dubbed into a wide variety of languages, including five separate English dubs. In the United States, it was syndicated on various networks throughout the 1970s with a dub by Magno Sound and Video in New York. The original series continues to air to this day on television in France, Italy and El Salvador and Barbapapa merchandise is still produced in France and Japan.

Google created a doodle celebrating the 45th anniversary of the publishing of Barbapapa on May 19, 2015. It also served as a tribute to Talus Taylor.

The song 'Ce matin là' by the French electronic music duo Air (from their album Moon Safari) was inspired by the horn sounds on the Barbapapa show, per the band.

The 1994 song 'It's a Kid's World' by British post-rock/experimental rock trio Disco Inferno also samples the Barbapapa TV show theme.

The German comedians Bodo Wartke and Marti Fischer released a Tongue twister rap song called in 2024 which immediately went viral. People from all around the world listened and created dance choreographies to it. The song mentions the so-called Rhabarberbar-Barbaren, which the title-giving Barbara finds almost as likable as Barbapapa, a nod to the old show that is still well known in Germany.

Barbapapa receives a subtle but notable reference in the 2025 video game Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 . The game, which blends dark fantasy themes with painterly visual design, includes a small environmental detail in which one of the expedition’s logs describes a creature or phenomenon as “shifting like a Barbapapa”. This comparison playfully invokes the iconic shape‑shifting characters from the French children’s series, whose fluid, rounded transformations parallel the surreal and mutable forms encountered throughout the journey. Although brief, the reference functions as a cultural nod to European animation and highlights the developers’ tendency to contrast the world’s somber tone with occasional light, unexpected allusions to familiar media.

It also shows up in the game as a status effect from enemies in the game. Barbapapa is a restrictive status effect in Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 (specifically from the 'Verso's Drafts' DLC) that reduces the next instance of spell or attack damage from the affected character to 1. It is inflicted by the enemy Barbasucette and requires using basic attacks or specific skills to remove the "sticky" stacks.

References

  • Wiki devoted to Barbapapa.