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Tiny Toon Adventures

Tiny Toon Adventures is an American animated television series created by Tom Ruegger that was broadcast from September 14, 1990, to December 6, 1992. It was the first animated series produced by Steven Spielberg's Amblin Television (credited as Amblin Entertainment) in association with Warner Bros. Animation.[1] The show follows the adventures of a group of young cartoon characters who attend Acme Looniversity to become the next generation of characters from the Looney Tunes series.[2]

Tiny Toon Adventures
Also known asSteven Spielberg Presents Tiny Toon Adventures
Genre
Created byTom Ruegger
Based onLooney Tunes
by Warner Bros.
Voices of
Theme music composerBruce Broughton
Opening theme"Tiny Toon Adventures Theme" by Charlie Adler, Tress MacNeille & Joe Alaskey
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes98 (233 segments) (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producerSteven Spielberg
ProducerSherri Stoner
Running time22 minutes
Production companies
Original release
Network
ReleaseSeptember 14, 1990 (1990-09-14) –
December 6, 1992 (1992-12-06)
Related

The pilot episode, "The Looney Beginning", aired as a prime-time special on CBS on September 14, 1990,[3] while the series itself was featured in first-run syndication for the first two seasons. The final season aired on Fox under the Fox Kids programming block. The series ended production in 1992 in favor of Animaniacs, which premiered a year later; however, two specials were produced in 1994.[4] A reboot series, Tiny Toons Looniversity, announced in October 2020, was released on September 8, 2023.

Premise edit

Setting edit

Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of "Acme Acres", where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend "Acme Looniversity", a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester the Cat, Wile E. Coyote and Elmer Fudd. In the series, the university is founded to teach cartoon characters how to become funny. The school is not featured in every episode, as not all of its storylines revolve around the school.

Like Looney Tunes, the series makes use of cartoon violence (e.g. anvils falling on someone, liberal use of explosives) and slapstick. The series parodies and references the current events of the early 1990s and Hollywood culture. Occasionally, episodes delve into veiled ethical and morality stories of ecology, self-esteem, and crime.

Characters edit

 
Artwork displaying a majority of the Tiny Toon cast.

The series centers on a group of young cartoon characters who attend a school called Acme Looniversity to be the next generation of Looney Tunes characters. Most of the Tiny Toons characters were designed to resemble younger versions of Warner Bros.' most popular Looney Tunes animal characters by exhibiting similar traits and looks. The four main characters are Babs Bunny, a pink female rabbit, Buster Bunny, a blue male rabbit not related to Babs, Plucky Duck, a green male duck and Hamton J. Pig, a pink male pig. Other major characters in the cast are generally nonhuman as well. These include Fifi La Fume, a purple-and-white female skunk; Shirley the Loon, a white female loon with psychic powers; Dizzy Devil, a purple tasmanian devil; Furrball, a blue cat; Sweetie Pie, a pink canary; Calamity Coyote, a bluish-gray coyote; Little Beeper, a red-orange roadrunner; and Gogo Dodo, a zany green dodo. Two human characters, Montana Max and Elmyra Duff, are regarded as the main villains of the series and also are students of Acme Looniversity. As villains, Elmyra is seen as an extreme pet lover while Montana Max is a spoiled rich brat who owns either many toys, change or polluting factories. Supporting characters included Li'l Sneezer, a gray mouse with powerful sneezes; Concord Condor, a purple condor; Byron Basset, a usually sleeping basset hound; Bookworm, a green worm with glasses; Arnold the Pit Bull, a muscular white pit bull; Fowlmouth, a white rooster with horrid language; Barky Marky, a brown dog, and Mary Melody, an African American girl.

Feeding off the characters are the more traditional Looney Tunes such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Porky Pig among others. Most of the adults teach classes at Acme Looniversity and serve as mentors to the Tiny Toons while others fill secondary positions as needed.

Production edit

Development edit

According to writer Paul Dini, Tiny Toons originated as an idea by Terry Semel, the then-president of Warner Bros., who wanted to "inject new life into the Warner Bros. Animation department", and at the same time create a series with junior versions of Looney Tunes characters. Semel proposed that the new series would be a show based on Looney Tunes where the characters were either young versions of the original Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies characters or new characters as the offspring of the original characters.[5] The idea of a series with the basis of younger and junior versions of cartoon characters was common at the time; the era in which Tiny Toons was produced for had such cartoons as Muppet Babies, A Pup Named Scooby-Doo (which Ruegger worked on), Tom & Jerry Kids and The Flintstone Kids.

On January 20, 1987,[6] the Warner Bros. Animation studio approached Steven Spielberg to collaborate with Semel and Warner Bros. head of licensing Dan Romanelli on Semel's ideas.[5] They eventually decided that the new characters would be similar to the Looney Tunes characters with no direct relation. As series producer/show-runner Tom Ruegger explained: "Well, I think in Warner Bros. case, they had the opportunity to work with Steven Spielberg] on a project [...] But he didn't want to just work on characters that Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, Bob McKimson and Bob Clampett made famous and created. He wanted to be involved with the creation of some new characters." The result was a series similar to Looney Tunes without the use of the same characters.[5] However, Tiny Toons did not go into production then, nor was it even planned to be made for television; the series initially was to be a theatrical feature-length film.[5][7]

On December 27, 1988, Tiny Toons was changed from a film to a television series, with Jean MacCurdy overseeing production of the first 65 episodes.[5] MacCurdy said that Tiny Toons was changed to a television series to "reach a broader audience".[7] For the series, MacCurdy hired Tom Ruegger, who previously wrote for Filmation and Hanna-Barbera, to produce.[5] In January 1989, Ruegger and writer Wayne Kaatz began developing the characters and the setting of "Acme Acres" with Spielberg.[5]

On January 9, 1989, Warner Bros. Animation chose its voice actors from over 1,200 auditions and put together its 100-person production staff.[7] On April 13, 1989, full production of series episodes began with five overseas animation houses and a total budget of $25 million.[7] The first 65 episodes of the series aired in syndication on 135 stations, beginning in September 1990.[8] During that time, Tiny Toons was a huge success and got higher ratings than its Disney Afternoon competitors in some markets. After a successful run in syndication, Fox attained the rights for season 3. Production of the series halted in late 1992 to make way for Animaniacs to air the following year.

Writers edit

The series and characters were developed by series producer, head writer and cartoonist Tom Ruegger, division leader Jean MacCurdy, associate producer and artist Alfred Gimeno and story editor/writer Wayne Kaatz. Among the series' first writers were Jim Reardon, Tom Minton and Eddie Fitzgerald. Other writers included Arleen Sorkin. The character and scenery designers included Alfred Gimeno, Ken Boyer, Dan Haskett, Karen Haskett and many other artists and directors.

"Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian" was co-written by three then-teenage fans.[9]

Casting info edit

Voice director Andrea Romano auditioned over 1,200 voices and chose more than a dozen main voice actors.[7] The role of Buster Bunny was given to Charlie Adler, who gave the role, as producer Ruegger said, "a great deal of energy".[5] The role of Babs Bunny was given to Tress MacNeille. Dini said that MacNeille was good for the role because she could do both Babs' voice and the voices of her impressions.[5] Voice actors Joe Alaskey and Don Messick were given the roles of Plucky Duck and Hamton J. Pig, respectively. Child actor Danny Cooksey played Montana Max and, according to Dini, was good for the role because he could do a "tremendous mean voice."[5] Cree Summer provides the roles of Elmyra Duff and Mary Melody; former Saturday Night Live cast member Gail Matthius voices Shirley the Loon, and Kath Soucie provides Fifi La Fume and Li'l Sneezer. Other voice actors include Maurice LaMarche as Dizzy Devil; Candi Milo as Sweetie, Frank Welker as Gogo Dodo, Furrball, Byron Basset, Calamity Coyote, Little Beeper, Barky Marky and other voices; and Rob Paulsen as Fowlmouth, Arnold the Pit Bull, Concord Condor and other characters. Legendary original Looney Tunes voice actor, Mel Blanc, was initially set to reprise his roles as the classic characters, but due to his death in July 1989, his characters were recast to Alaskey, Jeff Bergman, Greg Burson, and Bob Bergen.

During production of the third season, Adler left the show due to a feud with the producers. Adler was angry that he had not been offered a role in Animaniacs while his fellow Tiny Toons voice actors with smaller roles, such as Paulsen, LaMarche and Welker, were given starring roles in the new series.[10] John Kassir replaced Adler for the remainder of the show's run (although Adler would eventually return to voice Buster in the cancelled video game, Tiny Toon Adventures: Defenders of the Universe). Alaskey, voice of Plucky Duck, briefly left for financial reasons, but returned when an agreement was reached with the studio.[10]

Animation edit

In order to complete 65 episodes for the first season, Warner Bros. Animation and Amblin Television contracted several North American and international animation houses, including Tokyo Movie Shinsha, Wang Film Productions, AKOM, Freelance Animators New Zealand, Encore Cartoons, StarToons[11] and Kennedy Cartoons.[12] Tokyo Movie Shinsha also animated the series' opening sequence. Some of the Warner Bros. staff disliked working with Kennedy Cartoons due to the animation studio's inconsistent quality, and episodes that they animated were often subject to multiple re-takes. In other cases, such as the debut episode "The Looney Beginning", portions of Kennedy Cartoons-animated episodes were re-animated by another animation studio.[10][unreliable source?] Kennedy Cartoons was actually dropped after the end of the series' first season.

Tiny Toon Adventures was made with a higher production value than standard television animation. It had a cel count that was more than double that of most animated television shows then.[5] The series had about 25,000 cels per episode instead of the standard 10,000, making it unique in that characters moved more fluidly.[5] Animation producer Pierre DeCelles described storyboarding for the series as "fun but a big challenge because I always had a short schedule, and it's not always easy to work full blast nonstop".

Music edit

During development, Spielberg said that Warner Bros. would use a full orchestra, which some thought too expensive and impossible, but they ended up agreeing. Warner Bros. selected Bruce Broughton to write the theme tune (for which he would win a Daytime Emmy alongside Ruegger and Kaatz) and serve as music supervisor. Screen credits for the composers were given based on the amount of music composed for, or composed and reused in, the episode.

Twenty-six other composers were contracted to create original dramatic underscore for each episode: Julie and Steve Bernstein, Steven Bramson, Don Davis, John Debney, Ron Grant, Les Hooper, Carl Johnson, Elliot Kaplan, Arthur Kempel, Ralph Kessler, Albert Lloyd Olson, Hummie Mann, Dennis McCarthy, Joel McNeely, Peter Myers, Laurence Rosenthal, William Ross, Arthur B. Rubinstein, J. Eric Schmidt, David Slonaker, Fred Steiner, Morton Stevens, Richard Stone, Stephen James Taylor and Mark Watters. The composers conducted their own music. Of these composers, Broughton, Bramson, Davis, Olson, Stone, Taylor and Watters wrote the score to How I Spent My Vacation.

These composers would later write the musical scores for shows including Animaniacs and The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries.

Episodes edit

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast airedNetwork
1651September 14, 1990 (1990-09-14)CBS
64September 17, 1990 (1990-09-17)March 29, 1991 (1991-03-29)First-run syndication
213September 16, 1991 (1991-09-16)February 24, 1992 (1992-02-24)First-run syndication
How I Spent My VacationMarch 11, 1992 (1992-03-11)Direct-to-video
320September 14, 1992 (1992-09-14)December 6, 1992 (1992-12-06)Fox (Fox Kids)
Specials2March 27, 1994 (1994-03-27)May 28, 1995 (1995-05-28)

Films and television specials edit

A feature-length film was released direct-to-video in 1992, entitled Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation.[8] This was later re-edited and aired as part of the series. The length of the movie is 79 minutes.[13] Fox aired It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special in prime time on December 6, 1992.[14] This episode is a parody of It's a Wonderful Life. Although the Christmas episode is called a special, it is only called this as it is Christmas-themed and is just a regular episode. The Tiny Toon Spring Break Special[8] was aired on Fox during prime time on March 27, 1994.[4][15] Fox aired Tiny Toons' Night Ghoulery[8] in prime time on May 28, 1995.[16]

Spin-offs edit

In 1992, The Plucky Duck Show was produced as a spin-off for Fox Kids, based on the character Plucky Duck. Except for the premiere episode, "The Return of Batduck", the show was consisted entirely of recycled Plucky-centric episodes from Tiny Toon Adventures.[17][unreliable source?]

In 1998, a second spin-off, entitled Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain, premiered on Kids' WB. This series featured the character Elmyra Duff as well as Pinky and the Brain, two other characters who were originally on Animaniacs before receiving their own spin-off series, also entitled Pinky and the Brain. Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain picks up after Pinky and the Brain leaves off where Pinky and the Brain become Elmyra's pets after Brain accidentally destroys their original home, ACME Labs, during an experiment. Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain lasted for 13 episodes.

