The Big Sister

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The Big Sister
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Premiere date March 10, 1996
Run time 7:33
Starring Christine Cavanaugh
Allison Moore
Kath Soucie
Jeff Bennett
Frank Welker
Music composed by Thomas Chase
Steve Rucker
Writer(s) Genndy Tartakovsky
Director(s) Genndy Tartakovsky
Art director(s) Craig McCracken
Paul Rudish
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Title card
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"The Big Sister" is the twenty-eighth episode of What a Cartoon! It aired on March 10, 1996 on Cartoon Network. It was written and directed by the creator, Genndy Tartakovsky. This, along with "Changes," was a back door pilot to what led to Dexter's Laboratory being commissioned as a fully realized series in 1996. "The Big Sister" short was then integrated as the third segment of the sixth episode, which aired June 1, 1996.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Dexter Christine Cavanaugh
Dee Dee Allison Moore
Man #1 Jeff Bennett
Man #2 Frank Welker
Cop Jeff Bennett
Professor Jeff Bennett
Anchorman Jeff Bennett
General guy Frank Welker
Bill Clinton (voice only) Frank Welker
Albert Einstein Frank Welker
Ms. Physics Kath Soucie
Mom Kath Soucie
Dexter robot Christine Cavanaugh
General (voice only) Frank Welker
Computer (voice only) Kath Soucie


Locations

Objects

Vehicles

  • Tanks
  • Fighter jet

Production

Development

Filming

It was copyrighted in 1995.

Music

The What a Cartoon! theme song was performed by Gary Lionelli. The episode's main music was composed by Thomas Chase and Steve Rucker. The director of music production was Bodie Chandler.

Crew credits

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: March 10, 1996 on Cartoon Network

Behind the scenes

  • Dee Dee announces the What a Cartoon! logo.
  • Although the President is not mentioned by name, Frank Welker is doing an impression of then President of the United States Bill Clinton.
  • Dexter's room is filled with posters of colorful suited characters resembling the Power Rangers from the 1990s TV series Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, and a spaceship resembling the USS Enterprise from the 1960s TV series Star Trek.
  • Kath Soucie is uncredited for voicing Dexter's computer.

Errors

  • Why is Einstein depicted as God?
  • The drop Dexter took should've killed him.

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References