January 31, 2025

JOHN ERWIN DEAD AT 88

 


You can read the full story here.


Best known as the original He-Man, he played Reggie Mantle in Filmation’s Archie franchise based on the comics. He also played Reggie, Cousin Ambrose, Hexter, J.R., Humphrey and Hank in Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1970); Dick Tracy, Alvin, Smokey Stover, Spooky, Gaylord Buzzard and various others in Archie’s TV Funnies; Q and Slick in The New Archie/Sabrina Hour; Casey Balloo in “The Horse That Played Center Field” episode of ABC Weekend Specials; and Ronald Radford III and Clumpley in The Thing. He also provided voices for Foofur.












January 18, 2025

ALF TALES

 

ALF TALES
(NBC, September 10, 1988-December 9, 1989)
 
DiC Entertainment, Alien Productions, Lorimar-Telepictures, Saban Entertainment


 

MAIN CAST:
Paul Fusco – Gordon Shumway/ALF, Rick Fusterman
Thick Wilson – Bob Shumway, Larson Petty
Peggy Mahon – Flo Shumway
Tabitha St. Germain (as Paulina Gillis) – Augie Shumway, Rhonda
Noam Zylberman (season 1) & Michael Fantini (season 2) – Curtis Shumway
Len Carlson – Cantfayl, Sargent Staff
Rob Cowan – Skip, Roger Cowan
Dan Hennessey – Sloop/Eggbert Petty
Ellen-Ray Hennessey – Stella

 


Created by Paul Fusco and Tom Patchett, ALF Tales was a spin-off of ALF: The Animated Series, which in turn was a spin-off of the live-action/puppet sitcom ALF. ALF had become a major success for NBC, and it was only natural for the network to want to try and expand upon that success; particularly with their ever-increasing younger audience. And if one ALF animated show was good, two would have to be even better.

Promotional poster for the series depicting some of the tales.


            As with its predecessor, the series was set on Melmac and followed ALF, aka Gordon Shumway (Fusco) as he and his friends put on productions of fairy tales and other public domain stories. For whom and why beyond entertaining the real-life audience at home was never revealed. Gordon and his girlfriend, Rhonda (Tabitha St. Germain), were typically the stars of the productions. Other roles would be filled out by Gordon’s family, father Bob (Thick Wilson), mother Flo (Peggy Mahon), sister Augie (Germain), and brother Curtis (Noam Zylberman & Michael Fantini); his friends, Rick Fusterman (Fusco), Skip (Rob Cowan); Melmacian citizens like fortune-smeller Madame Pokipsi (Deborah Theaker) and waitress Stella (Ellen-Ray Hennessy); and even his enemies, Larson Petty (Wilson) and Sloop (Dan Hennessey). Cowan would also play a new character modeled after himself named Roger Cowan, a TV executive who tried to impart notes on the productions. The entire cast was carried over from The Animated Series with the exception of Fantini, who was briefly replaced by Zylberman for the first season.

ALF, Skip and Rick as the Three Little Pigs.


            As stated, those productions were parodies of various fairy tales and legends. They were often set in different eras and locations, featured various Melmacian elements native to the franchise, served as spoofs of various genres, films and television shows and featured numerous pop culture references. The episode “Cinderella”, for example, not only did their rendition of Cinderella, but was also presented like an Elvis Presley film as the prince was replaced by a rock star looking for love. “Rumpelstiltskin” played out like a detective noir as private eye Sam Shovel (ALF), a play on Sam Spade, needed to uncover Rumpelstiltskin’s (Sloop) name to get a miller’s daughter (Rhonda) out of a bad deal. “The Three Little Pigs” was bookended by scenes reminiscent of Rod Serling’s intros and outros for The Twilight Zone. The crocodile in the “Peter Pan” episode was portrayed as a caricature of the titular character from “Crocodile” Dundee. “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” was presented as an episode of Unsolved Mysteries with ALF playing a parody of Robert Stack.

Putting the "rap" in Rapunzel.


