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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest''}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest'' (TV series)}}
:''This article is about the TV series. For the other uses, see [[The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (disambiguation)]].''
:''This article is about the TV series. For other uses, see [[The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest]].''
{{Infobox TV
{{Infobox TV
|name= The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest
|title_card= [[File:TRA title card.png|300px]]
|title_card= [[File:TRA title card.png|300px]]
|caption= Peter Lawrence: Maybe the people who cling to the [[Jonny Quest (TV series)|old Quest]] and its attitudes are the same people who have lost American the great affection in which it was held worldwide.[http://questfan.com/Page/Peter_Lawrence_Dialogue.html]
|caption= Peter Lawrence: Maybe the people who cling to the [[Jonny Quest (TV series)|old Quest]] and its attitudes are the same people who have lost American the great affection in which it was held worldwide.[http://questfan.com/Page/Peter_Lawrence_Dialogue.html]
|creators= [[Peter Lawrence]]<br />[[Takashi]]
|creators= [[Peter Lawrence]]<br />[[Takashi]]
|network= [[TBS]]<br />[[Cartoon Network]]<br />[[TNT]]
|network= [[TNT]]<br />[[TBS]]<br />[[Cartoon Network]]
|prodcompany= [[Hanna-Barbera]]
|prodcompany= [[Hanna-Barbera]]
|distributor= Warner Bros. Television Distribution
|distributor= Warner Bros. Television Distribution
|released= [[August 26]], [[1996]]—[[April 6]], [[1997]]
|released= [[August 26]], [[1996]]—[[April 6]], [[1997]]
|run_time= 22 minutes
|run_time= 22 minutes
|starring= [[J.D. Roth]]<br />[[Michael Benyaer]]<br />[[Jesse Douglas]]<br />[[George Segal]]<br />[[Robert Patrick]]<br />[[Frank Welker]]<br />[[Quinton Flynn]]<br />[[Rob Paulsen]]<br />[[John De Lancie]]<br />[[Robert Foxworth]]
|starring= [[J.D. Roth]]<br />[[Michael Benyaer]]<br />[[Jesse Douglas]]<br />[[George Segal]]<br />[[Robert Patrick]]<br />[[Frank Welker (actor)|Frank Welker]]<br />[[Quinton Flynn]]<br />[[Rob Paulsen]]<br />[[John De Lancie]]<br />[[Robert Foxworth]]
|execs=  
|execs=  
|producers= [[David Lipman]]<br />[[John Eng]]<br />[[Jennifer Blohm]]<br />[[Margot McDonough]]<br />[[Davis Doi]]<br />[[Jennifer Pelphrey]]
|producers= [[David Lipman]]<br />[[John Eng]]<br />[[Jennifer Blohm]]<br />[[Margot McDonough]]<br />[[Davis Doi]]<br />[[Jennifer Pelphrey]]
Line 17: Line 18:
|director= Davis Doi<br />Peter Lawrence (voices)<br />[[Kris Zimmerman]] (voices)
|director= Davis Doi<br />Peter Lawrence (voices)<br />[[Kris Zimmerman]] (voices)
|previous= Jonny Quest (TV series)
|previous= Jonny Quest (TV series)
|next= The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest
|next= The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (TV series)
|title_card2= [[File:CN's TRA title card.png|300px]]
|title_card2= [[File:CN's TRA title card.png|300px]]
|caption2= Cartoon Network taking credit where credit's undue.
|caption2= Cartoon Network taking credit where credit's undue.
}}
}}
'''''The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest''''', referred to on-screen as '''''Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures''''', is an American animated sci-fi/action-adventure/supernatural TV series produced by [[Hanna-Barbera]] (H-B) for [[TBS]], [[Cartoon Network]], and [[TNT]]. It ran from [[1996]] to [[1997]], airing 52 episodes. It is the second and currently last series after the original ''[[Jonny Quest (TV series)|Jonny Quest]]'', which ran from [[1964]] to [[1965]], then again from [[1986]] to [[1987]].
'''''The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest''''', referred to on-screen as '''''Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures''''', is an American animated sci-fi/action-adventure/supernatural television series produced by [[Hanna-Barbera]] (H-B) for [[TNT]], [[TBS]], and perhaps most importantly [[Cartoon Network]]. It ran from [[1996]] to [[1997]], airing 52 episodes that technically spanned one season, but is now commercially marketed as two due to major differences between the first 13 episodes and the last 13 episodes. It is the second and currently last series after the original ''[[Jonny Quest (TV series)|Jonny Quest]]'', which ran from [[1964]] to [[1965]], then again from [[1986]] to [[1987]].


