Rosie Come Home

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Rosie Come Home
File:.png
Premiere date September 17, 1985
Run time 21:40
Starring George O'Hanlon
Penny Singleton
Daws Butler
Janet Waldo
Don Messick
Jean Vander Pyl
Frank Welker
Gregg Berger
Howard Morris
Music composed by Hoyt Curtin
Writer(s) Glenn Leopold
Voice director(s) Gordon Hunt
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Title card
TJ 202 title card.png

"Rosie Come Home" is the second episode of The Jetsons season two, and the twenty-sixth overall. It aired on September 17, 1985 in syndicated markets that featured The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera programming blocks. It was written by Glenn Leopold, and voice directed by Gordon Hunt.

Rosie is in need of a replacement program, which she overhears and thinks she's being replaced, so she leaves the Jetsons.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Elroy Jetson Daws Butler
Orbitty Frank Welker
Rosie Jean Vander Pyl
Astro Don Messick
Jane Jetson Penny Singleton
George Jetson George O'Hanlon
Judy Jetson Janet Waldo
Mac Don Messick
Henry Orbit Daws Butler
Robot City salesman Gregg Berger
Mr. Spacely Mel Blanc
Mechano Maid 2000 Unavailable
Newscaster Don Messick
Johnny Omega N/A
Titus T. Tweeter Howard Morris


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: September 17, 1985 in syndication

Behind the scenes

  • This is the first title card to spell the Jetsons' robot maid's name as "Rosie," when it had been spelled as "Rosey."
  • The Galaxy Strip, which apparently has robot singles bars, is a parody of the Sunset Strip.
  • Judy gets her driving license in this episode.
  • This is Jean Vander Pyl's favorite episode of The Jetsons, taking to heart what Rosie was going through.[1]

Errors

  • Instead of going back to U-Rent a Maid where Rosie was bought in "Rosey the Robot," George goes to Robot City, which may just be the fact it deals with robots in general, as opposed to outright ignoring the former.
  • George says "The Lubra Coffee Shop", but it's spelled "The Libra Coffee Shop" on the building.
  • When Rosie offers to drive, Judy's collar is white and her top looks a little short, too.
  • The driving instructor seems to be Mr. Tweeter from "Jane's Driving Lesson," but he has brown hair, instead of orange.

Marketing and promotion

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References

  1. ^ Dooley, J. (1991). "Speaking of Wilma...," page 64. Comics Scene #19. Retrieved February 27, 2024.