Reception edit

The show was received with positive reviews; the Philadelphia Daily News remarked "It's the most cinematic first-run animated show on TV, mixing long shots, extra-tight closeups and odd perspectives for comic effect..."[18] Citizens' Voice noted "Combining the animation of Warner Bros. and the creative direction of Spielberg, the collection of 65 half-hour cartoons is sure to make a big impression during the weekday late afternoon viewing period..."[19] However, The Journal News criticized about the series "Adults looking for the smart-aleck attitude and wit of the old Warner Bros. classics will be disappointed, however; these are aimed squarely at kids and reflect a '90s sensibility, sneaking pro-social messages into madcap adventure stories."[20]

Awards and nominations edit

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
1991 Daytime Emmy Awards Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Ken Boyer, Art Leonardi, Art Vitello, Paul Dini, and Sherri Stoner Won [21]
Outstanding Music Direction and Composition William Ross for "Fields of Honey" Won [22]
Outstanding Original Song Bruce Broughton, Wayne Kaatz, and Tom Ruegger for the main title theme Won [22]
1992 Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Sherri Stoner, Rich Arons, and Art Leonardi Nominated [21]
Outstanding Music Direction and Composition Mark Watters for "The Love Disconnection" Won [22]
Outstanding Writing in an Animated Program Nicholas Hollander, Tom Ruegger, Paul Dini, and Sherri Stoner Won [22]
1993 Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Sherri Stoner, Rich Arons, Byron Vaughns, Ken Boyer, Alfred Gimeno, and David West Won [21]
Outstanding Music Direction and Composition Steven Bramson for “The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain” Won [22]
1992 Annie Awards Animated Television Program Nominated [22]
1993 Nominated [22]
1991 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Paul Dini, Sherri Stoner, Dave Marshall, Glen Kennedy, Rich Aarons (for episode "The Looney Beginning") Nominated [22]
1989/1990 Young Artist Awards Best New Cartoon Series Tiny Toon Adventures Won [23]
1991–1992 Outstanding Young Voice-Over in an Animated Series or Special Whitby Hertford Nominated [24]
1991 Environmental Media Awards Children's Television Program – Animated episode "Whales Tales" Won [25][21]

In January 2009, IGN named Tiny Toons as the 41st in their Top 100 Animated TV Shows list.[26]

Merchandise edit

Print edit

Tiny Toon Adventures Magazine, a quarterly children's magazine based on the series, debuted in October 1990. Issues #1–4 were published by DC Comics, and issues #5–7 were released by Welsh Publishing Group. The final issue was cover-dated Spring 1992.[27] Also, various storybooks were published by the Little Golden Book company, including a few episode adaptations and some original stories (Lost in the Fun House and Happy Birthday, Babs!). Tiny Toon Adventures also had a comic book series made by Warner Bros. and DC. The characters also made occasional cameo appearances in the Animaniacs, Freakazoid! and Pinky and the Brain comic books.[citation needed]

Toys and video games edit

Since its debut, numerous video games based on Tiny Toons have been released. There have been no less than nine titles based on the series released after its original television run and as recently as 2002. Many companies have held the development and publishing rights for the games, including Konami (during the 1990s), Atari, NewKidCo, Conspiracy Games, Warthog, Terraglyph Interactive Studios, and Treasure. Toys for the series included plush dolls and plastic figures, primarily made by Playskool.

Home media edit

Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation was released on DVD on August 21, 2012. There are currently no plans to release the two specials (Spring Break and Night Ghoulery) on DVD. In the early to mid-1990s, Warner Bros. had released several videos, including Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation (a direct-to-video release which later aired as a four-part TV episode), Best of Buster and Babs, Two-Tone Town, Tiny Toons: Big Adventures, Tiny Toons: Island Adventures, Tiny Toons: Music Television, Tiny Toons: Fiendishly Funny Adventures, Tiny Toons: Night Ghoulery, and It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special.

DVD name Ep # Release date Special Features Notes
Season 1 Volume 1 35 July 29, 2008 (2008-07-29) From Looney Tunes to Tiny Toons: A Wacky Evolution, featurette Was released concurrently with the first season of Freakazoid!. "The Looney Beginning" episode is uncut on the set.
Season 1 Volume 2 30 April 21, 2009 (2009-04-21) None, aside from trailers Was released concurrently with the second season of Freakazoid!. Two episodes are edited: "Tiny Toons Music Television" (a phone number gag was removed) and "Son of the Wacko World of Sports" (wraparounds and title cards were removed).[citation needed]
Volume 3: Crazy Crew Rescues 17 January 8, 2013 (2013-01-08) None, aside from trailers The allegedly banned episode "Elephant Issues" is included in this set. Initially when the set was announced, the content list did not contain the episode due to its controversial "One Beer" segment.[28]
Volume 4: Looney Links 16 May 28, 2013 (2013-05-28) None, aside from trailers The original release contained a glitch which Warner Bros. fixed by the end of July. Also, "Best of Buster Bunny Day" is missing its second wraparound scene.[citation needed]

Reboot edit

A reboot, Tiny Toons Looniversity, was announced on October 28, 2020, through the Amblin Entertainment website. It was ordered for two seasons, with each episode running 30 minutes.[29][30] As with the original series, Steven Spielberg will return to his role as executive producer. Sam Register, Darryl Frank, and Justin Falvey will also be serving as executive producers, while Erin Gibson will be the showrunner and co-executive producer. The series premiered on Max on September 8, 2023, and it aired on Cartoon Network on September 9, 2023. [31][32]

The reboot's first piece of concept art showed Buster Bunny and Babs Bunny, redesigned with different clothes and a new art style.

Tom Ascheim, then-current president of Cartoon Network, was quoted saying. "Tiny Toons Looniversity will capture all the clever, subversive and smart humor that made Tiny Toon Adventures such a standout series. Fans old and new will love to laugh at and with these characters all over again."[33]

Shortly after the reboot's announcement, it was reported that several of the original voice actors were not going to be involved in the series. Cree Summer had revealed she was informed that Elmyra Duff was excluded.[34] Additionally, Charlie Adler was not approached to reprise his role as Buster, nor was Maurice LaMarche as Dizzy Devil.[35]

However, during an interview on July 12, 2021, Candi Milo said she would be returning to voice Granny but it remained uncertain if she would also be reprising her role as Sweetie Bird. A few days later, on July 15, Jeff Bergman confirmed that he would be returning to the series as well, voicing Bugs Bunny, Sylvester, and Foghorn Leghorn. He went into detail on the characters' roles in the series, explaining Foghorn would occupy as Acme Looniversity's coach, while Bugs would take on a "Dumbledore-like" personality. He also confirmed recording sessions had begun. As shown in the teaser trailer, Lola Bunny and characters from the Warner Bros.-Seven Arts era will be appearing.[36]

On July 9, 2022, it was announced that Tiny Toons Looniversity would be part of the Looney Tunes panel at San Diego Comic-Con 2022.[37] On July 22, it was revealed that Ashleigh Crystal Hairston would be voicing Babs, instead of Tress MacNeille. Numerous pieces of concept art were shown, revealing a revamped Acme Looniversity and its interiors. This also confirmed many of the original series' major characters would be returning, some with updated appearances. Most notably, Elmyra was included in one of these pictures, disproving the claims of her removal. Some have suggested this meant Elmyra was added back at some point or was always intended to appear. Spielberg referred to the series as "the best iteration of Tiny Toons he'd ever seen".[38]

Character design supervisor Leonard Lee and showrunner Erin Gibson confirmed that Buster and Babs would be presented as twin siblings in the reboot, as opposed to best friends and potential romantic partners. This decision was criticized by fans of the original series.[39][40] A July 2022 interview had crew members giving more details. They revealed the series was going to bring back all of the characters from the original show, "down to Arnold the Pit Bull".[38] They also hinted at an episode which takes place in outer space. Gibson provided an explanation behind the choice to make Buster and Babs related, saying, "They're fraternal twins, which was not an original plot point. I wanted to dive into a brother/sister relationship that looked really symbiotic and collaborative and supportive, not antagonistic. Seeing two people who are really on the same page, and then how do people who are so close make new friends? You know, find out who they are by these new relationships — these new college experiences while still having fun and doing the dumbest stuff you'll ever see on TV, but having story and plot points and character development." Nate Cash added, "And they look up to the faculty, they're established Tunes who are like their gods, but then they're like, 'Who am I?' and 'What's my voice?' — which is a cool place to develop them as their own characters and not just mini versions of their counterparts."

