THE PUPPY’S NEW ADVENTURES / THE
PUPPY’S FURTHER ADVENTURES / THE PUPPY’S GREAT ADVENTURES
(ABC, September 25, 1982-October 29, 1983)
Ruby-Spears
Enterprises, Hanna-Barbera Productions (season 1)
(ABC, September 25, 1982-October 29, 1983)
MAIN CAST:
Billy Jacoby – Petey
Nancy McKeon – Dolly
Michael Bell – Duke, Dash, various
Peter Cullen – Lucky
Tony O’Dell – Tommy
Janet Waldo – Tommy’s mother
John Stephenson – Tommy’s father, various
Billy Jacoby – Petey
Nancy McKeon – Dolly
Michael Bell – Duke, Dash, various
Peter Cullen – Lucky
Tony O’Dell – Tommy
Janet Waldo – Tommy’s mother
John Stephenson – Tommy’s father, various
Catherine Woolley was a
prolific writer best known for her children’s books under both her name and her
pen name, Jane Thayer. Her first book, I
Like Trains, was published in 1944 and her last, Writing
for Children, in 1989. Within that 45-year timeframe, she had penned 87 children’s books,
including 1958’s The
Puppy Who Wanted a Boy. It was the story of a puppy named Petey who
wanted a little boy of his own for Christmas in a town where they were in short
supply. After trying and failing to convince several dogs to give up their
boys, he would eventually find Ricky at an orphanage, and found himself with
not one but many boys.
20 years
later, the book got a second life as it was one of the ones chosen for an
adaptation into an episode of the anthology series ABC
Weekend Specials. Produced by Ruby-Spears Enterprises,
it followed Beagle mix Petey
(Todd Turquand), the only
member of a litter not to be adopted, as he searched for a boy of his own. Like
the book, he tried to convince a couple of dogs to give up their boys to no
avail. In order to expand the story to a full 22-minutes, Barbara Avedon and Barbara Corday added Petey
encountering two dog bullies and foiling their attempt to steal food; escaping
capture from a cruel dog-seller with a group of strays; and attempting to pass
himself off as a toy dog so a boy and his mother would buy him. He finally
found his boy, now named Tommy, at the orphanage.
The episode performed well enough
to not only earn Ruby-Spears its first Emmy
nomination, but gained something the book itself never did: sequels. “The
Puppy’s Great Adventure” saw Petey (now Bryan Scott) have to win over
Tommy’s dog-hating adoptive parents. “The Puppy’s Amazing Rescue” had Petey and
his friend/love interest, a Cocker Spaniel mix
named Dolly (Nancy McKeon), try to avoid dangers while getting help for their
humans trapped in an avalanche. “The Puppy Saves the Circus” gave Petey (now Sparky Marcus) amnesia and saw
him becoming a breakout performer in a struggling circus.
With the
sequels also being well-received, and reruns of the original still getting high
ratings, ABC decided to take things to the
next level and greenlight a full animated series. Dubbed The Puppy’s New
Adventures, Petey’s (now Billy Jacoby) family decided to move overseas by
ship and took Dolly with them. Stowing away were Petey’s friends from his days
as a stray: Duke (Michael Bell), a German shepherd/Labrador Retriever
mix who looked after the group; Dash (also Bell), a sleek and speedy Greyhound who was both the
smartest of the group and also the most cowardly; and Lucky (Peter Cullen), a
big and strong St. Bernard
who was a little light in the brains department. A freak storm washed the dogs
overboard and they had to journey through various counties looking for Tommy
(Tony O’Dell) and his parents. Along the way, they encountered people (understanding
them perfectly, although they couldn’t speak back) or animals who needed their
help before they could move on to the next destination. Each episode featured
an opening narration by Petey setting up the circumstances of their upcoming
adventure.
The
Puppy’s New Adventures debuted on ABC on September 25, 1982. Inexplicably,
it was combined with the dissimilar Scooby-Doo
and Scrappy Doo (1980) in a block called The Scooby & Scrappy-Doo/Puppy
Hour. Hanna-Barbera,
makers of Scooby-Doo, and Ruby-Spears were both owned by the same parent
company, Taft
Broadcasting, and Joe Ruby
and Ken Spears
were former employees of Hanna-Barbera and the creators of Scooby-Doo.
