Once and Future Queen

From Hanna-Barbera Wiki
Revision as of 21:20, 29 September 2022 by MisterJames (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Once and Future Queen
Goons carry Diabolyn.png
Premiere date September 13, 1986
Run time 23:11
Starring Georgi Irene
John Vernon
Jessica Walter
Bobby Jacoby
Susan Blu
David Ackroyd
Billy Barty
Rob Paulsen
Frank Welker
Rene Auberjonois
Victoria Carroll
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Jeff Segal
Kelly Ward
Director(s) Gordon Hunt (voices)
Episode navigation
Previous Next
Title card
WF 101 title card.png

"Once and Future Queen" is the first episode of Wildfire season one. It aired on September 13, 1986 on CBS. It was written by Jeff Segal and Kelly Ward, and voice directed by Gordon Hunt.

Diabolyn kidnaps the royal weaver to make her a new dress for her coronation to be the new queen of Dar-Shan.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Brutus Susan Blu
Dorin Bobby Jacoby
Flap Unavailable
Alvinar Rene Auberjonois
Queen Sarana
Dweedle Billy Barty
Booper Rob Paulsen
Dertz Unavailable
Mudlusk Frank Welker
Thimble Unavailable
Wildfire John Vernon
John Cavanaugh David Ackroyd
Princess Sara Georgi Irene
Ellen Crowe Lilly Moon
Custer N/A
Mrs. Ashworth Victoria Carroll
Lady Diabolyn Jessica Walter
Royal weaver Unavailable
Spectres Unavailable


Locations

Objects

  • Sara's amulet

Vehicles

  • Mrs. Ashworth's car

Production

Development

Filming

Music

The theme music was composed by Jimmy Webb. The music was composed by Hoyt Curtin, credited as musical director, with coordination by Joanne Miller.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: September 13, 1986 on CBS

Behind the scenes

Errors

  • Sara has already met Wildfire prior to the episode. It'd be like if Filmation had skipped Adora finding out about her royal heritage and became She-Ra off-screen.
  • Since when is child welfare represented by a group of old biddies?

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References