Wake, Rattle, and Roll | |
---|---|
Title Card for Wake, Rattle, and Roll. |
|
Genre | Comedy |
Format | Live-action Animation |
Created by | David Kirschner |
Written by | Laren Bright Brady Connell Don Dougherty David Kirschner Ken Knox Linda Krause Earl Kress Kristina Luckey Bill Matheny David Schwartz Carl Swenson Marlowe Weisman |
Directed by | Doug Rogers Steven J. Santos |
Starring | R. J. Williams Avery Schreiber Ebonie Smith Terri Ivens |
Voices of | Charlie Adler Greg Burson Tim Curry Richard Gautier Marvin Kaplan John Mariano Allan Melvin Don Messick Pat Musick Rob Paulsen Neil Ross Arnold Stang John Stephenson Shadoe Stevens Jean Vander Pyl Janet Waldo Frank Welker Paul Winchell Jonathan Winters Patric Zimmerman |
Theme music composer | Joe Curiale |
Composer(s) | Joe Curiale Udi Harpaz Bob Mithoff Michael Tavera |
Country of origin | United States Canada |
Language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 50 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Shukri Ghalayini David Kirschner Ron Ziskin Cartoon segments: William Hanna Joseph Barbera Paul Sabella |
Producer(s) | Cosmo Anzilotti David Casci Jim Crum Jeffrey Hilton Jeffrey Scott Kelly Ward Kay Wright |
Editor(s) | Terry Moore |
Running time | 30 Minutes |
Production company(s) | Hanna-Barbera Productions Four Point Entertainment |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | Syndication The Disney Channel |
Picture format | Color |
Audio format | Stereophonic |
Original run | September 17, 1990 | – 1991
Chronology | |
Related shows | Monster Tails Fender Bender 500 |
Wake, Rattle, and Roll (retitled Jump, Rattle, and Roll when it aired on The Disney Channel on weekday afternoons in 1991[1]) is a live-action/animated television show produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and Four Point Entertainment that premiered in the fall of 1990. The show's title was inspired by the song "Shake, Rattle and Roll". After its single season on the air in syndication, Wake, Rattle, and Roll moved exclusively to The Disney Channel[1] under the title Jump, Rattle, and Roll.
Contents |
The series was about a boy named Sam Baxter (played by R. J. Williams) and his robot D.E.C.K.S. (voiced by Rob Paulsen; built from old audio/video equipment and a Sony U-Matic videotape head; an acronym for Digital Electronic Cassette-Headed Kinetic System) and their adventures in the basement, which has a time machine that can bring back historical figures. In some cases, Sam and D.E.C.K.S. occasionally have remote fights in which they each have a remote control and start pressing buttons changing each other from Hanna-Barbera stars to famous movie stars.
Sam's grandpa Dr. Lester T. Quirk (played by Avery Schreiber) is a brilliant inventor and is constantly supplying Sam and DECKS with sci-fi technology to add to their basement bedroom:
After a short live-action skit, D.E.C.K.S. would turn on the television screen on his torso and display an animated short. There are two new Hanna-Barbera series made exclusively for this program.
Monster Tails is about a group of pets who live in a castle in Transylvania with their guardian Igor Jr. (voiced by Charlie Adler), the son of Igor (Iggy for short). Each of them had a similar personality to their masters, who are in Hollywood making movies:
This was the Wacky Races of the 1990s, in which the racers drove monster trucks made for racing. Each vehicle had a different theme, specific to its drivers; e.g., Yogi & Boo Boo's truck looked like a giant picnic basket on wheels. Game show announcer and disk jockey Shadoe Stevens provided the voice of the race announcer. Competitors (listed by vehicle number) included:
00: Dick Dastardly & Muttley in the Dirty Truckster.
1: Yogi & Boo-Boo Bear in the Jellystone Jammer.
2: Huck & Snagglepuss in the Half Dog, Half Cat, Half Track
3: Wally Gator & Magilla Gorilla in the Swamp Stomper
4: Top Cat & Choo-Choo in the Alley Cat
5: Quick Draw McGraw & Baba Looey in the Texas Twister
6: Pixie & Dixie in the Chedder Shredder
7: Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy in the Lucky Trucky
13: Winsome Witch (with her cat, Lucky) in the Sonic Broom
Because Disney Channel didn't have any commercial breaks at the time, Hanna-Barbera added a "secret cartoon" at the end of the last live-action segment, which was either reruns of "Dino and the Cave Mouse" (Cave Mouse became a part of the opening credits for the Disney Channel episodes) from The Flintstones Comedy Show or re-runs of "Undercover Elephant" from The CB Bears Show.
Monster Tails
Fender Bender 500
|
|
|
|
|