Toonsylvania Explained

Genre:Cartoon series
Horror-comedy
Anthology series
Director:Jeff DeGrandis
Rich Arons
Dave Marshall
Charlie Bean
Creator:Bill Kopp
Mike Peters ("Night of the Living Fred" segments)
Chris Otsuki ("Melissa Screetch" segments)
Voices:Nancy Cartwright
Jim Cummings
Matt Frewer
Brad Garrett
Jess Harnell
Jonathan Harris
Tom Kenny
Wayne Knight
Valery Pappas
Paul Rugg
Kath Soucie
David Warner
Billy West
Theme Music Composer:Julie Bernstein
Steven Bernstein
Paul Rugg
Composer:Michael Tavera
John Given
Christopher Klatman
Thom Sharp
Carl Johnson
Nathan Wang
Christopher Neil Nelson
Gordon Goodwin
Cameron Patrick
Jonathan Green
Charles Fernandez
Billy Martin
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:2
Num Episodes:21 (whole)
82 (segments)
List Episodes:
  1. Episodes
Executive Producer:Bill Kopp
Rich Arons
Steven Spielberg
Producer:Jeff DeGrandis
Company:DreamWorks Television Animation
Runtime:30 minutes
Network:Fox Kids

Toonsylvania is an American animated television series, which ran for two seasons in 1998 on the Fox Kids Network block (usually placed in a block called "The No Yell Motel" that contained other scary kids' shows such as Goosebumps and Eerie, Indiana) in its first season, then was moved to Monday afternoons from September 14, 1998 until January 18, 1999, when it was cancelled. It was executive produced in part by Steven Spielberg, as DreamWorks' first animated series.[1]

The show had recurring cartoon series that appeared in each episode. Unlike Animaniacs, Toonsylvania did not have a wide range of characters and almost every episode had the same content. The main segments were "Frankenstein", "Night of the Living Fred" (most episodes on season one), "Attack of the Killer B Movies" (some episodes from season 1), "Igor's Science Minute", and "Melissa Screetch's Morbid Morals".[2]

Plot summary

Frankenstein

A typical episode of Toonsylvania starts with a cartoon series called "Frankenstein" (a parody of Mary Shelley's novel of the same name) about the adventures of Dr. Vic Frankenstein (voiced by David Warner), his assistant Igor (voiced by Wayne Knight) who always sets out to prove that he is a genius like his master, and their dim-witted Frankenstein Monster known as Phil (voiced by Brad Garrett).

During the season two restructuring, Igor, Dr. Vic Frankenstein and Phil interact with a variety of new characters, including a snooping next-door neighbor Seth Tuber (voiced by Jonathan Harris), who was based on Norman Bates from Psycho. He interacted with his "immobile" mother by putting his hand over his mouth and talking into it. There was also a typical Transylvanian angry mob that was, in fact, a cheerful group of Beatles-esque hipsters. Most of these new characters were voiced by Paul Rugg, who also improvised many of their lines.

Remote control gags

Before the second cartoon, there is an animated vignette where Igor is on the couch with Phil and tries to use the remote control, only for a problem to occur (a running gag akin to the couch gags seen on The Simpsons) before the TV turns on to show the cartoon in question.

Night of the Living Fred

A segment about a family of zombies that consists of Fred Deadman (voiced by Billy West), his sister Ashley Deadman (voiced by Kath Soucie), his mother Stiffany Deadman (voiced by Valery Pappas), and his father Dedgar Deadman (voiced by Matt Frewer in season one, Jess Harnell in season two). This segment was created by cartoonist Mike Peters.[3]

Attack of the Killer B-Movies

Sometimes, a parody of a B-list horror movie would air instead of a "Night of the Living Fred" cartoon. Most of them involve Ace Deuce (voiced by Tom Kenny), Professor Man (voiced by Billy West), Professor Man's daughter (voiced by Kath Soucie) whose name and occupation keeps getting changed, Ace's friend Newark (voiced by Billy West), and the general (voiced by Jim Cummings) of an army fighting different monstrous threats.

Igor's Science Minute

A short segment where Igor gives a science lesson (be it a musical piece or a spoken piece) that always ends in disaster.

Melissa Screetch

When Phil does something bad, Igor punishes him by reading a horror tale from the book "Melissa Screetch's Morbid Morals". It involves a bratty girl named Melissa Screech (voiced by Nancy Cartwright) who does not heed the warnings of adults like her mother (voiced by Kath Soucie) and suffers the consequences for it one way or another. After the story is told, something tied in with the story happens with Igor and Phil. This segment was created by Chris Otsuki.

During season two, Melissa Screetch starred in a new segment called "The Melissa Screetch Show". Whenever Melissa was disappointed with a friend or a family member, she would go home and cover herself under her bed sheets where she pretended to host a show. She then had her transgressor on as a guest star and often did away with them in an ironic manner.

Production

Second season changes

In season two, Bill Kopp and Jeff DeGrandis left the show and were replaced by Paul Rugg. The series' format changed into more of a sitcom style.

The only other backup segments to re-materialize in season two were the B-movie parodies (though some episodes of "Night of the Living Fred" aired) and Melissa Screetch in a new segment called "The Melissa Screetch Show".

Episodes

Season 1 (1998)

Note: All episodes in this season were directed by Jeff DeGrandis.

Season 2 (1998–99)

Music

The music for the series was written by Michael Tavera, Keith Baxter, Christopher Neal Nelson, John Paul Given, Christopher Klatman and Thom Sharp. The main title song was written by Steve Bernstein and Julie Bernstein with lyrics by Paul Rugg.

Cast

Additional voices

Crew

Home media releases

On August 31, 1999, a VHS cassette of Toonsylvania was released, which contained selected episodes. The episodes seen were "Darla Doiley, Demon Doll", "Voodoo Vacation", "Baby Human", "Dead Dog Day Afternoon", "Igor's Science Minute" ("Clone or Be Cloned", "The Brain", "Earthquake Boogie", and "Gravity and the Eiffel Tower"), "Melissa Screetch's Morbid Morals" ("The Boogeyman", "Stop Making Ugly Faces", "Here There Be Monsters", and "Melissa Screetch: Earth Ambassador"), "Phil's Brain", "Football...and Other Body Parts", "Bang!", and "WereGranny".

In 2014, Netflix in Latin America streamed the entire series.

Video game

A Toonsylvania video game was developed by RFX Interactive and released by Light & Shadow Production and Ubi Soft for the Game Boy Color in 2000.[4] [5]

Merchandise

Toonsylvania action figures and playsets were developed by Pangea Corporation and released by Toy Island. Burger King distributed toys based on Toonsylvania in their kids' meals for a short period of time.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Steven Spielberg Presents...Nickelodeon?. Animated World Network. August 7, 2015. January 1998.
  2. Book: Perlmutter . David . The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows . 2018 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-5381-0373-9 . 653–654.
  3. Book: Erickson . Hal . Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 . 2005 . 2nd . McFarland & Co . 978-1-4766-6599-3 . 863–864.
  4. Web site: Lopez. Miguel. Toonsylvania Review. Gamespot. September 3, 2016. August 3, 2000.
  5. Web site: Light & Shadow publiziert mit Ubi Soft. GamesMarkt. September 3, 2016. de. March 14, 2000.