        ALF Tales debuted on NBC on September 10, 1988; paired with the second season of The Animated Series to form The ALF/ALF Tales Hour. It was produced by DiC Entertainment, Alien Productions, Lorimar-Telepictures and Saban Entertainment. Only Alicia Marie Schudt, Bradley Kesden, and Skip Shepard were carried over from The Animated Series’ writing staff; although Richard Raynis still served as a producer as he did on the other series. Joining them were David Steven Cohen, Roger S.H. Schulman, Eddie Gorodetsky, Michael Rowe, Ellis Weiner, Mitchell Kriegman, Steve Roberts, Richard J. Schellbach, Phil Harnage and Judy Rothman, with Cohen, Schulman and Rothman serving as story editors and Harnage as assistant story editor. Fil Barlow was the character design supervisor over Paul Wee, Marcelo Vignali, Ed Lee, Michael Goguen, Charles Crawford, Adriana M. Galvez, Dean Gordon, Brian Hogan, David S. Karoll, Joey Banaszkiewicz, David Feiss, Mike Kim and Lou Police. Haim Saban and Shuki Levy provided the music, and animation duties were handled by KK C&D Asia and Mook DLEIn the rare event an episode’s story ran short, a brief live-action ALF segment was tacked onto the end where he’d read and answer fictional fan mail.

Rock star ALF searching for the owner of a glass slipper.


            The Animated Series was cancelled after its second season and its reruns were split from Tales to allow its brief second season to air independently. Tales’ intro showcased Gordon directing an off-camera symphony as his outfit and background changed to the various settings featured in the respective tales, while the Hour intro just used The Animated Series’ with the new title. Unfortunately, it was also cancelled after two seasons as new leadership was moving into NBC with no investment in the ALF franchise. All versions of ALF left the network by the fall of 1990. The animated ALF made one additional appearance in the drug-prevention special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue, which was broadcast across all the major networks on April 21, 1990 and starred a collection of Saturday morning characters.

The DVD.


            A VHS was released in 1989 in the United Kingdom by The Video Collection, featuring the episodes “Robin Hood” and “Sleeping Beauty”. In 2006, Lionsgate Home Entertainment released the first seven episodes of the series to DVD in ALF Tales: ALF and the Beanstalk and Other Classic Fairy Tales. In 2023, Shout! Factory released Alf: The Complete Series Deluxe Edition, which contained the complete original series, spin-off film Project: ALF, and both animated series. The following year, both animated series became part of the debut line-up of retro animation network MeTV Toons. The series is also available to stream on Prime Video, Fubo, Peacock, The Roku Channel, Tubi and Crackle and the official ALF YouTube Channel.

 

EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“Robin Hood” (9/10/88) – Robin Hood and his jazz band must rescue Maid Marian from Nottingham castle while opposing the Sheriff’s unjust taxes.
 
“Sleeping Beauty” (9/17/88) – Prince Gordon gets a cursed papercut that causes him to fall asleep, and it’s up to princess Rhonda to defeat the witch that cast it with three wizards.
 
“Cinderella” (9/24/88) – Cinderella’s fairy godmother helps her attend a rock star’s concert where he plans to find his bride and wows him with a spectacular duet.
 
“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” (10/1/88) - While investigating the Headless Horseman for a story, reporter Ichabod Crane discovers that there are in fact several Horsemen.
 
“Jack and the Beanstalk” (10/8/88) – Jack Bates trades the family cow for magic beans to save their struggling motel and the resulting beanstalk leads to a giant with a hen that lays golden eggs.
 
“The Aladdin Brothers and Their Lamp” (10/15/88) – Ziggy and Roy Aladdin end up in trouble when their genie sends them to Sheboygan and they encounter the princess.
 
“Rapunzel” (10/29/88) – The Wicked Witch controls all media in the country and ends up imprisoning Rapunzel and her family when they lose her rigged quiz show.
 
“Rumpelstiltskin” (11/12/88) – A miller’s daughter comes to P.I. Sam Shovel to find out the name of a dwarf and get her out of a bad deal made with him.
 
