Wacky Races (1968 TV series)
- This article is about the original 1968 TV series. For other uses, see Wacky Races.
Wacky Races | |
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On-screen title card. | |
Network | CBS |
Production company | Hanna-Barbera Heatter Quigley Inc. |
Distributor | Taft Broadcasting |
Original release | September 14, 1968—January 4, 1969 |
Starring | Paul Winchell Don Messick Janet Waldo Daws Butler John Stephenson Dave Willock |
Producer(s) | Alex Lovy Art Scott |
Music composed by | Hoyt Curtin |
Writer(s) | Larz Bourne Tom Degenais Mike Maltese Dalton Sandifer |
Director(s) | William Hanna Joseph Barbera |
Series navigation | |
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Wacky Races is an American animated racing comedy television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and Heatter-Quigley Inc. for CBS' Saturday morning children's programming. It ran from 1968 to 1969, airing 17 episodes that spanned one season. Despite only lasting one season, some of the characters continued to live on in different forms, with two equally as popular spin-offs, The Perils of Penelope Pitstop and Dastardly & Muttley in Their Flying Machines.
The series follows the titular Wacky Races, where a cast of oddball personalities compete each other in road rallies across North America, all for the sole purpose of winning the title of the "World's Wackiest Racer". It featured a number of characters, with 23 people and animals riding 11 individual vehicles. In addition to the show's narrator providing his commentary of the high-speed hijinks, it also focused on the exploits of Dick Dastardly and his snickering canine partner, Muttley, who attempt at anything to cheat and sabotage in every race, even though those attempts only backfire in the end and put them at last place. Apart from Dastardly and Muttley, racers such as the dashing Peter Perfect, and the ever-so-glamorous Penelope Pitstop get their own spotlight in the series.
The entire series has also been released on DVD.
Production
Development
Wacky Races was the first in a change of format that deviated from the rise of the superheroes, the likes of which were not only failing in the ratings but had received a backlash from parent groups who opposed the violence.[1][2]
The idea was somewhat based on two 1965 comedy films, The Great Race and Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines.[2]
Music
The music was composed by Hoyt Curtin, who was credited as music director.
Episodes
Episode | Original air date |
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1x01 | September 14, 1968 |
1x02 | September 21, 1968 |
1x03 | September 28, 1968 |
1x04 | October 5, 1968 |
1x05 | October 12, 1968 |
1x06 | October 19, 1968 |
1x07 | October 26, 1968 |
1x08 | November 2, 1968 |
1x09 | November 9, 1968 |
1x10 | November 16, 1968 |
1x11 | November 23, 1968 |
1x12 | November 30, 1968 |
1x13 | December 7, 1968 |
1x14 | December 14, 1968 |
1x15 | December 21, 1968 |
1x16 | December 28, 1968 |
1x17 | January 4, 1969 |
Cast
- Paul Winchell as Dick Dastardly, Private Meekly and Clyde
- Don Messick as Muttley, Professor Pat Pending, Gravel Slag and Ring-a-Ding
- Janet Waldo as Penelope Pitstop
- Daws Butler as Rock Slag, Big and Little Gruesome, the Red Max, Sergeant Blast, Peter Perfect, Rufus Ruffcut and Sawtooth
- John Stephenson as Lazy Luke and Blubber Bear
- Dave Willock as the Announcer
Legacy
In 1972, three years after the series had concluded, Sawtooth made an appearance in the Yogi's Ark Lark television film, as a member of Yogi's Gang, where he helps the gang build the Ark. However, he does not appear for the Yogi's Gang series that followed after.
Another TV series Yogi's Treasure Hunt also starred Dick Dastardly and Muttley as villains with Penelope Pitstop making a cameo in the episodes "Snow White & the 7 Treasure Hunters" and "Goodbye, Mr. Chump," respectively, while Blubber Bear guest-starred on The New Yogi Bear Show.
When Cartoon Network tasked its Senior Vice President, Mike Lazzo, with creating its first cost-effective series in 1993, he originally envisioned a marathon-like version of Wacky Races, which had all the episodes edited together to make it look like one long race across America. This was quickly abandoned due to a greater desire to turn Space Ghost into a nighttime talk show host in Space Ghost Coast to Coast.[3]
The series has been revived a couple of times by Warner Bros. Animation. In 2006, there was a five-minute pilot pitch called Wacky Races Forever, which acted as a sequel, but was not picked up. The second was a comparatively more successful reboot/quasi-sequel once again called Wacky Races, which lasted between 2017 to 2019 on the Boomerang SVOD service.
In 2016, DC Comics published their own take called Wacky Raceland, which is a somewhat more realistic and much darker turn in comparison to the original series.
Life-size replicas of the show's vehicles are a popular attraction at the annual Goodwood Festival of Speed; located in West Sussex, England. New additions have occurred each year, with 2008 seeing the last of the cars (the Bulletproof Bomb) added to the now-completed set.[4]
In 2004, Vauxhall's unveiled its ads patterning its new Corsa line after Wacky Races. In 2013, Peugeot Brazil did the same for their Peugeot 208, with high production values and live actors playing them for the first time.
In 2018, Variety reported that Warner Animation Group was developing a theatrical film based on the series.[5] Currently, there are no cast or crew members attached to the project.
On June 15, 2022, it was announced at the Annecy Film Festival that a stop motion series based on Wacky Races was in the works.[6]
In popular culture
- In "Lust in Translation," an episode of the British The Green Green Grass sitcom, Boycie calls his inept farmhands the Wacky Racers as he watches them drive away from the farm.
- In the UK show Sooty, there is an episode called "The Great Car Race," which has a Wacky Races-type race, with its own Dick Dastardly, Freddy Firewheel, who also says, "Drat, and double drat," when Sooty and Soo foil his plan to stop them from driving their van by throwing oil over their windshield by simply using the windshield wipers.
- In the South Park episode "Handicar," the series was a subject of parody, including its intro sequence. Dastardly and Muttley also appear here as well, albeit aged.
- Dastardly and Muttley made a cameo in the Uncle Grandpa episode "Uncle Grandpa Retires."
- In the Lucifer episode "Yabba Dabba Do Me," a young Jimmy Baines watches Wacky Races.
In other languages
Language | Name | Meaning |
---|---|---|
Spanish | Los Auto Locos | The Crazy Cars |
Japanese | チキチキマシン猛レース (Chiki Chiki Mashin Mō Race) | Chiki Chiki Machine Race* |
- Chiki Chiki is an otomonopia for the sounds of a tire spinning.
References
- ^ Sennett, Ted (October 30, 1989). The Art of Hanna-Barbera, page 151. Viking Studio Books. Retrieved November 25, 2022.
- ^ a b Sennett, Ted (October 30, 1989). The Art of Hanna-Barbera, page 153. Viking Studio Books. Retrieved November 25, 2022.
- ^ Kenyon, Heather (July 1998). "Late Nite With Space Ghost". Animation World Magazine, issue 3.4. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
- ^ Joseph, Noah (June 8, 2009). "Hanna-Barbera's Wacky Racers take to the street ahead of Goodwood Festival of Speed". autoblog.com. Retrieved October 2, 2022.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (October 15, 2018). "‘Tom and Jerry,’ ‘Scooby-Doo’ Movies Land Top Filmmaking Talent at Warner Animation (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved October 14, 2022.
- ^ Hopewell, John (June 15, 2022). "‘Unicorn,’ ‘Fionna and Cake,’ ‘Gumball’ Reboots, ‘Bye Bye Bunny’ Fascinate at Annecy". Variety. Retrieved June 15, 2022.