JOHNNY
QUEST
(ABC, September 18, 1964-March 11, 1965)
Hanna-Barbera Productions
Comic book artist Doug Wildey was tasked by Hanna-Barbera to design
a series around the radio drama character Jack Armstrong, the All-American
Boy. Wildey crafted a presentation using magazines Popular Science, Popular Mechanics and Science Digest for
inspiration in crafting the world and technology featured. When Hanna-Barbera
was unable to secure the rights, Wildey was asked to rework his presentation
into an original character. It became Johnny
Quest, which took inspiration from Jackie Cooper and Frankie Darro movies, the comic
strip Terry
and the Pirates, and the film Dr. No. Other names
proposed for the series were The Saga of
Chip Baloo and Quest File 037. The
name Quest was selected from the phone book for its adventurous implications.
Race, Johnny, Dr. Quest, Hadji and Bandit. |
Johnny
Quest followed the adventures of 11-year-old Johnny (Tim Matheson) as he journeyed
around the world on adventures with his father, scientist Dr. Benton C. Quest (John Stephenson for the first
five episodes, Don Messick
for the remainder), special agent, bodyguard and pilot Roger T. “Race” Bannon (Mike Road) and his adopted
Kolkatan brother, Hadji (Danny
Bravo). Johnny’s dog, Bandit (Messick combined with actual dog barks), was
conceived and designed by animator Dick
Bickenbach as the show’s comedy relief. Together, they investigated
scientific mysteries that typically ended up being the work of various
villains, leading them to fight foes such as robots, monsters, mummies and
dinosaurs. They also had a recurring nemesis in the form of Dr. Zin (Vic Perrin): a yellow-skinned
Asian criminal mastermind (a common depiction with Cold War-era fiction at the
time). The show was the first attempt on television to depict realistic-looking
characters in an otherwise fantastic world. Scenes from the abandoned Jack Armstrong series were recycled in
the end credits and were part of the package Wildey used to sell the show to ABC.
Dr. Zin. |
Johnny
Quest was broadcast in primetime on ABC for 26 episodes. Despite being a
critical and ratings success, the series wasn’t renewed for a second season.
When it entered syndicated reruns in 1967, it became a big money-maker. Reruns
aired on CBS from 1967-70, and NBC from 1971-72, making it one of the few to
air on all three major television networks. It was heavily featured on Cartoon Network from its launch in
1992 through 2003 and was also shown on its sister network Boomerang from 2000-14.
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