The New Adventures of Beany and Cecil
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The New Adventures of Beany and Cecil | |
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Genre | Animation |
Based on | Beany and Cecil by Bob Clampett |
Developed by | John Kricfalusi |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Voices of | |
Opening theme |
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Composers |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 5 (plus 8 unaired) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | John Kricfalusi |
Running time | 30 min |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | September 10 October 8, 1988 | –
Related | |
Beany and Cecil |
The New Adventures of Beany and Cecil was an animated revival of Bob Clampett's Beany and Cecil. It was produced in 1988 by DIC Animation City. Five half-hour episodes aired out of the thirteen in production during its original run. This incarnation of the show was developed, produced, and directed by Canadian animator John Kricfalusi.
Production
[edit]ABC had been negotiating for the production of the show with the Clampett family, who insisted that John Kricfalusi would be part of the production. The long negotiations delayed the start of production to mid-July, causing much of the animation to be rushed in order to meet the September deadline. Tensions rose between Kricfalusi and ABC over the tone of the show, leading to an uncomfortable atmosphere for the show's crew. The more ABC strove to soften the show, the more Kricfalusi pushed for shocking and offensive material.[1] The Clampett family were ultimately not happy with the cartoon, but remained supportive of Kricfalusi.[2] ABC cancelled the show after a handful of episodes as they found the humor not suitable for children's programming.[3] As a result, ABC replaced it with Hanna-Barbera's The Flintstone Kids.
Episodes
[edit]Thirteen half-hours were proposed, but only the first five were broadcast:[4]
Nº | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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1 | "The Framed Freep" | John Kricfalusi | Chuck Lorre | September 10, 1988 | |
Captain Huffenpuff leads Beany and Cecil on a mission to King Muckamuck of the tropical islands of Howareya to capture a three-headed monster called the Freep who is menacing them. When they arrive, King Muckamuck's daughter Princess Princess claims that the Freep wouldn't normally attack them, causing Beany and Cecil to investigate. They eventually find the Freep is actually a giant robot piloted by Dishonest John in his plot to turn the island into a vacation resort for evildoers called Club Bad. Note: During the "Club Bad" part of the episode, there are bad guys who are parodies of Doctor Doom, Joker, Frankenstein's Monster, Red Skull, Doctor Octopus, Jason Voorhees, Darth Vader, and Ming the Merciless. | |||||
2a | "Radio with a Bite!" | Eddie Fitzgerald | George Atkins | September 17, 1988 | |
Beany takes Cecil to the dentist to deal with a toothache. As Cecil waits for the dentist to return, Dishonest John poses as a nurse in order to place a radio receiver in Cecil's mouth in order to make Cecil think that he is listening to his conscience. With the radio receiver in place, DJ makes Cecil commit various crimes as it also picks up a radio station. | |||||
2b | "The Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H." | Jim Smith | Chuck Lorre | September 17, 1988 | |
Dishonest John is shown to be a member of the Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H. (short for Bad Guys, Losers, Evildoers, Crooks, and Horrible People). After getting a letter from them about cancelling his membership if he doesn't prove his bad ways, he is approached by some Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H. members who will judge him and do a painful way of cancelling his membership. When his attempts to bring doom to the Leakin' Lena fail and DJ is given one final chance to prove himself, they are overheard by Beany who suggests to Cecil and Huffenpuff to act like they are in danger to have the Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H. members impressed with DJ. | |||||
3a | "The Bad Guy Flu!" | Jim Smith | Rowby Goren | September 24, 1988 | |
Dishonest John gets the bad guy flu. He has to stay on the Leakin' Lena and be taken care of by Beany and Cecil until he gets better. Meanwhile, he tries to steal Captain Huffenpuff's top secret box. | |||||
