Runtime: | 30 minutes (including commercials) |
Executive Producer: | Steven Hahn |
Producer: | Mike Young Michael Hack Pawn Evans Marlene Sharp |
Voices: | Edan Gross Joe Flaherty Jonathan Winters Kath Soucie Brian Cummings Neil Ross |
Theme Music Composer: | Andrew Dimitroff, Stephen C. Marston, Barry Trop |
Country: | United States France Germany |
Company: | Steven Hahn Productions (entire run) Sachs Family Entertainment Bandai Entertainment |
Network: | FOX (Fox Kids) M6 |
Num Episodes: | 13 (3 unaired) |
'Little Dracula' is a 1991 French-German-British-American animated series directed by Joe Pearson with original music by Stephen C. Marston under Walker Hahn Productions.[1] It debuted on Fox Kids on 3 September 1991 and features the voices of several veteran comedians and actors. Based on the book series of the same name, thirteen episodes were produced, but only six were aired; five episodes aired the week of 3 – 6 September, before its timeslot was given to Beetlejuice.[2] A sixth episode aired on Halloween. It was during this initial run that the Little Dracula franchise made its way to a handful of merchandising deals.
In 1999, Fox Family reran Little Dracula, including four episodes which had not aired during the original run (another three remained unaired).[3] Some Little Dracula books were also republished following this brief revival.
A second season (13 more episodes) was co-produced with France and Germany, by IDDH, M6, and Renaissance-Atlantic Films. It never aired in the United States. In Europe, Little Dracula (Draculito, mon saigneur) is an animated series in 26 episodes.[4] [5]
Numerous episodes of Little Dracula came to VHS throughout 1993 and '94. Available through Abbey Home Media, they appear to have been made available in PAL format only.
Title | Date | Format | Description | Studio | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Biggest Ever Saturday Morning Heroes | 4 October 1993 | PAL VHS | Three hours of James Bond Jr., T-Rex, Little Dracula, Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles, Super Mario Bros., Captain N, and The Transformers. 191 minutes. | Abbey Home Entertainment; distributed by Tempo Video | |
Little Dracula's Fangtastic Video | 4 October 1993 | PAL VHS | Includes "Bat Boys" and "Easy Biters." 66 minutes. | Abbey Home Entertainment; distributed by Tempo Video | |
Little Dracula's Video Full of Frightful Surprises | PAL VHS | Includes "Little D's Surprise," "Deadwood's Complaint," and "The Chamber of Unspeakable Terrors." 65 minutes. | Abbey Home Entertainment; distributed by Tempo Home Video | ||
Little Dracula's Video: With a Bite | 28 December 1994 | PAL VHS | The adventures of Little Dracula. 66 minutes. | Abbey Home Video; distributed by Tempo Home Video |
The year Little Dracula debuted on Fox Kids, an action figure collection based on the characters hit store shelves. Produced by Bandai, the line includes Little Dracula, Drac Attack Little Dracula, Igor, Maggot, Werebunny, Garlic Man, Twin Beaks, The Man With No Eyes, and Deadwood. They each feature multiple points of articulation, several meticulous accessories, and a unique action feature (Igor's brain pops up when his arm is lifted). Vehicles of Little Dracula include the Coffin Car, Dracster, Easy-biter Motorcycle, and Garlicmobile.
Other merchandise includes costume and roleplaying sets such as Little Dracula's Vampire Kit and Little Dracula's Scepter & Amulet. Starting January 1992, Harvey Comics also published a 3-part Little Dracula comic book mini-series.