[[Jonny Quest (character)|Jonny Quest]], now a full-fledged teenager, continues to follow his father, [[Benton Quest|Dr. Benton Quest]], all over the globe to explore the wonders and mysteries that man has yet to uncover himself. In Jonny's exciting adventures, he is also joined by his best friends, [[Hadji]] and [[Jessie Bannon|Jessie]], and their friendly bodyguard, [[Race Bannon]].
[[Jonny Quest (character)|Jonny Quest]], now a full-fledged teenager, continues to follow his father, [[Benton Quest|Dr. Benton Quest]], all over the globe to explore the wonders and mysteries that man has yet to uncover. In Jonny's exciting adventures, he is also joined by his best friends, [[Hadji]] and [[Jessie Bannon|Jessie]], and their family bodyguard, [[Race Bannon]].


[[Turner Entertainment Company|Turner]] staged a massive marketing campaign to promote the series, supported by 33 licensees, in spite of the turbulent production schedules it suffered and never truly recovered from. The series ultimately failed to achieve the strong ratings it was striving for, and after the completed 52 episodes had aired, Cartoon Network pulled the [[QuestWorld]] plug for good.
[[Turner Entertainment Company|Turner]] staged a massive marketing campaign to promote the series, supported by 33 licensees, despite the turbulent production schedules it suffered and never truly recovered from. The series ultimately failed to achieve the strong ratings it was striving for, and after the completed 52 episodes had aired, Cartoon Network pulled the [[QuestWorld]] plug for good.
 
The [[The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest: Season One, Volume One|entire series]] [[The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest: Season One, Volume Two|has been]] [[The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest: The Complete Second Season|released on DVD]].


==Production==
==Production==
===Development===
===Development===
===Casting===
===Casting===
The casting department went for actors who had done rarely any voice acting before, or in [[Jesse Douglas]]'s case, very little acting. [[J.D. Roth]] and [[George Segal]], who played Jonny and Dr. Quest, respectively, had both done work for the [[Nickelodeon]] series ''Aahh! Real Monsters'', while [[Robert Patrick]], best known for ''Terminator 2: Judgement Day'', had done voice work for ''[[SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron]]'' and ''[[Captain Planet and the Planeteers]]''. Patrick was directed to use a good ole' country boy accent.
The casting department went for actors who had rarely done voice acting before, or in [[Jesse Douglas]]'s case, very little acting. [[J.D. Roth]] and [[George Segal]], who played Jonny and Doctor Quest, respectively, had both done work for the [[Nickelodeon]] series ''Aahh! Real Monsters'', while [[Robert Patrick]], best known for ''Terminator 2: Judgement Day'', had done voice work for ''[[SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron (TV series)|SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron]]'' and ''[[Captain Planet and the Planeteers]]''. Patrick was directed to use a good ole' country boy accent.


When the production team shifted halfway through the series, so did the voice cast. Segal and Patrick weren't suitable for the vision the new team was aiming for, which in part was to be faithful to the continuity of the original series. While they could have kept Patrick, they didn't think it was fair to him to suddenly drop the accent.
When the production team shifted halfway through the series, so did the voice cast. Segal and Patrick weren't suitable for the vision the new team was aiming for, which in part was to be faithful to the continuity of the original series. While they could have kept Patrick, they didn't think it was fair to him to suddenly drop the accent.


Having released everyone from their contracts (except for [[Frank Welker]] as [[Bandit]] and [[Jeremia Surd]]), soundalike [[Quinton Flynn]] replaced Roth, while the mostly soundalike [[Jennifer Hale]] replaced Douglas (who then disappeared into the [[Hollywood]] abyss), while past actors, [[Don Messick]], [[Rob Paulsen]], and [[Granville Van Dusen]] (now credited as Sonny Van Dusen), reprised their roles of Dr. Quest, Paulsen, and Race, respectively.
Having released everyone from their contracts (except for [[Frank Welker (actor)|Frank Welker]] as [[Bandit]] and [[Jeremia Surd]]), soundalike [[Quinton Flynn]] replaced Roth, while the mostly soundalike [[Jennifer Hale]] replaced Douglas (who then disappeared into the [[Hollywood]] abyss), while past actors, [[Don Messick]], [[Rob Paulsen]], and [[Granville Van Dusen]] (now credited as Sonny Van Dusen), reprised their roles of Doctor Quest, Paulsen, and Race, respectively.


