Template:Short description Template:Infobox television
Heathcliff is a half-hour Saturday morning animated series based on the Heathcliff comic strip created by George Gately and produced by Ruby-Spears Productions. It premiered on ABC on October 4, 1980,[1] with a total of 26 episodes produced under the titles Heathcliff and Dingbat and Heathcliff and Marmaduke.[2]
History
The series began production on November 10, 1979.[3]
The first season, called Heathcliff and Dingbat, ran for 13 episodes and included backup segments with Dingbat and the Creeps, who were created for the show.[4]
Dingbat and the Creeps revolved around the adventures of three monstrous characters who were self-employed as "Odd Jobs, Inc." which consisted of Dingbat, a vampire dog who used a bat-shaped novelty straw to eat most foods; Sparerib, a strangely rotund skeleton with the ability to change himself into useful items (such as a floor lamp, which he did in the opening credits); and Nobody, a gravelly-voiced jack-o-lantern who led the team and often found them various work.
The second season, called Heathcliff and Marmaduke, ran for 13 episodes and featured backup segments with fellow comic strip character Marmaduke (although the Marmaduke segments are actually the first to be seen in each half-hour show).[4]
Reruns of the second season (Heathcliff and Marmaduke) were seen occasionally on Boomerang.
In 1983, NBC reran the show as a segment on Thundarr the Barbarian reruns.
Two years after this show ended, another one based on Heathcliff was produced by DiC Entertainment, which was called simply Heathcliff, although for distinction this series is usually referred to by the expanded title of Heathcliff and the Catillac Cats.
Dingbat has appeared as a cameo in a Yogi Bear comic with many Hanna-Barbera animal characters captured. He was the only Ruby-Spears character there.[5]
Cast
- Mel Blanc as Heathcliff, Spike, Mr. Nutmeg, Mr. Schultz, Milkman
- Henry Corden as Clem, Digby, Dogcatcher, Officer Casey
- June Foray as Iggy, Muggsy, Mrs. Nutmeg, Sonja, Marcy
- Don Messick as Sparerib, Nobody, Mr. Post, Mr. Snyder
- Russi Taylor as Barbie Winslow, Billy Winslow, Dottie Winslow
- Frank Welker as Dingbat
- Paul Winchell as Marmaduke, Phil Winslow
Additional voices
- Takayo Doran – (season 1)
- Clare Peck – (season 1)
- Marilyn Schreffler – (seasons 1 & 2)
- Judy Strangis – (season 1)
- Janet Waldo – (season 1)
- Alan Dinehart – (season 2)
- Avery Schreiber – (season 2)
- Hal Smith – (season 2)
Episodes
Template:More citations needed
Season 1: Heathcliff and Dingbat (1980)
Each episode consists of two 5-minute Heathcliff cartoons and two 5-minute "Dingbat and the Creeps" cartoons.[6][7]
Nº | Heathcliff | Dingbat and the Creeps | Air date |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Feline Fugitive / Doggone Dogcatcher | Football Flunkies / Lumbering Loonies | Template:Start date |
2 | The Watchcat / Pumping Irony | It's a Snow Job for a Creep / Knutty Knights | Template:Start date |
3 | Great Cop 'n Cat Chase / Milk Run Mayhem | Heir Today Gone Tomorrow / U.F. Oafs | Template:Start date |
4 | Mascot Rumble / Heathcliff of Sherwood Forest | Safari Saps / Prized Pooch | Template:Start date |
5 | Angling Anglers / Cake Flakes | Health Nutz / Retail Ruckus | Template:Start date |
6 | The Mouse Trapper / Lion Around the House | Window Washouts / Door to Door Sales Creeps | Template:Start date |
7 | Robinson Cruise Ho / Heathcliff & the Sleeping Beauty | Creep Crop Crack-ups / Nautical Noodnicks | Template:Start date |
8 | Gold-Digger Daze / Hives | Batty Boo-ticians / Carnival Cut-ups | Template:Start date |
9 | Rodeo Dough / Pinocchio Rides Again | Bungling Baby Sitters / Treasure Haunts | Template:Start date |
10 | Cat In The Beanstalk / The Great Chase | LeMans-ter Rally / Beach Blanket Bozos | Template:Start date |
11 | Kitty a la Carte / Mystery Loves Company | French Fried Fracas / Showbiz Shenanigans | Template:Start date |
12 | Red Hot Riding Hooded Heathcliff / The Great Milk Factory Fracas | Service Station Screwballs / No News Is Ghoul News | Template:Start date |
13 | Star Trick / The Big Fish Story | Detective Ding-a-Lings / High Flying Fools | Template:Start date |
Season 2: Heathcliff and Marmaduke (1981)
Each episode consists of a 6-minute Heathcliff cartoon sandwiched between two 6-minute Marmaduke cartoons.[8] Scatman Crothers sang its theme song. It competed with The Smurfs on NBC.
Nº | Marmaduke | Heathcliff | Marmaduke | Air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Home Run Rover | Gator Go Round | Play Grounded | Template:Start date |
2 | Missy Miseque | Crazy Daze | Shuttle Off to Buffalo | Template:Start date |
3 | Wish Bones | Caught Cat Napping | Wondermutt | Template:Start date |
4 | Gone with the Whim | Dud Boat | Seagoing Watchdog | Template:Start date |
5 | Beach Brawl | Of Mice and Menace | Tricky Treat | Template:Start date |
6 | Ghostly Goof Up | A Briefcase of Cloak and Dagger | Fret Vet | Template:Start date |
7 | Bearly Camping | Tabby and the Pirate | Gold Fever Fracas | Template:Start date |
8 | Police Pooch | Mush Heathcliff Mush | Bone to Pick with Marmaduke | Template:Start date |
9 | Surburden Cowboy | A Close Encounter | Marmaduke of the Movies | Template:Start date |
10 | Baby Sitting Shenanigans | A New Kit on the Block | Kitty Sitter | Template:Start date |
11 | Leapin' Leprechaun | Clon'en Around | School Daze | Template:Start date |
12 | Caper Cracker | Cat Kit | Barking for Dollars | Template:Start date |
13 | The Lemonade Kid | The Great Milk Factory Fracas (repeat from Dingbat) | Double Trouble Maker | Template:Start date |
Home media
Warner Bros. Home Entertainment released The Heathcliff and Dingbat Show on DVD in region 1 via their Warner Archive Collection in August 2012. This is a Manufacture-on-Demand (MOD) release, available exclusively in the US and only through Warner's online store or Amazon.com.[9]
References
External links
- Heathcliff official website
- Template:IMDb title
- Big Cartoon Database – Heathcliff and Dingbat
- Big Cartoon Database – Heathcliff and Marmaduke
- planete-jeunesse (French)
- Retroland
Template:Children's programming on the American Broadcasting Company in the 1980s