Remember that one day when you could wake up without an alarm? When you would get your favorite bowl of cereal and sit between the hours of 8 and 12? This is a blog dedicated to the greatest time of our childhood: Saturday mornings. The television programs you watched, the memories attached to them, and maybe introducing you to something you didn't realize existed. Updated every weekend.
For the history of Archie, check out the post here.
Archie Comics ad for the show, featuring Miss Grundy, Mr. Weatherbee, Amani, Reggie,
Veronica, Archie, Moose, Jughead, Eugene, Betty, Hot Dog and Red.
It had been almost a
decade since the last animated series featuring characters from Archie Comics had graced television
screens, after being a constant presence since the 1968 debut of The
Archie Show. DiC
Entertainment and Saban Entertainment
sought to rectify that by acquiring the rights to Archie’s characters and
bringing them back in an all-new series. The hook this time was that it would
take advantage of the babyfication craze started by the runaway success of Muppet
Babies and de-age the cast from high schoolers to middle schoolers. Of
course, this wasn’t the first time the Archie crew was depicted as younger; in
1956, Archie published a series of comics called Little Archie which followed
them in elementary school (although somehow still having the same teachers they
would in high school).
Reggie, disguised as Veronica, with bully Fangs.
The characters were
still the same as they had always been. Archie (J. Michael Roncetti) was a
lovable klutz who kept accidentally finding his way into trouble; Jughead
(Michael Fantini) was a lazy chowhound; Betty (Lisa Coristine) was the sweet
girl-next-door with a crush on Archie; Veronica (Alyson Court) was the spoiled
rich girl who liked stealing Archie from Betty; Reggie (Sunny Besen Thrasher)
was the conniving prankster; Big Ethel (Jazzmin Lausanne) was tall, lanky and
awkward; and Big Moose (Victor Erdos) was a boneheaded jock. Additionally, principal
Mr. Weatherbee (Marvil Goldhar), teacher Miss Grundy (Linda Sorenson) and Coach
Kleats (Greg Swanson) were all present to keep the madcap shenanigans under
control at Riverdale Junior High. Carrying over from Little Archie was
bully Fangs Fogarty and the fact Archie had a dog (named Red rather than
Spotty).
Eugene and Amani learning they like each other as they are.
Two new characters were created specifically for the show to add some
diversity to the cast. Eugene (Colin Waterman) was a combination of resident
genius Dilton
Doiley and cartoonist Chuck Clayton (sans
the artistic talent, however). Amani (Karen Burthwright) was essentially just
Chuck’s girlfriend Nancy
Woods from the comics with a new name, for inexplicable reasons. Both
Eugene and Amani even became a couple during the show like Chuck and Nancy.
Comic book ad for NBC's 1987 Saturday morning.
The New Archies debuted on NBC on
September 12, 1987, after having been showcased the night before on the preview
special Alf Loves a
Mystery. It was written by Pat Allee, Scott Anderson,
Eleanor Burian-Mohr, Jon Cohen, Herb Englehardt, Gary Greenfield, Jack Hanrahan, Ben Hurst, Dennis O’Flaherty and Kimmer Ringwald,
who also served as story editor and developed the show. Each episode was broken
up into two story segments. Along with producing, Haim Saban composed the music with Shuki Levy and it was animated by Toei Animation. The stories played
out relatively close to how they would in the comics, featuring slice of life
adventures around Riverdale. When not dealing with dances, pageants and
homework, they would be drawn into the world of the fantastic through Eugene’s
inventions going haywire, body doubles and daydreams. Several episodes borrowed
plots directly from the comics, such as “Goodbye Ms. Grundy” and “Wooden it Be
Lovely”.
No mistaking this decade with Betty, Archie, Veronica and Jughead's fashion choices.
Unfortunately, The New Archies lacked
the staying power of the earlier animated efforts and only lasted a single
season of 13 episodes. The series did gain an extended life by airing reruns
from 1988-95 on Canada’s YTV, on The
Family Channel’s Saturday mornings from 1991-93, and on Toon Disney from 1998-2002.
