THE
ADVENTURES OF RAGGEDY ANN AND ANDY
(CBS, September 17-December 10, 1988)
CBS Entertainment Productions
MAIN CAST:
Christina Lange – Raggedy Ann
Josh Rodine – Raggedy Andy
Charles Adler – Grouchy Bear
Kenneth Mars – The Camel with
the Wrinkled Knees
Dana Hill – Raggedy Dog
Katie Leigh – Sunny Bunny
Kath Soucie – Raggedy Cat
Tracy Rowe – Marcella
Raggedy Ann is
a rag doll with a candy heart in her chest, making her a gentle and caring
sort. Her brother, Raggedy Andy, is more adventurous, bold and mischievous.
They have graced the pages of many books and even spawned their own line of
actual dolls whose popularity has long surpassed those of the books. Now, while
it may have been a given to make fictional toys into real one, they were, in
fact, based off of an actual toy.
The original book. |
Author and illustrator Johnny Gruelle was searching
for something in the attic of his parents’ home sometime in the early 20th century and
stumbled upon an old homemade ragdoll that belonged to his sister. Gruelle
thought the doll would make a good story and kept it; however it wasn’t until
his daughter, Marcella, was born that anything came of it. Watching her play
with her dolls inspired Gruelle’s stories surrounding the doll he had found.
One of the original handmade dolls. |
Gruelle named the doll “Raggedy Ann” from the James Whitcomb Riley poems “The Raggedy Man” and “Little Orphant Annie” and submitted it
to the U.S. Patent office. By the time his
patent was granted in 1915, Marcella had died from an infected vaccination at
the age of 13. Raggedy Ann was subsequently utilized as the mascot for the anti-vaccination
movement at the time. In 1918, Gruelle published the first
Raggedy Ann book, Raggedy
Ann Stories, through the P.F. Volland Company. A version of the
doll was handmade by Gruelle’s family to sell along with the book. The book and
the doll proved a success, and Gruelle released the follow-up in 1920, Raggedy
Andy Stories, which introduced Ann’s brother Andy, while the doll entered
mass production. Their owner in the book, Marcella, was modeled after Gruelle’s
daughter.
Gruelle continued writing new Raggedy Ann stories until his death in 1938,
however books kept being made and he received credit for them for the next two
decades. In 1941, Fleischer Studios adapted the
series into a theatrical short called Raggedy Ann and Andy. They produced two more in 1944 and 1947. Dell and Gold Key published comic books starring the
characters between 1946 and 1973.The franchise received a feature film in 1977
called Raggedy Ann & Andy: A
Musical Adventure directed by Richard Williams and starring Didi Conn, which was adapted
into a stage play in 1981. The next two years, CBS aired two
holiday-themed specials directed by legendary director Chuck Jones and starring June Foray and Daws Butler: Raggedy Ann and Andy in the
Great Santa Claus Caper and Raggedy Ann and Andy
in the Pumpkin Who Couldn’t Smile. An adaptation of the book The
Camel with the Wrinkled Knees aired as an episode of CBS
Storybreak.
Production cel featuring Ann, Andy, Grouchy, Camel, Raggedy Cat and Raggedy Dog. |
Based on the ratings
for the specials it aired, and for the franchise’s 70th anniversary,
CBS commissioned a new animated series starring Raggedy Ann (Christina Lange)
and Andy (Josh Rodine). The series revolved around Ann and Andy, as well as
their friends Grouchy Bear (Charles Adler), The Camel with the Wrinkled Knees
(Kenneth Mars), Sunny Bunny (Katie Leigh), Raggedy Dog (Dana Hill) and Raggedy
Cat (Kath Soucie) as they journeyed to foreign lands or alternate dimensions to
combat the evil, but inept, sorcerer, Cracklin. Their owner, Marcella (Tracy Rowe) was unaware of their adventures as the toys
would remain lifeless in the presence of humans (ala Toy Story).
The evil wizard Cracklin. |
The Adventures of Raggedy Ann
and Andy premiered on
September 17, 1988. It ran for a single season of 13 episodes, all directed by Jeff Hall and written by Chris Weber, Karen Willson, George Atkins,
Gordon Bressack, Sheryl Scarborough, Kayte Kuch, Linda Woolverton, Buzz Dixon and
Janis Diamond, who also
served as story editor and developed the show. Davis Doi provided the
character designs as well as produced the show. Bobby Bennett and David Storrs composed the
show’s theme, and animation was handled by Wang Film Production
Company’s Cuckoo’s
Nest Studios and Hung Long Animation
Company.
Off on another adventure! |
Despite
the show’s short run, CBS kept it on its schedule until the fall of 1990. In
1998, 20th Century
Fox released most of the show on single-episode VHS
tapes. In 2014, New Video Group released the complete series to DVD, as
well as across three DVD
collections containing four episodes each.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“The
Perriwonk Adventure” (9/17/88) – The toys track down Marcella’s missing locket
to a village where it will be offered as a sacrifice.
“The Pirate
Adventure” (9/24/88) – A treasure hunt leads to Andy being kidnapped by priates.
“The Mabbit
Adventure” (10/1/88) – Ann, Andy and Sunny Bunny have to help the Mabbits
protect their spell book from Cracklin.
“The Beastly
Ghost Adventure” (10/8/88) – The ghosts from Marcella’s ghost story appear to
come to “life”.
“The Pixling
Adventure” (10/15/88) – Ann and Andy have to return a prince before the evil
Count Gerich takes over.
“The Ransom
of Sunny Bunny Adventure” (10/22/88) – Cracklin has Sunny Bunny kidnapped in
order to lure Ann and Andy into a trap.
“The
Megamite Adventure” (10/29/88) – Marcella’s cousin’s robot Magamite is taken to
another dimension and used by Cracklin to transform that world’s water into
silver.
“The
Boogeyman Adventure” (11/5/88) – Ann and Andy have to rescue a good boogeyman
from Cracklin before he turns him into his own personal monster.
“The
Christmas Adventure” (11/12/88) – Ann and Andy try to help find Santa’s stolen
sleigh in order to save Christmas.
“The Sacred
Cat Adventure” (11/19/88) – A magic genie kidnaps Raggedy Cat and
unintentionally takes the other toys with them.
“The Little
Chicken Adventure” (11/26/88) – Marcella’s rocking horse pretends to be a
unicorn and ends up in the sights of Little Chicken, an Indian boy that needs
to rope a unicorn.
“The Warrior
Star Adventure” (12/3/88) – Ann, Andy and friends end up embroiled in a
conflict between Marcella’s new toys and have to keep one of them from
conquering the universe.
“The Magic
Wings Adventure” (12/10/88) – Ann and Andy attempt to return a gigantic purple
egg to its nest.
Originally posted in 2017. Updated in 2020.
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