Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1980 TV series)
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Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo | |
---|---|
Genre | Animation |
Running time | 30 minutes segments as three 7-minute shorts |
Creator(s) | Joe Ruby Ken Spears |
Starring | Don Messick Casey Kasem Frank Welker |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Original channel | ABC |
Original run | November 5, 1980–December 18, 1982 |
No. of episodes | 33 (99 shorts) |
Preceded by | Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1979–1980) |
Followed by | The All-New Scooby and Scrappy-Doo Show (1983–1984) |
The second version of Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo represents the fifth incarnation of the long-running Hanna-Barbera Saturday morning cartoon Scooby-Doo series. A total of 33 half-hour episodes, each of which included three 7-minute shorts, ran for three seasons, from 1980 to 1982 on ABC. Thirteen episodes were produced in 1980–1981 and seven were produced in 1981 as segments of The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show and thirteen were produced as segments of The Scooby-Doo/Scrappy-Doo/Puppy Hour. Out of the 99 shorts that were produced, 86 of them feature Scooby-Doo, his nephew Scrappy-Doo and Shaggy without the rest of the Mystery Inc gang, and the other 13 were back-up segments that only featured Scrappy-Doo and Yabba-Doo.
Contents |
[edit] Overview
Scrappy-Doo's addition to the show during the 1979–1980 season (see Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1979-1980)) gave it the ratings boost it needed to survive. For the 1980-1981 season, the show was completely overhauled into more of a purely comedy-based show.
In three 7-minute segments, Scooby, Scrappy, and Shaggy went on humorous adventures that pitted which against "real" supernatural forces. Fred, Daphne, and Velma were nowhere to be found, and neither was the mystery aspect of the show. These new short Scooby-Doo episodes were presented as one-half of the package program The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show, and reruns of the 1979–1980 episodes were later alternated with the newer episodes. The new Scooby and Scrappy cartoons also were the first to feature Don Messick doing Scrappy's voice instead of Lennie Weinrib; Messick's tough interpretation of his Pixie Mouse/Ruff the Cat voice was a significant difference from Weinrib's rougher characterization.
Because of a massive animators strike, only seven new Scooby-Doo half-hours (21 segments) were produced for the 1981-1982 season. To fill the void, Hanna-Barbera repackaged reruns from previous seasons under the title Scooby-Doo Classics. From this point until the demise of the series, there was always a package of Scooby reruns on ABC's Saturday morning lineup.
The 1982–1983 season brought a Hanna-Barbera/Ruby-Spears co-production, The Scooby-Doo/Scrappy-Doo/Puppy Hour. Hanna-Barbera produced new 7-minute episodes of Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo, which featured Scooby, Scrappy, and Shaggy traveling across the country as the "Fearless Detective Agency," attempting to solve mysteries (most of which were more typical spy or criminal cases, instead of the original ghosts-and-monsters setup), and Ruby-Spears produced episodes of The Puppy's New Adventures, featuring the character of Petey the Puppy (which was spun-off from Ruby-Spears' 1978 special, The Puppy Who Wanted a Boy, which was based on the book of the same name). In addition, Hanna-Barbera contributed a back-up segment called Scrappy and Yabba-Doo, which featured Scrappy-Doo having Western-based adventures with his uncle Yabba-Doo, and Yabba's master, Deputy Dusty.
[edit] Episode guide
The following guide only includes 30 minute Scooby-Doo segments. It does not include other episodes that ran along with them.
[edit] Season one (1980-1981, as segments on The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show)
# and Episode title | Original airdate |
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1.1: "A Close Encounter With A Strange Kind" 1.2: "A Fit Night Out For Bats" 1.3: "The Chinese Food Factory" |
November 8, 1980 |
1.4: "Scooby's Desert Dilemma" 1.5: "The Old Cat and Mouse Game" 1.6: "Stowaways" |
November 15, 1980 |
1.7: "Mummy's the Word" 1.8: "Hang in There, Scooby" 1.9: "Stuntman Scooby" |
November 22, 1980 |