On April 20, 2023, IGN shared an official teaser trailer on their YouTube site, stating the show was scheduled to premiere in Fall of 2023.[41]

On June 22, 2023, the main voice cast was announced. Eric Bauza will voice Buster, Daffy Duck, and Gossamer, David Errigo Jr. will voice Plucky and Hamton, Tessa Netting will voice Sweetie, Bob Bergen and Cree Summer will reprise their roles as Porky Pig and Elmyra respectively, Candi Milo (the original voice of Sweetie) will now play Granny and Witch Hazel, and Fred Tatasciore will voice Yosemite Sam and the Tasmanian Devil, joining the aforementioned Bergman and Hairston.[42][43] On July 21, 2023, two episodes were screened at San Diego Comic-Con. On the same day, the opening theme was uploaded online, with Matthew Janszen being announced as the composer.[44][45] On August 18, 2023, a new trailer was released, announcing the premiere date as September 8, 2023, on Max and the following day on Cartoon Network.[46]

References edit

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  24. ^ . The Young Artist Foundation. Archived from the original on February 2, 2000. Retrieved February 6, 2007.
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  35. ^ Adler, Charlie. "Charlie Adler on Twitter: "I have not been invited to participate so I don't have any idea about the production but I wish it great success !"". Twitter. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  36. ^ Weiss, Josh (July 15, 2021). "'Tiny Toons' Reboot on HBO MAX will feature a 'Dumbledore'-esque Bugs Bunny, Return to Looniversity". from the original on July 15, 2021. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
  37. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony; Hipes, Patrick (July 9, 2022). "Comic-Con 2022 Panel Schedule For Film & TV Serves Up MCU, 'Black Adam', 'Shazam! Fury Of The Gods', 'House Of The Dragon' & More". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  38. ^ a b Graves, Sabrina (July 27, 2022). "Tiny Toons Looniversity, Bugs Bunny Builders, and a Halloween Special Join a New Looney Tunes Era". Retrieved July 27, 2022.
  39. ^ The Animanicast post
  40. ^ Tiny Toons' Controversial Babs Bunny Retcon Is All Sorts Of Weird
  41. ^ Tiny Toons Looniversity - Official Teaser Trailer (2023). April 20, 2023. Retrieved April 27, 2023 – via YouTube.
  42. ^ Bergen, Bob (June 22, 2023). "[Tiny Toons cast announcement]". Instagram. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  43. ^ "Meet the All-Star Voice Cast for "Tiny Toons Looniversity"" (Press release). Cartoon Network. June 22, 2023. Retrieved June 22, 2023 – via The Futon Critic.
  44. ^ Graves, Sabina (July 22, 2023). "A New Class Is Ready To Act Out in Tiny Toons Looniversity". Gizmodo. Retrieved July 23, 2023.
  45. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (July 21, 2023). "'Looniversity' Puts New Spin on Beloved 'Tiny Toons' Theme Song". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 23, 2023.
  46. ^ "Tiny Toons Looniversity Trailer Offers Looney Tunes-Style Hijinks & Iconic Characters [EXCLUSIVE]". Screen Rant. August 18, 2023. Retrieved August 18, 2023.