“The Princess and the Pea” (11/19/88) – Aspiring stand-up comic Prince Gordy wants to marry a waitress that’s really a princess, but the Queen says she must pace the mattress test first.
 
“John Henry” (12/3/88) – Master chef John Henry fights automation when he competes against a mechanical food processor to see who can make the best meals.
 
“The Three Little Pigs” (12/10/88) – B.B. Wolf is tasked with getting the Three Little Pigs’ land for the oil deposits beneath it.
 
“Alice in Wonderland” (12/17/88) – When a humanoid rabbit steals his birthday present for Rhonda, Gordon follows her down an elevator shaft into Wonderland.
 
“Peter Pan” (1/7/89) – Peter Pan brings Wendy and her brothers to Never-Never Land where stand-up pirate Captain Hook views him as a rival and plots against him.
 
Season 2:
“Hansel & Gretel” (9/16/89) – Hansel and Gretel end up at Camp Eat-a-Kid where Hansel is fattened up by a wicked witch and Gretel is imprisoned with two Chimpunky prisoners.
 
“The Wizard of Oz” (9/23/89) – A tornado brings 1930s Gordon to the 1960s where landing on a witch gets him stuck with magical ruby high-top sneakers that only the Wizard of Oz can remove.
 
“The Elves and the Shoemaker” (9/30/89) – Elves are tasked with helping failed shoemaker Donald Tramp, but the success and riches turns him into a miserly dictator of a CEO.
 
“The Emperor’s New Clothes” (10/14/89) – The finicky Emperor is presented with the most unique of fashion: invisible Schmatex.
 
“Goldilocks & the Three Bears” (10/28/89) – When Rhonda gets a better house-sitting offer, she tasks Gordon with watching Mayor Bear’s place and he turns it into an amusement park.
 
“Little Red Riding Hood” (11/11/89) – Red has a package for scientist Granny, but little does he know that the Wolf had gotten there first and used her own shrinking device to shrink and eat her.
 
“Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” (12/2/89) – Robert Stuck is on the case of missing champion skier Snow White after she was last seen in the company of a thug for hire.
 
“King Midas” (12/9/89) – Oklahoma Jones is in search of King Midas, but the evil Professor Bouquet steals his map with the intent of finding the king first.

January 16, 2025

BOB UECKER DEAD AT 90

 


You can read the full story here.


He played an umpire in an episode of Teacher’s Pet, a baseball announcer in an episode of Puppy Dog Pals, himself in an episode of Teen Titans Go!, and a parody named Bob Yucker in an episode of Monsters at Work







WAYNE OSMOND DEAD AT 73

 


You can read the full story here.


He voiced himself in the animated series The Osmonds, as well as performed on the songs used on it with his brothers.




January 11, 2025

TARZAN, LORD OF THE JUNGLE

 

TARZAN, LORD OF THE JUNGLE
(CBS, September 11, 1976-November 3, 1979)
 
Filmation Associates

 

 

MAIN CAST:
Robert Ridgely  – Tarzan (speaking), various
Danton Burroughs – Tarzan (yell)
Lou Scheimer – N’Kima, various

 

 
Edgar Rice Burroughs had wandered from job to job and one failed enterprise to another, making darkly humorous cartoon sketches and writing fairy tales set on other worlds to amuse himself and distract from his string of bad luck in life. Having indulged in some pulp publications during his downtime, he felt he could write better than what he read and began work on his first pulp story: Under the Moons of Mars, which would become the first entry in his Barsoom series about Confederate Army captain John Carter suddenly finding himself on the planet Mars and embroiled in the conflict between its peoples. After finishing half of it, he submitted it to The All-Story magazine under the pseudonym “Normal Bean” (fearing his reputation would be damaged if connected to the work). Managing editor Thomas Newell Metcalf liked what he read, and after some polish and its completion, he bought the serialization rights from Burroughs for $400 USD (equivalent to $13,283.92 as of this writing). It was first published in the February-July 1912 issues of The All-Story.

Cover to The All-Story magazine's October 1912 edition.