While Hanna-Barbera continued the pre-production and voice-over work for their
half of the block, Ruby-Spears handled the actual production of the entire
program, resulting in some of their unique sound effects library being heard in
the Scooby segments. The series was written by Mark Jones, Buzz Dixon, Diane Dixon, Jack Enyart, Steve Gerber and Gary Greenfield, with Jones
serving as executive story consultant and Michael Maurer as story editor. Dean Elliott and Hoyt Curtin were the musical
directors, with Paul DeKorte
as the musical supervisor.
The series
was renewed for a second season, this time airing independently as The
Puppy’s Further Adventures. The globe-trotting storyline was ended in a
two-part episode resulting in Petey being reunited with his family and his
friends being adopted by them. Their new adventures usually involved joining
Tommy as his father (John Stephenson) went on scientific expeditions or visited
friends. A new recurring dog character was introduced named Glyder (Josh Rodine), whose enormous
ears caused him to constantly trip when on the ground, but allowed him to glide
in the air. Writers for this season included Jones, Gerber, Flint Dille, Michael J. Reaves, Marc Scott Zicree, Janis Diamond, Martin Pasko and Sheldon Stark, with Diamond
serving as story consultant. Although no new episodes were made for the third season,
a third season of reruns did air as The Puppy’s Great Adventures from
September 8-November 10, 1984. Great Adventures would return for a final
run on CBS from September 13-November 8,
1986.
While Puppy
has never seen a home media or streaming release, various episodes have
resurfaced online on sites like YouTube. It
did, however, receive other merchandise across four years. In 1982, Etone
International released stuffed toys of Petey
and Dolly. The following year, Antioch
Publishing Company released three books—ABC
with Petey (a Little Shape book), Hide
and Seek (a What’s Inside? Pop-Open book), and The
Puppy Who Wanted a Boy (a sticker book)—and Playskool a 15-piece jigsaw puzzle. In
1984, Milton
Bradley released a board
game and four 25-piece
frame-tray puzzles, while Hestair Puzzles released an 80-piece jigsaw
puzzle. 1985 saw the release of a coloring book by Western Publishing,
and a French language 7” vinyl single titled “Les
Poupies” performed by VĂ©ronique
Bodoin from Polydor Records.
EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“The Treasure of the Ancient Ruins” (9/25/82) – NO SYNOPSIS
AVAILABLE.
“The Puppy’s Dangerous Mission” (10/2/82) – The dogs must
keep a serum meant to heal an ailing young king out of the hands of enemy
spies.
“An American Puppy in Paris” (10/9/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“The Puppy and the Pirates” (10/16/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“The Mystery of the Wailing Cat” (10/23/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“The Puppy’s Australian Adventure” (10/30/82) – NO SYNOPSIS
AVAILABLE.
“Puppy and the Reluctant Bull” (11/6/82) – The dogs must
rescue a gentle bull that has been abducted to participate in a bullfight.
“The Puppy’s Hong Kong Adventure” (11/13/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“Honolulu Puppy” (11/20/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“The Puppy’s Great Escape” (11/27/82) – The dogs attempt to
reunite a grandmother separated from her grandchildren by the Berlin Wall.
“The Puppy’s Great Race” (12/4/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“The Puppy’s Amazon Adventure” (12/11/82) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“Petey and the 101 Seals” (12/18/82) – The dogs must protect
a baby seal from some poachers.
Season 2:
“Glyder, the Misfit Puppy” (9/10/83) – The dogs try to keep
a puppy with enormous ears from becoming a sideshow attraction.
“Puppy Goes Home” (9/17/83) – Thieves kidnap Petey’s family
to get inside a top-secret government crate.
“Puppy and the Badlands” (9/24/83) – Petey’s family goes on
an archaeological dig where bandits happen to be looking for lost Civil War
gold.
“Puppy in Omega World” (10/1/83) – Tommy and the dogs are
taken on a tour of futuristic theme park Omega World where things are
mysteriously going haywire.
“Puppy and the Spies” (10/8/83) – Duke, Dash and Lucky get
themselves “recruited” into the scheme of enemy spies looking to steal plans
from NASA.
“Puppy Goes to College” (10/15/83) – Glyder ends up
performing at Tommy’s father’s old college where a plot is in the works against
the governor.
“Puppy and the Brown Eyed Girl” (10/22/83) – NO SYNOPSIS AVAILABLE.
“Biggest Diamond in the World” (10/29/83) – Tommy ends up
kidnapped by a pair of jewel thieves whose crime he stumbles across.
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