External links edit

tiny, toon, adventures, this, article, about, series, video, game, based, video, game, american, animated, television, series, created, ruegger, that, broadcast, from, september, 1990, december, 1992, first, animated, series, produced, steven, spielberg, ambli. This article is about the series For the video game based on it see Tiny Toon Adventures video game Tiny Toon Adventures is an American animated television series created by Tom Ruegger that was broadcast from September 14 1990 to December 6 1992 It was the first animated series produced by Steven Spielberg s Amblin Television credited as Amblin Entertainment in association with Warner Bros Animation 1 The show follows the adventures of a group of young cartoon characters who attend Acme Looniversity to become the next generation of characters from the Looney Tunes series 2 Tiny Toon AdventuresAlso known asSteven Spielberg Presents Tiny Toon AdventuresGenreComedy Slapstick SatireCreated byTom RueggerBased onLooney Tunesby Warner Bros Voices ofCharlie Adler Tress MacNeille Joe Alaskey Don Messick Gail Matthius Kath Soucie Maurice LaMarche Frank Welker Rob Paulsen Danny Cooksey Cree Summer Jeff Bergman Candi Milo Noel Blanc June Foray Jim Cummings John Kassir Stan Freberg Bob Bergen Greg BursonTheme music composerBruce BroughtonOpening theme Tiny Toon Adventures Theme by Charlie Adler Tress MacNeille amp Joe AlaskeyComposersBruce Broughton Steven Bernstein Steven Bramson Don Davis Carl Johnson Albert Lloyd Olson William Ross Arthur B Rubinstein Fred Steiner Morton StevensCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons3No of episodes98 233 segments list of episodes ProductionExecutive producerSteven SpielbergProducerSherri StonerRunning time22 minutesProduction companiesWarner Bros Animation Amblin EntertainmentOriginal releaseNetworkCBS pilot Syndicated seasons 1 2 Fox season 3 ReleaseSeptember 14 1990 1990 09 14 December 6 1992 1992 12 06 RelatedAnimaniacs 1993 1998 The Plucky Duck Show 1992 Freakazoid 1995 1997 Pinky and the Brain 1995 1998 Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain 1998 1999 Tiny Toons Looniversity 2023 present The pilot episode The Looney Beginning aired as a prime time special on CBS on September 14 1990 3 while the series itself was featured in first run syndication for the first two seasons The final season aired on Fox under the Fox Kids programming block The series ended production in 1992 in favor of Animaniacs which premiered a year later however two specials were produced in 1994 4 A reboot series Tiny Toons Looniversity announced in October 2020 was released on September 8 2023 Contents 1 Premise 1 1 Setting 1 2 Characters 2 Production 2 1 Development 2 2 Writers 2 3 Casting info 2 4 Animation 2 5 Music 3 Episodes 4 Films and television specials 5 Spin offs 6 Reception 7 Awards and nominations 8 Merchandise 8 1 Print 8 2 Toys and video games 8 3 Home media 9 Reboot 10 References 11 External linksPremise editSetting edit Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of Acme Acres where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live The characters attend Acme Looniversity a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros cartoons such as Bugs Bunny Daffy Duck Porky Pig Sylvester the Cat Wile E Coyote and Elmer Fudd In the series the university is founded to teach cartoon characters how to become funny The school is not featured in every episode as not all of its storylines revolve around the school Like Looney Tunes the series makes use of cartoon violence e g anvils falling on someone liberal use of explosives and slapstick The series parodies and references the current events of the early 1990s and Hollywood culture Occasionally episodes delve into veiled ethical and morality stories of ecology self esteem and crime Characters edit Main article List of Tiny Toon Adventures characters nbsp Artwork displaying a majority of the Tiny Toon cast The series centers on a group of young cartoon characters who attend a school called Acme Looniversity to be the next generation of Looney Tunes characters Most of the Tiny Toons characters were designed to resemble younger versions of Warner Bros most popular Looney Tunes animal characters by exhibiting similar traits and looks The four main characters are Babs Bunny a pink female rabbit Buster Bunny a blue male rabbit not related to Babs Plucky Duck a green male duck and Hamton J Pig a pink male pig Other major characters in the cast are generally nonhuman as well These include Fifi La Fume a purple and white female skunk Shirley the Loon a white female loon with psychic powers Dizzy Devil a purple tasmanian devil Furrball a blue cat Sweetie Pie a pink canary Calamity Coyote a bluish gray coyote Little Beeper a red orange roadrunner and Gogo Dodo a zany green dodo Two human characters Montana Max and Elmyra Duff are regarded as the main villains of the series and also are students of Acme Looniversity As villains Elmyra is seen as an extreme pet lover while Montana Max is a spoiled rich brat who owns either many toys change or polluting factories Supporting characters included Li l Sneezer a gray mouse with powerful sneezes Concord Condor a purple condor Byron Basset a usually sleeping basset hound Bookworm a green worm with glasses Arnold the Pit Bull a muscular white pit bull Fowlmouth a white rooster with horrid language Barky Marky a brown dog and Mary Melody an African American girl Feeding off the characters are the more traditional Looney Tunes such as Bugs Bunny Daffy Duck and Porky Pig among others Most of the adults teach classes at Acme Looniversity and serve as mentors to the Tiny Toons while others fill secondary positions as needed Production editDevelopment edit According to writer Paul Dini Tiny Toons originated as an idea by Terry Semel the then president of Warner Bros who wanted to inject new life into the Warner Bros Animation department and at the same time create a series with junior versions of Looney Tunes characters Semel proposed that the new series would be a show based on Looney Tunes where the characters were either young versions of the original Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies characters or new characters as the offspring of the original characters 5 The idea of a series with the basis of younger and junior versions of cartoon characters was common at the time the era in which Tiny Toons was produced for had such cartoons as Muppet Babies A Pup Named Scooby Doo which Ruegger worked on Tom amp Jerry Kids and The Flintstone Kids On January 20 1987 6 the Warner Bros Animation studio approached Steven Spielberg to collaborate with Semel and Warner Bros head of licensing Dan Romanelli on Semel s ideas 5 They eventually decided that the new characters would be similar to the Looney Tunes characters with no direct relation As series producer show runner Tom Ruegger explained Well I think in Warner Bros case they had the opportunity to work with Steven Spielberg on a project But he didn t want to just work on characters that Chuck Jones Friz Freleng Bob McKimson and Bob Clampett made famous and created He wanted to be involved with the creation of some new characters The result was a series similar to Looney Tunes without the use of the same characters 5 However Tiny Toons did not go into production then nor was it even planned to be made for television the series initially was to be a theatrical feature length film 5 7 On December 27 1988 Tiny Toons was changed from a film to a television series with Jean MacCurdy overseeing production of the first 65 episodes 5 MacCurdy said that Tiny Toons was changed to a television series to reach a broader audience 7 For the series MacCurdy hired Tom Ruegger who previously wrote for Filmation and Hanna Barbera to produce 5 In January 1989 Ruegger and writer Wayne Kaatz began developing the characters and the setting of Acme Acres with Spielberg 5 On January 9 1989 Warner Bros Animation chose its voice actors from over 1 200 auditions and put together its 100 person production staff 7 On April 13 1989 full production of series episodes began with five overseas animation houses and a total budget of 25 million 7 The first 65 episodes of the series aired in syndication on 135 stations beginning in September 1990 8 During that time Tiny Toons was a huge success and got higher ratings than its Disney Afternoon competitors in some markets After a successful