Burroughs took up writing full time. Although initially discouraged when his next story idea was rejected, encouragement to keep at it led him to create the first entry in his most successful series: Tarzan of the Apes. Tarzan was the son of a British Lord and Lady who were marooned on the West coast of Africa before he was born. Neither survived his infancy and he was adopted and raised by Kala, member of the ape tribe known as the Magani. His name, Tarzan, meant “White Skin” in their language. Tarzan would eventually ascend to king of the apes, learned about his past upon discovery of his family’s hut, people in general when another group wound up stranded in the jungle, and eventually of love when he met Jane Porter—who would eventually become his wife. Although his adventures would often take him out of the jungle, it wouldn’t be long before he was drawn back to it.

Front page artwork from the 1914 edition of Tarzan of the Apes.


Tarzan of the Apes was published in The All-Story in October of 1912. After being rejected by several publishers, A.C. McClurg and Co. finally agreed to release it in novel form in 1914, becoming a best-seller. Burroughs would go on to publish 24 books in the Tarzan series—two posthumously after his death in 1950—along with several novellas. Recognizing how popular Tarzan was with his audience, Burroughs went against advice and planned to exploit the character through whatever other media he could: a comic strip that ran from 1929-2002 and continues on in reruns; films beginning with the 1918 silent film Tarzan of the Apes and still being produced in the present; stage plays starting in 1921; radio shows beginning in 1932 which Burroughs was involved with; and various merchandise. For tax reasons and to maintain control over his works, Burroughs formed Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. which is still run by his family today and continues to license and manage Burroughs’ creations that have not yet fallen into the public domain.

Jane, Tarzan and Cheeta from Tarzan the Ape Man.


The films introduced many of the characteristics most people associate with Tarzan. 1932’s Tarzan the Ape Man introduced Tarzan’s sidekick Cheeta; a chimpanzee that provided comic relief and correspondence between Tarzan (Johnny Weissmuller) and his allies, and led other animals to come to Tarzan’s aid. This character replaced Nkima from the books; an African monkey that first appeared in Tarzan and the Lost Empire who exhibited great bravery in Tarzan’s presence but was otherwise cowardly on his own. The film also introduced the version of Tarzan’s yell synonymous with the character (and whose vocal origins have been an ongoing debate). His son with Jane (Maureen O’Sullivan), Jack, that first appeared in The Eternal Lover, was also replaced by an adopted son known only as “Boy” (Johnny Sheffield) in 1939’s Tarzan Finds a Son! The 12 films starring Weissmuller established Tarzan as a noble savage speaking in broken English, rather than the cultured aristocrat he was portrayed as being in the novels. The 1935 serial The New Adventures of Tarzan, which was one of a competing series of films allowed by licensing issues and the only film production with Burroughs’ direct involvement, featured an educated Tarzan. When television emerged as a dominant medium, many of the Tarzan films were brought to Saturday morning television. The character’s first television series, Tarzan starring Ron Ely, aired on NBC between 1966-68 as essentially a continuation of the films made under producer Sy Weintraub that began with 1959’s Tarzan’s Greatest Adventure.

The animated Tarzan and his animal friends.


Eight years later, Filmation co-founder and producer Lou Scheimer decided he wanted to try his hand at producing his own Tarzan series. Scheimer, at this time, resided in Tarzana, California; the town that sprang up when Burroughs gradually sold off portions of his massive 550-acre Tarzana Ranch named after Tarzan. ERB, Inc.’s office was also located in Tarzana just a few minutes away from Scheimer’s house. Scheimer met with the Burroughs estate to convince them that Tarzan would be perfect for animation; starting with a film to explain his origins. Unfortunately, Burroughs’ grandson, Danton, wasn’t thrilled with the changes writer David Gerrold wanted to make for the film to have the story flow better, and the resulting heated exchange between them would be one of the reasons Gerrold left Filmation to work with Krofft Productions. Eventually, a deal was struck and Filmation acquired the rights. They, in turn, sold the show to CBS.

Tarzan gives his traditional call.


