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Comedy cafe Mr Bean puts smiles on lips

Updated: 2012-10-13 16:42
By Lu Chang ( China Daily)

China's got more bean selling coffee - and they're not playing for laughs

The creators of one of the world's most recognized comedy characters probably didn't have the coffee bean in mind when they named him, but it's no surprise that someone eventually decided to use him to sell coffee.

What will raise an eyebrow or two, in the style of British comic actor Rowan Atkinson, is that his Mr Bean character has been adopted with full licensing rights by the Chinese to take on strong competition like Starbucks and Costa along with scores of milder contenders.

Comedy cafe Mr Bean puts smiles on lips

Mr Bean Coffee says it targets at those who like a laugh and don't stand too much for any form of ceremony or ritual regarding their coffee-drinking habits. [Photo / China Daily] 

If you're aware of the bumbling, accident-prone misfit that is Mr Bean, it's safe to say smooth and sophisticated in the continental vogue is not the image China's latest chain of coffee shops wishes to convey.

Related reading: Coffee break in tradition

Rather, the aim is toward the lighter, more relaxed and easygoing side of people's nature, to those who like a laugh and don't stand too much for any form of ceremony or ritual regarding their coffee-drinking habits.

"If you are simply looking for a cup of coffee, you can go to an array of different coffee shops, or even a pastry store that hasn't put coffee in their list until recently, but you don't go to Mr Bean Coffee," says Tino Wu, chief representative of Mr Bean Coffee, which opened in China last year. "What consumers can expect here is a totally different experience."

Comedy cafe Mr Bean puts smiles on lips

Tino Wu is chief representative of Mr Bean Coffee in China. [Photo / China Daily]

The Mr Bean TV show starred Atkinson in the title role as the childish misfit, who continually manages to transform everyday, mundane events into hilarious situations due to the backfiring of his various schemes and contrivances.

But that doesn't mean customers of the new coffee houses can expect funny noises from the baristas mimicking the expresso machines or funny faces as they inspect coffee-less froth.

Wu hopes - seriously - the stores will be a new hangout for people who enjoy humor in their life, pursue a simple way of living like Mr Bean, and who can make the most mundane events unexpectedly amusing.

Mr Bean, which originally surfaced in 14 half-hour episodes on UK television in the early 1990s, has achieved a massive following around the world and is now recognized as the most popular British comedy internationally. Two feature films were also made, most recently in 2007, as well as an animated series of 26 episodes. Atkinson also reprised the character for the Opening Ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics.

But it was only in 2010 that its producers Tiger Aspect, in which Atkinson has a stake, struck a deal with Shanghai Franchise Enterprise Management Services Company to license the rights to use the Mr Bean brand name.

"We are extremely pleased to move into this new area of business with SFC and are looking forward to increasing awareness of Mr Bean in China through the network of coffee shops," said Katherine Senior, executive producer of Mr Bean.

Currently there are only four Mr Bean coffee shops in China, with three in Shanghai and one in Wuxi, Jiangsu province. But the company plans to open 16 more by the end of 2013, mostly in large cities such as Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Beijing.

The stores feature a replica of Mr Bean's old Mini car and display on the walls various stills from the programs.

"Compared with some large coffee chains, our expansion plan is not very aggressive, because we are sort of still in a learning process," Wu says. "China's coffee market is so extensive, with so much potential, that what we have explored is only the tip of an iceberg."

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