run in syndication Fox attained the rights for season 3 Production of the series halted in late 1992 to make way for Animaniacs to air the following year Writers edit The series and characters were developed by series producer head writer and cartoonist Tom Ruegger division leader Jean MacCurdy associate producer and artist Alfred Gimeno and story editor writer Wayne Kaatz Among the series first writers were Jim Reardon Tom Minton and Eddie Fitzgerald Other writers included Arleen Sorkin The character and scenery designers included Alfred Gimeno Ken Boyer Dan Haskett Karen Haskett and many other artists and directors Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian was co written by three then teenage fans 9 Casting info edit Voice director Andrea Romano auditioned over 1 200 voices and chose more than a dozen main voice actors 7 The role of Buster Bunny was given to Charlie Adler who gave the role as producer Ruegger said a great deal of energy 5 The role of Babs Bunny was given to Tress MacNeille Dini said that MacNeille was good for the role because she could do both Babs voice and the voices of her impressions 5 Voice actors Joe Alaskey and Don Messick were given the roles of Plucky Duck and Hamton J Pig respectively Child actor Danny Cooksey played Montana Max and according to Dini was good for the role because he could do a tremendous mean voice 5 Cree Summer provides the roles of Elmyra Duff and Mary Melody former Saturday Night Live cast member Gail Matthius voices Shirley the Loon and Kath Soucie provides Fifi La Fume and Li l Sneezer Other voice actors include Maurice LaMarche as Dizzy Devil Candi Milo as Sweetie Frank Welker as Gogo Dodo Furrball Byron Basset Calamity Coyote Little Beeper Barky Marky and other voices and Rob Paulsen as Fowlmouth Arnold the Pit Bull Concord Condor and other characters Legendary original Looney Tunes voice actor Mel Blanc was initially set to reprise his roles as the classic characters but due to his death in July 1989 his characters were recast to Alaskey Jeff Bergman Greg Burson and Bob Bergen During production of the third season Adler left the show due to a feud with the producers Adler was angry that he had not been offered a role in Animaniacs while his fellow Tiny Toons voice actors with smaller roles such as Paulsen LaMarche and Welker were given starring roles in the new series 10 John Kassir replaced Adler for the remainder of the show s run although Adler would eventually return to voice Buster in the cancelled video game Tiny Toon Adventures Defenders of the Universe Alaskey voice of Plucky Duck briefly left for financial reasons but returned when an agreement was reached with the studio 10 Animation edit In order to complete 65 episodes for the first season Warner Bros Animation and Amblin Television contracted several North American and international animation houses including Tokyo Movie Shinsha Wang Film Productions AKOM Freelance Animators New Zealand Encore Cartoons StarToons 11 and Kennedy Cartoons 12 Tokyo Movie Shinsha also animated the series opening sequence Some of the Warner Bros staff disliked working with Kennedy Cartoons due to the animation studio s inconsistent quality and episodes that they animated were often subject to multiple re takes In other cases such as the debut episode The Looney Beginning portions of Kennedy Cartoons animated episodes were re animated by another animation studio 10 unreliable source Kennedy Cartoons was actually dropped after the end of the series first season Tiny Toon Adventures was made with a higher production value than standard television animation It had a cel count that was more than double that of most animated television shows then 5 The series had about 25 000 cels per episode instead of the standard 10 000 making it unique in that characters moved more fluidly 5 Animation producer Pierre DeCelles described storyboarding for the series as fun but a big challenge because I always had a short schedule and it s not always easy to work full blast nonstop Music edit During development Spielberg said that Warner Bros would use a full orchestra which some thought too expensive and impossible but they ended up agreeing Warner Bros selected Bruce Broughton to write the theme tune for which he would win a Daytime Emmy alongside Ruegger and Kaatz and serve as music supervisor Screen credits for the composers were given based on the amount of music composed for or composed and reused in the episode Twenty six other composers were contracted to create original dramatic underscore for each episode Julie and Steve Bernstein Steven Bramson Don Davis John Debney Ron Grant Les Hooper Carl Johnson Elliot Kaplan Arthur Kempel Ralph Kessler Albert Lloyd Olson Hummie Mann Dennis McCarthy Joel McNeely Peter Myers Laurence Rosenthal William Ross Arthur B Rubinstein J Eric Schmidt David Slonaker Fred Steiner Morton Stevens Richard Stone Stephen James Taylor and Mark Watters The composers conducted their own music Of these composers Broughton Bramson Davis Olson Stone Taylor and Watters wrote the score to How I Spent My Vacation These composers would later write the musical scores for shows including Animaniacs and The Sylvester amp Tweety Mysteries Episodes editMain article List of Tiny Toon Adventures episodes SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast airedNetwork1651September 14 1990 1990 09 14 CBS64September 17 1990 1990 09 17 March 29 1991 1991 03 29 First run syndication213September 16 1991 1991 09 16 February 24 1992 1992 02 24 First run syndicationHow I Spent My VacationMarch 11 1992 1992 03 11 Direct to video320September 14 1992 1992 09 14 December 6 1992 1992 12 06 Fox Fox Kids Specials2March 27 1994 1994 03 27 May 28 1995 1995 05 28 Films and television specials editA feature length film was released direct to video in 1992 entitled Tiny Toon Adventures How I Spent My Vacation 8 This was later re edited and aired as part of the series The length of the movie is 79 minutes 13 Fox aired It s a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special in prime time on December 6 1992 14 This episode is a parody of It s a Wonderful Life Although the Christmas episode is called a special it is only called this as it is Christmas themed and is just a regular episode The Tiny Toon Spring Break Special 8 was aired on Fox during prime time on March 27 1994 4 15 Fox aired Tiny Toons Night Ghoulery 8 in prime time on May 28 1995 16 Spin offs editMain articles The Plucky Duck Show and Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain In 1992 The Plucky Duck Show was produced as a spin off for Fox Kids based on the character Plucky Duck Except for the premiere episode The Return of Batduck the show was consisted entirely of recycled Plucky centric episodes from Tiny Toon Adventures 17 unreliable source In 1998 a second spin off entitled Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain premiered on Kids WB This series featured the character Elmyra Duff as well as Pinky and the Brain two other characters who were originally on Animaniacs before receiving their own spin off series also entitled Pinky and the Brain Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain picks up after Pinky and the Brain leaves off where Pinky and the Brain become Elmyra s pets after Brain accidentally destroys their original home ACME Labs during an experiment Pinky Elmyra amp the Brain lasted for 13 episodes Reception editThe show was received with positive reviews the Philadelphia Daily News remarked It s the most cinematic first run animated show on TV mixing long shots extra tight closeups and odd perspectives for comic effect 18 Citizens Voice noted Combining the animation of Warner Bros and the creative direction of Spielberg the collection of 65 half hour cartoons is sure to make a big impression during the weekday late afternoon viewing period 19 However The Journal News criticized about the series Adults looking for the smart aleck attitude and wit of the old Warner Bros classics will be disappointed however these are aimed squarely at kids and reflect a 90s sensibility sneaking pro social messages into madcap adventure stories 20 Awards and nominations editYear Award Category Nominee s Result Ref 1991 Daytime Emmy Awards Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg Tom Ruegger Ken Boyer Art Leonardi Art Vitello Paul Dini and Sherri Stoner Won 21 Outstanding Music Direction and Composition William Ross for