1.10: "Scooby's Three Ding-A-Ling Circus" 1.11:"Scooby's Fantastic Island" 1.12:"Long John Scrappy" |
November 29, 1980 |
1.13: "Scooby's Bull Fright" 1.14: "Scooby Ghosts West" 1.15: "A Bungle in the Jungle" |
December 6, 1980 |
1.16: "Scooby's Fun Zone" 1.17: "Swamp Witch" 1.18: "Sir Scooby and the Black Knight" |
December 13, 1980 |
1.19: "Waxworld" 1.20: "Scooby in Wonderland" 1.21: "Scrappy's Birthday" |
December 20, 1980 |
1.22: "South Seas Scare" 1.23: "Scooby"s Swiss Miss" 1.24: "Alaskan King Coward" |
December 27, 1980 |
1.25: "Et Tu, Scoob?" 1.26: "Soggy Bog Scooby" 1.27: "Scooby Gumbo" |
January 3, 1981 |
1.28: "Way Out Scooby" 1.29: "Strongman Scooby" 1.30: "Moonlight Madness" |
January 10, 1981 |
1.31: "Dog Tag Scooby" 1.32: "Scooby at the Center of the World" 1.33: "Scooby's Trip to Ahz" |
January 17, 1981 |
1.34: "A Fright At the Opera" 1.35: "Robot Ranch" 1.36: "Surprised Spies" |
January 24, 1981 |
1.37: "The Invasion of the Scooby Snatchers" 1.38: "Scooby Dooby Guru" 1.39: "Scooby and the Bandit" |
January 31, 1981 |
[edit] Season two (1981, as segments on The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show)
# and Episode title | Original airdate |
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2.1: "Scooby Nocchio" 2.2: "Lighthouse Keeper Scooby" 2.3: "Scooby's Roots" |
September 19, 1981 |
2.4: "Scooby's Escape From Atlantis" 2.5: "Excalibur Scooby" 2.6: "Scooby Saves the World" |
September 26, 1981 |
2.7: "Scooby Dooby Goo" 2.8: "Rickshaw Scooby" 2.9: "Scooby's Luck of the Irish" |
October 3, 1981 |
2.10: "Backstage Scooby" 2.11: "Scooby's House of Mystery" 2.12: "Sweet Dreams Scooby" |
October 10, 1981 |
2.13: "Scooby-Doo 2000" 2.14: "Punk Rock Scooby" 2.15: "Canine to Five" |
October 17, 1981 |
2.16: "Hardhat Scooby" 2.17: "Hothouse Scooby" 2.18: "Pigskin Scooby" |
October 24, 1981 |
2.19: "Sopwith Scooby" 2.20: "Tenderbigfoot" 2.21: "Scooby and the Beanstalk" |
October 31, 1981 |
Following the final first-run episode on October 31, reruns from the first seasons were rerun alongside episodes from the second season.
[edit] Season three (1982, as segments of The Scooby-Doo/Scrappy-Doo/Puppy Hour)
Note: The third episode for each airdate listed is the Scrappy and Yabba-Doo episode from that date.
# and Episode title | Original airdate |
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3.1: "The Maltese Mackerel" 3.2: "Dumb Waiter Caper" 3.3: "Yabba's Hustle Rustle" |
September 25, 1982 |
3.4: "Catfish Burglar Caper" 3.5: "The Movie Monster Menace" 3.6: "Mine Your Own Business" |
October 2, 1982 |
3.7: "Super Teen Shaggy" 3.8: "Basketball Bumblers" 3.9: "Tragic Magic" |
October 9, 1982 |
3.10: "Beauty Contest Caper" 3.11: "Stakeout at the Takeout" 3.12: "Runaway Scrappy" |
October 16, 1982 |
3.13: "Who's Scooby-Doo?" 3.14: "Double Trouble Date" 3.15: "Slippery Dan the Escape Man" |
October 23, 1982 |
3.16: "Cable Car Caper" 3.17: "Muscle Trouble" 3.18: "The Low-Down Showdown" |
October 30, 1982 |
3.19: "The Comic Book Caper" 3.20: "The Misfortune Teller" 3.21: "The Vild Vest Vampire" |
November 6, 1982 |
3.22: "A Gem of a Case" 3.23: "From Bad to Curse" 3.24: "Tumbleweed Derby" |
November 13, 1982 |
3.25: "Disappearing Car Caper" 3.26: "Scooby-Doo and Genie-Poo" 3.27: "Law and Disorder" |
November 20, 1982 |
3.28: "Close Encounters of the Worst Kind" 3.29: "Captain Canine Caper" 3.30: "Alien Schmalien" |
November 27, 1982 |
3.31: "The Incredible Cat Lady Caper" 3.32: "Picnic Poopers" 3.33: "Go East Young Pardner" |
December 4, 1982 |
3.34: "One Million Years Before Lunch" 3.35: "Where's the Werewolf?" 3.36: "Up a Crazy River" |
December 11, 1982 |
3.37: "The Hoedown Showdown" 3.38: "Snow Job Too Small" 3.39: "Bride And Gloom" |
December 18, 1982 |
[edit] Notes
- The Richie Rich/Scooby-Doo Show, and the rest of the new ABC Saturday morning lineup, did not debut until November 5 (instead of the traditional first or second week of September) because of a voice actors' strike.
[edit] References
- Banks, Clive. "Scooby-Doo". Retrieved from http://www.clivebanks.co.uk/Scooby-Doo%20Intro.htm on September 4, 2005.
- Baxter, Joel (2003). The Complete Scooby-Doo Episode Guide. Retrieved from http://www.execulink.com/~joelb/scooby/doobydoo.htm on September 3, 2005.
- "Hanna-Babera Studios" (and subarticles). The Big Cartoon DataBase. Retrieved from http://www.bcdb.com/cartoons/Hanna-Barbera_Studios/index.html on September 3, 2005.