SPACECATS
(NBC, September
14-December 14, 1991)
Marvel Productions,
Paul Fusco Productions, NBC Productions
Rob Paulsen – Thomas “Tom” Spacecat, Chelsie Pipshire
Townsend Coleman – Scratch
Pat Fraley – Sniff
Paul Fusco – Captain Catgut
Charles Nelson Reilly – D.O.R.C.
Robert Ridgley - Narrator
Spacecats
was an animated/live-action/puppet hybrid created by Paul Fusco, the man
behind the ALF
puppet and franchise. The series focused on a group of alien cats
(basically cats with antennae) who were created on the planet Trygliceride-7 to
solve all the problems of Earth; fighting for “truth, justice and a
better-quality cat food without a fishy aftertaste” (a play on Superman’s motto). They
took refuge in an underground lair so secret, not even the cats themselves knew
where they were.
Their leader was D.O.R.C. (the
Disembodied Omnipotent Ruler of Cats, performed in liv-action by Charles Nelson
Reilly), a former game show host with a low tolerance for cats due to his
inability to have a pet as a young head (because he needed to be able to carry
them in his mouth). He relayed missions directly to the less-than-intelligent
Captain Catgut (Fusco), who then selected the agents to carry out their
mission. Despite a large
assortment of Spacecats to choose from (seriously—he usually flipped through
film slides of several), Catgut generally chose the same three. The team leader
was always Thomas “Tom” Spacecat (Rob Paulsen), a weapons expert with excellent
spelling ability. Under him was disguise expert Scratch (Townsend Coleman), so
named because of a musical family of space fleas constantly making him itchy,
and Sniff (Pat Fraley), whose keen sense of smell was only rivaled by his
numerous allergies. It would be up to the Spacecats to foil the villains, save
the day, and try to discreetly blend in with Earth cats (well, two out of three
ain’t bad).
Spacecats debuted on NBC on September 14, 1991. The series was
written by Fusco with ALF writers Howard Bendetson and David Silverman, animated ALF
writer Terrie Collins,
ALF Tales writer Judy
Rothman, Rogena Schuyler,
Rowby Goren (who served
as story editor), George Atkins and
Ron Friedman,
with music by Shuki Levy, orchestrated by Udi Harpaz.
Each episode followed a similar structure: after the intro and theme by ALF veterans
Leslie Ann Podkin and Alf Clausen, the narrator
(Robert Ridgley) would introduce the Spacecats to the audience as the camera
went from space down into their lair via the garbage can entrance. The lair and
Captain Catgut would be represented by puppets on a set, typically in stock
footage showing the cats milling about looking busy-ish. D.O.R.C. would then
appear on the to fill Catgut in on the mission with some snide barbs before
departing with a comedic message appearing on his screen, such as “Deposit $850”
or “Want to lose weight? Ask me how!”. The episode would then switch to
traditional animation by AKOM Productions
as Catgut would scroll through slides of agents before settling on our three
protagonists, with the narrator going over their qualities (usually a mix of
serious and comedic). After the trio bumbled their way through the assignment,
they would end the episode by addressing the audience with words of
not-quite-wisdom. A running gag also had them announcing themselves with a
poorly-harmonized vocal fanfare. This would be Marvel Productions’
second—and arguably more successful—attempt at an animation/puppet hybrid
series after the failed Little
Muppet Monsters.
Unfortunately
for all involved, the series came about right when NBC was considering a move
away from animation to produce more live-action teen-oriented fare in an
attempt to duplicate the success of Saved
by the Bell; which would take the form of TNBC the next season. As a
result, Spacecats was among the many animated shows cancelled by the network
after its sole season. To date, no home releases or merchandise have been
released outside of the partial adaptation of “Diamonds are Fur-Ever” featured
in the special NBC Saturday Morning Comics from
Harvey Comics, which
previewed NBC’s 1991 Saturday morning line-up. However, 10 episodes have been uploaded
online in various places, with two only available in Persian dubs.
(NOTE: Different sources list up to 26 different episode titles and seem to disagree on what episode aired when. Therefore, the accuracy of this guide cannot be verified at this time.)
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