Fields of Honey Won 22 Outstanding Original Song Bruce Broughton Wayne Kaatz and Tom Ruegger for the main title theme Won 22 1992 Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg Tom Ruegger Sherri Stoner Rich Arons and Art Leonardi Nominated 21 Outstanding Music Direction and Composition Mark Watters for The Love Disconnection Won 22 Outstanding Writing in an Animated Program Nicholas Hollander Tom Ruegger Paul Dini and Sherri Stoner Won 22 1993 Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg Tom Ruegger Sherri Stoner Rich Arons Byron Vaughns Ken Boyer Alfred Gimeno and David West Won 21 Outstanding Music Direction and Composition Steven Bramson for The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain Won 22 1992 Annie Awards Animated Television Program Nominated 22 1993 Nominated 22 1991 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Animated Program Steven Spielberg Tom Ruegger Paul Dini Sherri Stoner Dave Marshall Glen Kennedy Rich Aarons for episode The Looney Beginning Nominated 22 1989 1990 Young Artist Awards Best New Cartoon Series Tiny Toon Adventures Won 23 1991 1992 Outstanding Young Voice Over in an Animated Series or Special Whitby Hertford Nominated 24 1991 Environmental Media Awards Children s Television Program Animated episode Whales Tales Won 25 21 In January 2009 IGN named Tiny Toons as the 41st in their Top 100 Animated TV Shows list 26 Merchandise editPrint edit Tiny Toon Adventures Magazine a quarterly children s magazine based on the series debuted in October 1990 Issues 1 4 were published by DC Comics and issues 5 7 were released by Welsh Publishing Group The final issue was cover dated Spring 1992 27 Also various storybooks were published by the Little Golden Book company including a few episode adaptations and some original stories Lost in the Fun House and Happy Birthday Babs Tiny Toon Adventures also had a comic book series made by Warner Bros and DC The characters also made occasional cameo appearances in the Animaniacs Freakazoid and Pinky and the Brain comic books citation needed Toys and video games edit Main article List of Tiny Toon Adventures video games Since its debut numerous video games based on Tiny Toons have been released There have been no less than nine titles based on the series released after its original television run and as recently as 2002 Many companies have held the development and publishing rights for the games including Konami during the 1990s Atari NewKidCo Conspiracy Games Warthog Terraglyph Interactive Studios and Treasure Toys for the series included plush dolls and plastic figures primarily made by Playskool Home media edit Tiny Toon Adventures How I Spent My Vacation was released on DVD on August 21 2012 There are currently no plans to release the two specials Spring Break and Night Ghoulery on DVD In the early to mid 1990s Warner Bros had released several videos including Tiny Toon Adventures How I Spent My Vacation a direct to video release which later aired as a four part TV episode Best of Buster and Babs Two Tone Town Tiny Toons Big Adventures Tiny Toons Island Adventures Tiny Toons Music Television Tiny Toons Fiendishly Funny Adventures Tiny Toons Night Ghoulery and It s a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special DVD name Ep Release date Special Features NotesSeason 1 Volume 1 35 July 29 2008 2008 07 29 From Looney Tunes to Tiny Toons A Wacky Evolution featurette Was released concurrently with the first season of Freakazoid The Looney Beginning episode is uncut on the set Season 1 Volume 2 30 April 21 2009 2009 04 21 None aside from trailers Was released concurrently with the second season of Freakazoid Two episodes are edited Tiny Toons Music Television a phone number gag was removed and Son of the Wacko World of Sports wraparounds and title cards were removed citation needed Volume 3 Crazy Crew Rescues 17 January 8 2013 2013 01 08 None aside from trailers The allegedly banned episode Elephant Issues is included in this set Initially when the set was announced the content list did not contain the episode due to its controversial One Beer segment 28 Volume 4 Looney Links 16 May 28 2013 2013 05 28 None aside from trailers The original release contained a glitch which Warner Bros fixed by the end of July Also Best of Buster Bunny Day is missing its second wraparound scene citation needed Reboot editMain article Tiny Toons Looniversity A reboot Tiny Toons Looniversity was announced on October 28 2020 through the Amblin Entertainment website It was ordered for two seasons with each episode running 30 minutes 29 30 As with the original series Steven Spielberg will return to his role as executive producer Sam Register Darryl Frank and Justin Falvey will also be serving as executive producers while Erin Gibson will be the showrunner and co executive producer The series premiered on Max on September 8 2023 and it aired on Cartoon Network on September 9 2023 31 32 The reboot s first piece of concept art showed Buster Bunny and Babs Bunny redesigned with different clothes and a new art style Tom Ascheim then current president of Cartoon Network was quoted saying Tiny Toons Looniversity will capture all the clever subversive and smart humor that made Tiny Toon Adventures such a standout series Fans old and new will love to laugh at and with these characters all over again 33 Shortly after the reboot s announcement it was reported that several of the original voice actors were not going to be involved in the series Cree Summer had revealed she was informed that Elmyra Duff was excluded 34 Additionally Charlie Adler was not approached to reprise his role as Buster nor was Maurice LaMarche as Dizzy Devil 35 However during an interview on July 12 2021 Candi Milo said she would be returning to voice Granny but it remained uncertain if she would also be reprising her role as Sweetie Bird A few days later on July 15 Jeff Bergman confirmed that he would be returning to the series as well voicing Bugs Bunny Sylvester and Foghorn Leghorn He went into detail on the characters roles in the series explaining Foghorn would occupy as Acme Looniversity s coach while Bugs would take on a Dumbledore like personality He also confirmed recording sessions had begun As shown in the teaser trailer Lola Bunny and characters from the Warner Bros Seven Arts era will be appearing 36 On July 9 2022 it was announced that Tiny Toons Looniversity would be part of the Looney Tunes panel at San Diego Comic Con 2022 37 On July 22 it was revealed that Ashleigh Crystal Hairston would be voicing Babs instead of Tress MacNeille Numerous pieces of concept art were shown revealing a revamped Acme Looniversity and its interiors This also confirmed many of the original series major characters would be returning some with updated appearances Most notably Elmyra was included in one of these pictures disproving the claims of her removal Some have suggested this meant Elmyra was added back at some point or was always intended to appear Spielberg referred to the series as the best iteration of Tiny Toons he d ever seen 38 Character design supervisor Leonard Lee and showrunner Erin Gibson confirmed that Buster and Babs would be presented as twin siblings in the reboot as opposed to best friends and potential romantic partners This decision was criticized by fans of the original series 39 40 A July 2022 interview had crew members giving more details They revealed the series was going to bring back all of the characters from the original show down to Arnold the Pit Bull 38 They also hinted at an episode which takes place in outer space Gibson provided an explanation behind the choice to make Buster and Babs related saying They re fraternal twins which was not an original plot point I wanted to dive into a brother sister relationship that looked really symbiotic and collaborative and supportive not antagonistic Seeing two people who are really on the same page and then how do people who are so close make new friends You know find out who they are by these new relationships these new college experiences while still having fun and doing the dumbest stuff you ll ever see on TV but having story and plot points and character development Nate Cash added And they look up to the faculty they re established Tunes who are like their gods but then they re like Who am I and What s my voice which is a cool place to develop them as their own characters and not just mini versions of their