Judy's Elopement

From Hanna-Barbera Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Judy's Elopement
File:.png
Premiere date November 27, 1985
Run time 22:02
Starring George O'Hanlon
Penny Singleton
Daws Butler
Janet Waldo
Jean Vander Pyl
Frank Welker
Mel Blanc
Roger DeWitt
Nancy Cartwright
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Jeff Hall
Director(s) Gordon Hunt (voices)
Episode navigation
Previous Next
Title card
TJ 239 title card.png

'"Judy's Elopement" is the thirty-ninth episode of The Jetsons season two, and the sixty-first overall. It aired on November 27, 1985 in syndicated markets that featured The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera programming blocks. It was written by Jeff Hall, and voice directed by Gordon Hunt.

Due to gossip from Rosie, George believes Judy is eloping with Sam Spacely, Mr. Spacely's inept nephew. But she is really helping Sam secretly get hitched with Asteroid, Mr. Cogswell's daughter.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Jane Jetson Penny Singleton
Judy Jetson Janet Waldo
George Jetson George O'Hanlon
Eddie Rocketkowsky
Astro N/A
Orbitty Frank Welker
Mr. Spacely Mel Blanc
Sam Spacely Roger DeWitt
Rosie Jean Vander Pyl
Game show host Unavailable
Norma
Asteroid Cogswell Nancy Cartwright
Mr. Cogswell Daws Butler
Mr. Cogswell's secretary Unavailable
Mr. Smith Unavailable
Mrs. Smith Unavailable
Director Unavailable
Ed Unavailable
Judge Unavailable
Harvey Sonicblast


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

  • Flying cars

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The music was composed and conducted by Hoyt Curtin.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: November 27, 1985 in syndication

Behind the scenes

  • Elroy is absent for the first time.
  • The Moon Institute of Technology is a parody of Massachusetts of Technology.

Errors

  • Jane was supposed to have been young when she got married to George, but the flashback in "The Cosmic Courtship of George and Jane," showed both of them to look no different from their present day selves.

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References