Archie published a comic set
in the world of the show between 1987 and 1990 running 22 issues, and a digest magazine series between
1988 and 1991 running 14 issues. Although these character designs were retired
with the end of the show and the comics, the various stories have been
reprinted later on in various Archie digest collections, digitally in Pep
Digital #54 in 2013, and in a collected
edition published in 2020. Ja-Ru
produced a line of novelty
toys featuring the show’s branding, including a fake money and keyring set,
a ring toss game and a disappearing ink gag. St. Louis area McDonald’s included six
bumper car toys featuring the characters in their Happy Meals in 1988. In
1989, Diamond Publishing produced a set of stickers and an album utilizing images from
the episodes.
Jughead tries to nap in Miss Grundy's class.
Three VHS
collections with an episode each were released by Golden Book Video. While
no plans to release the series to DVD have yet been announced, DHX Media, the current rights holders to
the DiC library, had the first five episodes released on one of their YouTube channels before their changeover to WildBrain. The series was made available
to stream on Amazon
Prime Video with a CBS
All Access account. It was also available on Roku,
Hoopla, Tubi, Paramount+, and in Spanish on Vix.
EPISODE
GUIDE: “The Visitor /
Ballot Box Blues” (9/12/87) – Eugene’s invention accidentally shoots down a UFO
and the gang tries to help the alien get home. / Betty and Veronica both run
for class president with Archie and Reggie as their campaign managers. “The Last Laugh
/ Thief! (of Hearts)” (9/19/87) – When Reggie’s pranks get him in trouble with
Fangs, he has to set Fangs up with Veronica for the dance. / Clues lead the
gang to believe Mr. Weatherbee is a local jewel thief. “I Got to Be
me, Or Is It You? / Sir Jughead Jones” (9/26/87) – Amani and Eugene have
crushes on each other and the gang helps change them to attract the other. / Believing
Jughead is due to inherit a fortune, Reggie and Veronica give him lessons in
snobbery. “The Awful
Truth / Jughead Predicts” (10/3/87) – Veronica plans to sabotage Betty in the
Miss Junior Riverdale pageant with Eugene’s truth-telling machine. / A clunk on
the head enables Jughead to tell the future, which causes trouble for Reggie. “Future Shock /
Stealing the Show” (10/10/87) – After learning that the picnic queen and king
usually end up married, Archie imagines what his future would hold if he won. /
When Betty is cast as the lead in the school play, Veronica makes plans to take
the role for herself. “Hamburger
Helpers / Goodbye Ms. Grundy” (10/17/87) – Jughead bets Veronica he could give
up burgers for a week in exchange for her buying all he can eat for a day. / Archie
overhears Miss Grundy is considering going to another school and her students
try to change her mind. “Red to the
Rescue / Jughead the Jinx” (10/24/87) – A neighbor is determined to get Red
taken away for a series of disturbances, but first they have to find him and
her cat. / Jughead believes himself a jinx after smashing a mirror, and Reggie
is determined to make that true. “Telegraph,
Telephone, Tell Reggie / Wooden it Be Loverly” (10/31/87) – Reggie plans to
spoil the gang’s party until he learns the party is for him. / The gang rallies
to save their tree house from Reggie’s uncle’s development, but their efforts
are sabotaged from the inside. “I Was A 12
Year Old Werewolf / The Prince of Riverdale” (11/7/87) – Archie accidentally
gets some chemicals spilled on him that turns him into a wolf-boy. / Archie
changes places with a prince who looks like him. “Loose Lips
Stops Slips / A Change of Minds” (11/14/87) – The kids all try to do a good
deed sufficient enough to win a miniature statue of the town’s founder. / Eugene’s
latest invention causes him and Moose to swap minds. “Incredible
Shrinking Archie / Gunk for Gold” (11/21/87) – While trying to make perfume for
Veronica, Archie instead creates a formula that shrinks him and Jughead. /
Archie accidentally causes Eugene’s formula to become a substance that will
help the school win at soccer. “Jughead’s
Millions / Making of Mr. Righteous” (11/28/87) – Jughead invests in a stock for
a school project and it ends up taking off. / Moose accidentally activates an
untested robot duplicate of Eugene and brings him to school, believing it to be
the real Eugene. “Take My
Butler, Please / Hooray for Hollywood” (12/5/87) – Smithers becomes Archie’s
butler after Archie saves him from a runaway piano. / Tired of how everyone
perceives her, Betty decides to get a Hollywood makeover and a new personality.
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