counterparts On April 20 2023 IGN shared an official teaser trailer on their YouTube site stating the show was scheduled to premiere in Fall of 2023 41 On June 22 2023 the main voice cast was announced Eric Bauza will voice Buster Daffy Duck and Gossamer David Errigo Jr will voice Plucky and Hamton Tessa Netting will voice Sweetie Bob Bergen and Cree Summer will reprise their roles as Porky Pig and Elmyra respectively Candi Milo the original voice of Sweetie will now play Granny and Witch Hazel and Fred Tatasciore will voice Yosemite Sam and the Tasmanian Devil joining the aforementioned Bergman and Hairston 42 43 On July 21 2023 two episodes were screened at San Diego Comic Con On the same day the opening theme was uploaded online with Matthew Janszen being announced as the composer 44 45 On August 18 2023 a new trailer was released announcing the premiere date as September 8 2023 on Max and the following day on Cartoon Network 46 References edit Trusdell Brian May 28 1995 Focus Warner s Toon Factory for the 1990s The Los Angeles Times El Segundo California Los Angeles Times Communications LLC ISSN 2165 1736 Archived from the original on October 14 2012 Retrieved May 10 2011 Erickson Hal 2005 Television Cartoon Shows An Illustrated Encyclopedia 1949 Through 2003 2nd ed McFarland amp Co pp 853 856 ISBN 978 1476665993 TV Listings for September 14 1990 TV Tango TV Tango Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved May 10 2011 a b Mendoza N F March 27 1994 Shows for youngsters and their parents too Spielberg s Tiny Toons break for prime time and the rites of spring The Los Angeles Times El Segundo California Los Angeles Times Communications LLC ISSN 2165 1736 Archived from the original on April 11 2020 Retrieved May 10 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l Miller Bob 1990 NEW TOONS ON THE BLOCK They re attending Acme Looniversity amp hoping to graduate as classic cartoon characters Comic Scene No 15 Starlog Group pp 33 39 68 SUFFERIN SUCCOTASH IT S LOONEY TUNES TAKE TWO Entertainment Weekly September 28 1990 Archived from the original on November 28 2014 Retrieved September 19 2007 a b c d e Lambert David September 9 2012 Tiny Toon Adventures Long Awaited Volume 3 DVD Brings Toons from 2nd 3rd Season TV Shows on DVD Archived from the original on September 29 2012 Retrieved September 28 2012 a b c d Lenburg Jeff 1999 Specials The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons 2 ed New York New York Checkmark Books p 336 ISBN 0816038317 Berkman Meredith February 1 1991 Adventures among the Toons Entertainment Weekly No 51 New York City Meredith Corporation ISSN 1049 0434 OCLC 21114137 Archived from the original on March 31 2007 Retrieved May 28 2011 a b c Paltridge Peter July 2006 Platypus Comix interviews Tom Ruegger part II Platypus Comix Archived from the original on September 8 2006 Retrieved August 23 2006 Owens John July 5 1992 Drawing On Experience Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois Tribune Publishing ISSN 2165 171X OCLC 60639020 Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved October 1 2011 Credits from various Tiny Toon Adventures episodes clarification needed Beck Jerry 2005 Top 60 Animated Features Never Theatrically Released in the United States The Animated Movie Guide 1 ed Chicago A Capela Books p 327 ISBN 1556525915 TV Listings for December 6 1992 TV Tango TV Tango Archived from the original on October 8 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 TV Listings for March 27 1994 TV Tango TV Tango Archived from the original on October 8 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 TV Listings for May 28 1995 TV Tango TV Tango Archived from the original on October 8 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 Trivia for The Plucky Duck Show The Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on July 22 2009 Retrieved June 2 2007 https i imgur com z1yLwIq png Archived 2021 08 13 at the Wayback Machine From the May 30 1991 edition of Philadelphia Daily News https i imgur com r6xij3z png Archived 2021 08 13 at the Wayback Machine From the October 8 1990 edition of Citizens Voice https i imgur com ly45SJb png Archived 2021 08 13 at the Wayback Machine From the September 14 1990 edition of The Journal News a b c d Awards for Tiny Toon Adventures The Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on November 14 2004 Retrieved June 2 2007 a b c d e f g h Awards for Tiny Toon Adventures The Internet Movie Database IMDb Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved March 22 2011 Twelfth Annual Youth in Film Awards 1989 1990 The Young Artist Foundation Archived from the original on February 2 2000 Retrieved February 6 2007 Fourteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards 1991 1992 The Young Artist Foundation Archived from the original on February 2 2000 Retrieved February 6 2007 EMA Awards Past Recipients and Honorees Environmental Media Association Archived from the original on August 2 2020 Retrieved April 11 2020 Top 100 Animated Series 41 Tiny Toon Adventures IGN Archived from the original on February 11 2009 Retrieved October 24 2021 GCD Issue Tiny Toon Adventures Magazine 7 Grand Comics Database Archived from the original on April 11 2020 Retrieved April 11 2020 Tiny Toon Adventures DVD news Missing episode Elephant Issues to be included TVShowsOnDVD com January 8 2013 Archived from the original on May 3 2016 Retrieved September 10 2016 Otterson Joe October 28 2020 Tiny Toon Adventures Reboot Genndy Tartakovsky Series Ordered at HBO Max and Cartoon Network Variety Archived from the original on October 28 2020 Retrieved October 28 2020 WarnerMedia Expands Kids amp Family Offerings on Cartoon Network and HBO Max Under New Tagline Redraw Your World Press release WarnerMedia February 17 2021 Archived from the original on February 17 2021 Retrieved February 17 2021 Zahed Ramin January 17 2023 Warner Bros Animation to Launch Tiny Toons Looniversity This Year Animation Magazine Retrieved January 17 2023 Max HBO Your favorite Toons are back for more fun TinyToonsLooniversity is coming soon to Max StreamOnMax Twitter Retrieved April 12 2023 Scoop Where the Magic of Collecting Comes Alive Tiny Toons Reboot on HBO Max Cartoon Network Scoop previewsworld com Retrieved August 5 2022 Summer Cree IAmCreeSummer October 28 2020 I just got the word that ELMYRA will NOT be included in the Tiny Toons reboot Tweet via Twitter Adler Charlie Charlie Adler on Twitter I have not been invited to participate so I don t have any idea about the production but I wish it great success Twitter Retrieved August 1 2022 Weiss Josh July 15 2021 Tiny Toons Reboot on HBO MAX will feature a Dumbledore esque Bugs Bunny Return to Looniversity Archived from the original on July 15 2021 Retrieved July 15 2021 D Alessandro Anthony Hipes Patrick July 9 2022 Comic Con 2022 Panel Schedule For Film amp TV Serves Up MCU Black Adam Shazam Fury Of The Gods House Of The Dragon amp More Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 1 2022 a b Graves Sabrina July 27 2022 Tiny Toons Looniversity Bugs Bunny Builders and a Halloween Special Join a New Looney Tunes Era Retrieved July 27 2022 The Animanicast post Tiny Toons Controversial Babs Bunny Retcon Is All Sorts Of Weird Tiny Toons Looniversity Official Teaser Trailer 2023 April 20 2023 Retrieved April 27 2023 via YouTube Bergen Bob June 22 2023 Tiny Toons cast announcement Instagram Retrieved June 22 2023 Meet the All Star Voice Cast for Tiny Toons Looniversity Press release Cartoon Network June 22 2023 Retrieved June 22 2023 via The Futon Critic Graves Sabina July 22 2023 A New Class Is Ready To Act Out in Tiny Toons Looniversity Gizmodo Retrieved July 23 2023 Goldberg Lesley July 21 2023 Looniversity Puts New Spin on Beloved Tiny Toons Theme Song The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved July 23 2023 Tiny Toons Looniversity Trailer Offers Looney Tunes Style Hijinks amp Iconic Characters EXCLUSIVE Screen Rant August 18 2023 Retrieved August 18 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Tiny Toon Adventures nbsp Animation portal nbsp Cartoon portal nbsp 1990s portalTiny Toon Adventures at IMDb Tiny Toon Adventures at The Big Cartoon DataBase Tiny Toon Adventures at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tiny Toon Adventures amp oldid 1188651481, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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