The goal was to have the series appear as lush and illustrative as the work of Burne Hogarth, Burroughs’ favorite artist from the Tarzan comic strip that worked on it between 1937 and 1950, while keeping it within the scope of their budget. Knowing how physical a character Tarzan was, and since was meant to be a real man rather than a superhero who could fly like Superman, Filmation decided to make use of rotoscoping for their library of stock footage. They shot a lot of film of a model—who was a bartender from the animators’ favorite nearby hangout called The Dug-Out—walking, running, jumping, diving, swimming and whatever other common movements an ape-man would need to make in the jungle. The animators would then draw off of that footage to perfectly emulate how the human body would move.

Character models for Tarzan's foes from Zandor.


The series featured the smallest cast of any Filmation project; with the main characters only being Tarzan (Robert Ridgley) and his companion N’Kima (Scheimer providing vocal effects). Danton Burroughs himself provided Tarzan’s iconic yell (once; that single recording was reused for each instance in the series). Some of the recurring characters included the Mangani apes that raised him; Jad-bal-ja, the lion he raised and trained; African elephants, called “Tantor” in the Mangani language, that would come to Tarzan’s aid when called; Queen Nemone (Joan Gerber & Hettie Lynne Hurtes), the ruler of Zandor; Tomos (Alan Oppenheimer), Nemone’s prime minister and lackey; Belthar, Nemone’s pet lion; and Phobeg (Ted Cassidy & Oppenheimer), the strongest man in Zandor and one of the royal guards. Jane (Linda Gary) only appeared in one episode, and that was by special request from the Burroughs estate to resecure the character’s rights as she hadn’t appeared in visual media since 1959. The series made heavy use of the Mangani language from the books, having all animals be called by their Mangani names and even making up a few words when none existed, and retained Tarzan’s intellect.

Enter: evil robot Tarzan.


Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle debuted on CBS on September 11, 1976 and ran for four seasons; however, only the first was its own separate entity. For the second season, 6 new episodes and reruns were paired with repeats of The New Adventures of Batman to form The Batman/Tarzan Adventure Hour. They were joined by The Freedom Force, Jason of Star Command, Manta and Moray, Superstretch and Microwoman and Web Woman to form the 90-minute Tarzan and the Super 7 for the next two seasons. Tarzan’s runtime was reduced to 17 and 11 minutes as part of the block, depending on the episode, and longer reruns were trimmed down to run within the allotted time. 6 and 8 new episodes were made for each season, respectively. When the other series—excluding Jason—moved to NBC to air in reruns as Batman and the Super 7, reruns of Tarzan were joined by The New Adventures of The Lone Ranger to form The Tarzan/Lone Ranger Adventure Hour. For the final season, those shows were joined by The New Adventures of Zorro to make The Tarzan/Lone Ranger/Zorro Adventure Hour.

You encounter all sorts of strange beings in the jungle.


Much of the series was written by Len Janson and Chuck Menville, who also served as associate producers, with additional scripts from Paul Dini, Kathleen Barnes, David Wise, Tom Ruegger, Dale Kirby, Don Heckman, Michael Reaves and Fred Ladd. Many episodes were based off of Burrough’s books and tried to remain as faithful to them as possible; however, tempered for a more modern audience and infused with pro-social messages about preservation and treating animals and other cultures properly. Topping that off was Filmation’s customary coda at the end where Tarzan would relay a moral message to the viewers. Notably, Tarzan’s adventures seemed to be set in the present day with the appearance of robots, satellites and airplanes rather than the late 19th and early 20th Century of the books. Additionally, there were strong science fiction elements through the presence of mad scientists and extra-terrestrials. Lacking their desired film, storyboard director Bob Kline was able to provide at least a glimpse of Tarzan’s origins in the series’ opening sequence, supported by narration from Ridgely. Horta-Mahana Corp. was responsible for the music and sound effects used, with background music provided by Ray Ellis (as Yvette Blais) and producer Norm Prescott (as Jeff Michael).

The DVD cover.