3b | "D.J.'s Disappearing Act" | Eddie Fitzgerald | Chuck Lorre | September 24, 1988 | |
Captain Huffenpuff invents an invisibility paint which he demonstrates to Beany and Cecil. Unfortunately, it lasts for a few minutes. Dishonest John steals the invisibility paint in a plot to steal the Humongous Diamond that Captain Huffenpuff previously discovered and is on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Big Things. | |||||
4a | "Cecil Meets Clambo" | Eddie Fitzgerald | Paul Dini | October 1, 1988 | |
During a date with Cecilia at the drive-in theater, Cecil has a run-in with the clam movie star Clambo who invites Cecilia to be in his next movie. Taking advantage of Cecil working to get strong like Clambo, Dishonest John uses an Instant Muscle Kit to "help" Cecil. Dishonest John's "attempt" causes Cecil to crash into the giant penguin robot used for Clambo's movie causing it to go on a rampage. When Cecilia is in danger, Cecil must work to save her. | |||||
4b | "The Golden Menu" | Jim Smith | Rowby Goren | October 1, 1988 | |
Beany, Cecil, Captain Huffenpuff and Crowy travel to the Soup and Sandwich Island in search of the legendary Golden Menu which will give its owner any food they order. Dishonest John tries to steal the Menu while the Leakin' Lena crew is captured by savages. Captain Huffenpuff is mistaken for the mythical Great Customer. | |||||
5 | "The Courtship of Cecilia" | Bruce Timm | Paul Dini | October 8, 1988 | |
Cecil is prepared to tell Cecilia how much he loves her as he heads to her island home. Dishonest John plans to ruin Cecil's love life by posing as Cecilia and sabotaging his chances. | |||||
6a | "D.J. Goes Ape[4]" | Eddie Fitzgerald | Paul Dini | N/A | |
6b | "Momma Cecil[4]" | Bruce Timm | Tom Moore, Phil Kellard and Wayne Kline | N/A | |
7a | "May the Best Man Ribbet[4]" | John Kricfalusi and Eddie Fitzgerald | David Wise | N/A | |
7b | "On Your Mark, Get Set, B.L.E.C.H.[4]" | Jim Smith | Buzz Dixon | N/A | |
8a | "Cecil's Twin Brother[4]" | William H. Frake III | George Atkins | N/A | |
8b | "Rampage of the Robot Arms" | TBD | Stephen Langford | N/A | |
9a | "Bedtime for Beany[4]" | Eddie Fitzgerald (as Fenwick Birdwhistle) | Doug Molitor | N/A | |
9b | "Super Cecil Meets Thunderbolt[4]" | William H. Frake III | Gordon Kent | N/A | |
10a | "Eggs Marks the Spot[4]" | Eddie Fitzgerald (as Fenwick Birdwhistle) | Mark Edward Edens | N/A | |
10b | "Claws for Alarm[4]" | TBD | Brynne Stephens | N/A | |
10c | "Who Tamed Looney Lemur?[4]" | William H. Frake III | Jack Enyart | N/A | |
11a | "Color Me D.J.[4]" | TBD | Eddie Gorodetsky and Billy West(?) | N/A | |
11b | "Cecil the Singing Sea Serpent[4]" | John Kricfalusi | Paul Dini | N/A | |
12 | "Untitled Compilation Episode[4]" | John Kricfalusi | Paul Dini | N/A | |
13 | "Cecil's Birthday[4]" | John Kricfalusi | Paul Dini and Beth Bronstein | N/A |
Cast
[edit]- Mark Hildreth – Beany
- Maurice LaMarche – Dishonest John, King Muckamuck (in "The Framed Freep"), Film Director (in "Cecil Meets Clambo")
- Jim MacGeorge – Captain Horatio Huffenpuff
- Billy West – Cecil, Dentist (in "Radio with a Bite"), DJ (in "Radio with a Bite"), Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H. Member (in "Brotherhood of B.L.E.C.H."), Pinocchio (in "D.J.'s Disappearing Act"), Clambo (in "Cecil Meets Clambo"), Movie Trailer Announcer (in "Cecil Meets Clambo"), Head Waitress (in "The Golden Menu")
Additional voices
[edit]- Jane Mortfee
- Laura Harris
- Cree Summer-Francks
References
[edit]- ^ Komorowski, Thad. "Sick Little Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren & Stimpy Story".
- ^ Nolen-Weathington, Eric (2004). Modern Masters Volume 3: Bruce Timm. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 26–32. ISBN 1-893905-30-6. Retrieved 2010-12-31.
- ^ Joey Anuff (November 1998). "The Nearly Invisible Animation Genius". Spin volume 14 number 11 pp. 99-106. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Korkis, Jim. "The Thirteen New Adventures of Beany and Cecil". Cartoon Research.
External links
[edit]
- 1988 American television series debuts
- 1988 American television series endings
- Television series by DIC Entertainment
- 1980s American animated television series
- American children's animated fantasy television series
- American Broadcasting Company original programming
- Animated television series about children
- Animated television series about dragons
- Television series created by John Kricfalusi
- Beany and Cecil
- American Broadcasting Company animated television series
- Animated television series stubs