Stay Out!

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Stay Out!
WAC 104 poster.jpg
Poster ad.
Premiere date March 19, 1995
Run time 7:30
Starring Frank Welker
Henry Corden
Jean Vander Pyl
Music composed by Gary Lionelli
Story by Joseph Barbera
Writer(s) Stewart St. John
Storyboard artist(s) Robert Renzetti
Director(s) Joseph Barbera
Gordon Hunt (voices)
Animation director(s) Robert Alvarez
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Title card
WAC 104 title card.png

"Stay Out!", also known as "Stay Out", is the fourth episode of What a Cartoon! It aired on March 19, 1995 on Cartoon Network. It was written by Stewart St. John, directed by The Flintstones co-creator, Joseph Barbera, and voice directed by Gordon Hunt. This, along with "The Great Egg-Scape," were back door pilots to a possible series of Dino shorts that failed to materialize.

Fred orders Dino to keep a pesky cat out of the house while he goes bowling.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Fred Flintstone Henry Corden
Barney Rubble
Dino Frank Welker
Wilma Flintstone (voice only) Jean Vander Pyl
Saber tooth kitten Frank Welker
Santa Claus


Locations

Objects

  • Hand puppets
  • Dino's bed

Vehicles

  • None

Production

Development

Filming

It was copyrighted in 1995.

Music

The What a Cartoon! theme song and the episode's main music were both performed by Gary Lionelli. The director of music production was Bodie Chandler.

Crew credits

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: March 19, 1995 at 7 pm on Cartoon Network[1]

Behind the scenes

  • The cat replaces what could've been Baby Puss, who frequently needed to be taken out of the house in the second closing credits to The Flintstones.
  • The cat loosely resembles Wilma's pet saber tooth kitten Fangs in the prequel TV series The Flintstone Kids.
  • The cat hums "(Meet) The Flintstones" while in the shower.
  • Jean Vander Pyl voiced Wilma in this short, as she did in the original series, while Fred is voiced by his second original actor, Henry Corden, who took over the role after Alan Reed's passing.

Errors

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

  • Not available. 😢

References

  1. ^ Winfrey, Lee (January 14, 1995). "Network Featuring Several New Cartoons". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved January 10, 2022.