Following the last run of episodes in the Adventure Hour, Tarzan took a two-year hiatus from the network before returning for a brief seven month run in February of 1984. The series largely disappeared, with Scheimer stating in his book, Creating the Filmation Generation, that he was often asked about when it would be released to home media. Warner Bros. eventually released the episode “Tarzan and the Colossus of Zome” as part of their compilation DVD Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1970s Volume 1; itself collected with other entries in that series in 2018. The complete first season was released to DVD in 2016 by Studio Distribution Services in time for its 40th anniversary; just weeks before Warner Bros.’ (a part owner of SDS with Universal Pictures) new film, The Legend of Tarzan, hit theaters. It was also made available for purchase to stream on Prime Video.

 

EPISODE GUIDE:
Season 1:
“Tarzan and the City of Gold” (9/11/76) – Tarzan ends up a prisoner of Zandor when he attempts to help Athne of the City of Ivory return home after Zandorians drove her off.
 
“Tarzan and the Vikings” (9/18/76) – Tarzan is captured by jungle Vikings to be a slave to the chieftain’s daughter and ends up discovering a plot to overthrow the chieftain.
 
“Tarzan and the Golden Lion” (9/25/76) – Tarzan comes to the aid of the Monkey People being enslaved by the Bolmangani and teaches them how to stand up for themselves.
 
“Tarzan and the Forbidden City” (10/2/76) – Tarzan must rescue two groups of visitors seeking the Forbidden City for different reasons after they’re captured by the soldiers living there.
 
“Tarzan and the Graveyard of Elephants” (10/9/76) – The Novardians demand Tarzan’s aid in finding the Graveyard of the Elephants so that they may harvest the tusks from their bones.
 
“Tarzan’s Return to the City of Gold” (10/16/76) – Tarzan ends up saving Athen’s brother and attempts to get him home, but Queen Nemone has ordered her soldiers to capture Tarzan.
 
“Tarzan and the Strange Visitors” (10/23/76) – Tarzan meets an anthropologist as aliens arrive in the jungle to capture animal specimens to bring back to their planet.
 
“Tarzan and the Land of Giants” (10/30/76) – Tarzan discovers a hidden valley full of giants being terrorized by tyrant King Odysseus and Buto, the latter whom they believe is a god.
 
“Tarzan and the Knights of Nimmr” (11/6/76) – Tracking the occupant of a crashed balloon leads Tarzan to be captured by knights and stumbling upon a plot to rob the queen.
 
“Tarzan’s Rival” (11/13/76) – Tarzan is villainized by a robot duplicate so that Mr. Senti can steal the Jewels of Opa.
 
“Tarzan and the City of Sorcery” (11/20/76) – Tarzan meets a boy who claims his father has been transformed by a sorceress queen, and Tarzan travels to the city of Rashid to confront her.
 
“Tarzan at the Earth’s Core” (11/27/76) – Tarzan journeys to the prehistoric land of Pellucidar in order to help unite two kingdoms.
 
“Tarzan and the Ice Creature” (12/4/76) – A volcano eruption frees the gigantic ice creature Glakor from his slumber.
 
“Tarzan and the Olympiads” (12/11/76) – After meeting two escaped slaves, Tarzan heads to Olympus to free the remaining slaves and make Emperor Cronus change his ways.
 
“Tarzan’s Trial” (12/18/76) – The aliens return and capture Tarzan so that their commander can learn all of his abilities and use them to become supreme ruler of the space fleet.
 
“Tarzan, the Hated” (12/18/76) – The Bolmangani Emperor plans to turn a tribe of gorillas against Tarzan and rebuild their city in the Opar Region despite an archaeologist’s claims it’s unsafe.
 
Season 2:
“Tarzan and the Sunken City of Atlantis” (9/10/77) – Tarzan seeks to free whales enslaved to power Atlantis, but deny the city power will cause it to flood.
 
“Tarzan and the Bird People” (9/17/77) – Aiding an injured member of the Bird People gets Tarzan involved in the conflict between them and the Land People.
 
“Tarzan and the Colossus of Zome” (9/24/77) – The inches-high people seek to enlist Tarzan in their war against the Zomans, but the Zomans need help as well when their weapon turns against them.
 
