Baby Looney Tunes
Baby Looney Tunes | |
---|---|
Opening title | |
Genre | Cartoon series |
Directed by |
Jeffrey Gatrall Michael Hack Scott Heming |
Voices of |
June Foray Samuel Vincent Britt McKillip Terry Klassen Ian James Corlett Janyse Jaud Chiara Zanni Brian Drummond |
Theme music composer |
Lisa Silver Patty Way |
Opening theme | "The Baby Looney Tunes way" |
Ending theme | "The Baby Looney Tunes way" (Instrumental) |
Composer(s) |
Steven Bernstein Julie Bernstein |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 53 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Sander Schwartz |
Producer(s) |
Gloria Jenkins Tom Minton Emory Myrick |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel |
Kids' WB (2002) Cartoon Network (2002-2006) |
Original run | September 7, 2002 β April 20, 2005 |
External links | |
Website |
Baby Looney Tunes is an American animated television series showing the Looney Tunes characters as babies. It was produced by Warner Bros. Animation.[1]
The show premiered on WB stations usually before or after the Kids' WB! block on September 7, 2002 and continued to air on Cartoon Network until 2006. The show is similar to Muppet Babies, with the main characters taken care of by Granny.
Characters
Main Characters
- Baby Bugs β He is indicated to be the oldest of the babies, which validates him as the leader. His leadership however does tend to cause dispute, especially with Lola and Daffy.
- Baby Lola β She is second in the lead after Bugs but sometimes she takes charge. Her independence is greater than the others and she has more boyish tendencies than the other girls.
- Baby Daffy β Often he is self-indulgent and always wants his personal gain. When problems arise, he believes it is himself who is treated unfairly, not noticing the inconvience inflicted on the others. Half the time, he does show and mean good intent.
- Baby Melissa β She often sticks with Petunia. She is a highly ambitious and thoughtful sort with a good nature, but at times she can be a control freak and get on the others nerves.
- Baby Petunia β She often sticks with Melissa. She is smarter than the other babies with insatiable curiosity.
- Baby Taz β As much as Taz is well behaved, he often mistakes various objects for food and sometimes breaks things with his spin. He has a sense of fun which exceeds all the others and he is prone to being a cry baby.
- Baby Tweety β The youngest and the smallest of the gang. Depicted as the brainstormer, because he comes up with ideas when the others are fresh out of them. He is very sensitive about his small frame (which he must overcome in most episodes centered around him) and curious about what he encounters.
- Baby Sylvester β At times he is shy and hesitant and he makes an easy target for Daffy to hoax and trade with. He is rarely seen using his claws. He likes to get attention from Granny more than the others.
- Granny β She offers professional love and care for the babies to keep them happy. The babies are fascinated and touched by her wisdom and her ability to overcome problems when they arise.
- Floyd Minton β Granny's nephew. Sometimes he is overwhelmed by the responsibility he takes on the babies but he is determined never to let Granny down. He often keeps an eye on one of the individual babies in each episode during Season 2.
Other Characters
They usually appear during musical sequences between episodes or star in some episodes.
- Baby Porky
- Baby Elmer
- Baby Sam
- Baby Gossamer
- Baby Michigan
- Baby Wile E. & Road Runner
- Baby Foghorn
- Puppy Barnyard
- Baby PepΓ©
- Baby Marvin
- Puppy K-9
- Baby Instant Martians (in same episode as Baby Duck Dodgers)
Britt McKillip, the voice for Baby Lola, was the only child actress; she began the role at the age of 11. The other cast members were adults. June Foray, the voice for Granny, was the only actress who was in the original Looney Tunes shorts to be featured in this show.
Music
Underscoring for the series was written by veteran animation composers Steven Bernstein and Julie Bernstein. They were nominated for a Daytime Emmy (Outstanding Achievement in Music Direction and Composition) in 2006. They also composed the score for the Easter special, "Eggs-traordinary Adventure", writing the music and lyrics for the featured songs.
DVD releases
Warner Home Video[2] has released 15 of the 53 episodes of Baby Looney Tunes, including the DVD of the only Baby Looney Tunes movie: Eggs-traordinary Adventure
DVD Name | Ep # | Release Date | Special Features |
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Eggs-traordinary Adventure | 3 | May 25, 2004 |
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4 Kid Favorites: Baby Looney Tunes | 12 | January 17, 2012 |
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In the United Kingdom, 4 volumes were released on DVD from July 15, 2013. Each disc contains 4 half-hour episodes.
DVD Name | Episodes listed | Release Date |
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Baby Bugs Bunny |
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July 15, 2013 |
Baby Taz |
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July 15, 2013 |
Baby Sylvester |
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July 15, 2013 |
Baby Tweety |
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July 15, 2013 |
See also
References
- β "Baby Looney Tunes- TV.com". Tv.com. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
- β http://www.warnerbros.com/studio/divisions/home-entertainment/warner-home-video.html
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Baby Looney Tunes |
- Official website
- Baby Looney Tunes at the Internet Movie Database
- Baby Looney Tunes at TV.com
- Baby Looney Tunes at Cartoonito
- DVD review of Baby Looney Tunes Volume Three: Puddle Olympics and production notes
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