For the 1997 series see The New Adventures of Zorro (1997 TV series)
The New Adventures of Zorro | |
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Genre | Animated series |
Created by | Johnston McCulley (characters) |
Written by | Arthur Browne Jr. Robby London Ron Schultz Sam Schultz Marty Warner |
Voices of | Henry Darrow Julio Medina Eric Mason Don Diamond Christine Avila Socorro Valdez Carl Rivas Ismael 'East' Carlo |
Composer(s) | Ray Ellis Norm Prescott |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Don Christensen Norm Prescott Lou Scheimer |
Editor(s) | Ron Fedele Joe Gall Hector C. Gika |
Production company(s) | Filmation |
Distributor | CBS Television Distribution |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | CBS |
Original run | September 12 – December 5, 1981 |
The New Adventures of Zorro is an American animated television series produced by Filmation in 1981. The series, which has 13 episodes, is based on the fictional character created by Johnston McCulley. It aired as part of The Tarzan/Lone Ranger/Zorro Adventure Hour.
This is the only series Filmation made in which they contracted an outside, third party animation studio (although the storyboards were created by Filmation themselves). The series was outsourced to Tokyo Movie Shinsha in Japan. All other series afterwards were animated internally by Filmation themselves. It was producer Norm Prescott's final series with Filmation, bringing to an end the famous 'rotating producers' wheel Filmation was famous for. From Gilligan's Planet onwards, Lou Scheimer would handle production duties on his own.
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Don Diego de la Vega is a young man of high social position from the town of Los Angeles, who fights against tyranny under a secret identity, Zorro. He is helped by Tempest (originally "Tornado"), his black horse, and Miguel, a young swordsman (replacing Zorro's mute manservant Bernardo). Miguel wears a disguise very similar to Zorro’s (but with different colors and without a cape) and rides a Palomino. Ramón, the captain of the garrison, is Zorro’s main foe. Captain Ramón is helped in his task of capturing Zorro by González, a foolish sergeant who is friends with the De La Vega family. Sergeant González was a character from the original Zorro story 'The Curse of Capistrano'. He had been replaced by Sergeant Garcia on the Disney series. Ironically or possibly intentionally ironically, the actor who voiced González, Don Diamond, played Sergeant Garcia's companion Corporal Reyes.
Voice actor | Character |
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Henry Darrow | Zorro / Don Diego |
Julio Medina | Miguel |
Eric Mason | Captain Ramon |
Don Diamond | Sgt. González |
Christine Avila | Maria |
Socorro Valdez | Gov. Gen. Garcia |
Carl Rivas | Don Alejandro de la Vega |
Ismael 'East' Carlo | Gaspar |
Zorro showed the viewers information about California and the influence of Spanish language and Spanish culture in the region at the end of each chapter. These kinds of educational messages were common in 1980’s animated television series of Filmation. Other examples of this are the moral advice found in chapters of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe.
In 1981, toy manufacturer Gabriel released a line of Zorro action figures that tied in with Filmation's animated series. The characters included in the toy line were Zorro, Miguel, Captain Ramon, Sergeant Gonzalez, Tempest (horse) and Picaro (horse).
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