“Tarzan and the Beast in the Iron Mask” (10/1/77) – Tarzan must restore Chief Denat after his twin brother has assumed his identity in order to mine for gold in a volcano.
 
“Tarzan and the Amazon Princess” (10/8/77) – Tarzan returns a long-lost Amazon to her home only to learn the captain of the royal guard seeks her extermination to become next in line to rule.
 
“Tarzan and the Conquistadors” (10/15/77) – Tarzan must protect the Donlumangani from Conquistadors searching for their captain’s ancestors’ treasure.
 
Season 3:
“Tarzan and the Spider People” (9/9/78) – Tarzan tracks large spiders abducting elephants to a treetop city where he discovers that the spiders are actually robots under their control.
 
“Tarzan and the Space God” (9/16/78) – Tarzan rescues a professor from a crashed plane who convinces him to lead him to an area where the Mayans are believed to have disappeared.
 
“Tarzan and the Lost World” (9/23/78) – Tarzan must help a scientist retrieve a downed satellite from the Minotaur before it explodes and destroys the valley.
 
“Tarzan and the Monkey God” (9/30/78) – N’Kima winds up in a village being terrorized by a gorilla where he’s believed to be a monkey god.
 
“Tarzan and the Haunted Forest” (10/7/78) – Tarzan partners with the inhabitants of the Haunted Forest in order to stop Queen Tara’s deforestation to power her machines.
 
“Tarzan and the Island of Dr. Morphos” (10/14/78) – Tarzan pursues an abducted N’Kima to an island where a mad scientist plans to perform genetic experiments on Tarzan.
 
Season 4:
“Tarzan and the Sifu” (9/15/79) – Tarzan is captured in Tao Ching when their Sifu is overthrown, and their new leader plans to conquer other cities in the jungle and take control of a dragon.
 
“Tarzan and Jane” (9/22/79) – Tarzan rescues Jane and her father after a mutiny during an archaeological exposition and helps lead them back to civilization.
 
“Tarzan and the Land Beneath the Earth” (9/29/79) – Tarzan and his friends end up in the land of the mole people who have been using Makos Trees to power their furnace.
 
“Tarzan and the Drought” (10/6/79) – Tarzan tries to convince the Monkey People to tear down their dam during a drought.
 
“Tarzan and the Soul Stealer” (10/13/79) – Tarzan learns Zandor and Athne are at war again, and Queen Nemone has acquired magical powers.
 
“Tarzan and the Future King” (10/20/79) – King Torg’s Vizier plans to foil Prince Yaru’s final trial in order to become king of the Red Gorilla Kingdom himself.
 
“Tarzan and the Huntress” (10/27/79) – Tarzan must rescue Fana the Huntress from Kerlock and his men when they believe her to be an ally of Tarzan’s.
 
“Tarzan and the White Elephant” (11/3/79) – Tarzan must convince a kingdom to leave a White Elephant calf with its mother instead of taking it to protect against invading Rhino Riders.

January 10, 2025

BILL BYRGE DEAD AT 88

 


You can read the full story here.


He played Bobby in several entries of the Ernest franchise, including the series Hey Vern, It’s Ernest!




January 08, 2025

DALE WILSON DEAD AT 74

 


You can read the full story here.


He played Poodle’s owner in Madeline; Bigfoot, Dragon and an Astronaut in Darkstalkers; Duke Freid in The Vision of Escaflowne; Welman Matrix, Faux Megabyte and Starship Alcatraz Computer in ReBoot; Akuma, computer, and Incan #3 in Street Fighter: The Animated Series; Vulcan in Monster Rancher; Duck Dunaka and Mike Hauger in NASCAR Racers; Machine Men, X-51, Electro and additional voices in Spider-Man Unlimited; Clow Reed in Cardcaptors; Gus Bonner in Stargate: Infinity; Principal Edward Kelly in X-Men: Evolution; and Java in Martin Mystery. He also provided additional voices for Camp Candy, Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century, Alienators: Evolution Continues, Mary-Kate and Ashley in Action!, Gadget and the Gadgetinis,