It was discovered early on that Messick had become too weak to perform certain aspects required of him, so he was replaced with [[John De Lancie]], who rerecorded all of Messick's lines. Due to a misshape, one of Messick's lines is left in "Rock of Rages," when Dr. Quest responds to Race's timely save with "And not a moment too soon!"
It was discovered early on that Messick had become too weak to perform certain aspects required of Doctor Quest, so he was replaced with [[John De Lancie]], who rerecorded all of Messick's lines. Due to a misshape, however, one of Messick's lines is left in "Rock of Rages," when Doctor Quest responds to Race's timely save with, "And not a moment too soon!"


Another actor who had auditioned for Dr. Quest was [[Robert Foxworth]], who made such an impression that the creative team had decided to have Foxworth replace Van Dusen after six episodes.
Another actor who had auditioned for Doctor Quest was [[Robert Foxworth]], who made such an impression on the creative team that they had Foxworth replace Van Dusen after six episodes.


===Filming===
===Filming===
Line 45: Line 48:


==Music==
==Music==
The score was composed by [[Gary Lionelli]] based on the original theme by [[Hoyt Curtin]]. The music director was [[Bodie Chandler]].
The music was composed by [[Gary Lionelli]] based on the original theme by [[Hoyt Curtin]]. The music director was [[Bodie Chandler]].


The end credits of each episode always touted [[Kid Rhino]]'s CD that you could buy, although one never existed.
The end credits of each episode always touted [[Kid Rhino]]'s CD that you could buy, although one never existed.
Line 53: Line 56:
! Episode
! Episode
! Number
! Number
! Air date
! Original air date
|-
|-
| "[[The Darkest Fathoms]]"
| "[[The Darkest Fathoms]]"
Line 111: Line 114:
| [[September 12]], 1996
| [[September 12]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Amok (episode)|Amok]]"
| "[[Amok]]"
| 1x15
| 1x15
| [[September 13]], 1996
| [[September 13]], 1996
Line 160: Line 163:
|-
|-
| "[[The Mummies of Malenque]]"
| "[[The Mummies of Malenque]]"
| 2x01
| 1x27
| September 18, 1996
| September 18, 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Rock of Rages]]"
| "[[Rock of Rages]]"
| 2x02
| 1x28
| [[September 28]], 1996
| [[September 28]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Bloodlines]]"
| "[[Bloodlines]]"
| 2x03
| 1x29
| [[December 13]], 1996
| [[December 13]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Race Against Danger]]"
| "[[Race Against Danger]]"
| 2x04
| 1x30
| [[December 16]], 1996
| [[December 16]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[The Dark Mountain]]"
| "[[The Dark Mountain]]"
| 2x05
| 1x31
| [[December 17]], 1996
| [[December 17]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Cyberswitch]]"
| "[[Cyberswitch]]"
| 2x06
| 1x32
| [[December 18]], 1996
| [[December 18]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Undersea Emergency]]"
| "[[Undersea Emergency]]"
| 2x07
| 1x33
| [[December 19]], 1996
| [[December 19]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Nemesis]]"
| "[[Nemesis]]"
| 2x08
| 1x34
| [[December 20]], 1996
| [[December 20]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[DNA Doomsday]]"
| "[[DNA Doomsday]]"
| 2x09
| 1x35
| [[December 23]], 1996
| [[December 23]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Ghost Quest]]"
| "[[Ghost Quest]]"
| 2x10
| 1x36
| [[December 25]], 1996
| [[December 25]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Nuclear Netherworld]]"
| "[[Nuclear Netherworld]]"
| 2x11
| 1x37
| [[December 26]], 1996
| [[December 26]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Eclipse]]"
| "[[Eclipse]]"
| 2x12
| 1x38
| [[December 27]], 1996
| [[December 27]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Without a Trace]]"
| "[[Without a Trace]]"
| 2x13
| 1x39
| [[December 30]], 1996
| [[December 30]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Village of the Doomed]]"
| "[[Village of the Doomed]]"
| 2x14
| 1x40
| [[December 31]], 1996
| [[December 31]], 1996
|-
|-
| "[[Dark Sentinel]]"
| "[[Dark Sentinel]]"
| 2x15
| 1x41
| [[February 10]], 1997
| [[February 10]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[Other Space]]"
| "[[Other Space]]"
| 2x16
| 1x42
| [[February 11]], 1997
| [[February 11]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[Digital Doublecross]]"
| "[[Digital Doublecross]]"
| 2x17
| 1x43
| [[February 12]], 1997
| [[February 12]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[Thoughtscape]]"
| "[[Thoughtscape]]"
| 2x18
| 1x44
| [[February 13]], 1997
| [[February 13]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[The Bangalore Falcon]]"
| "[[The Bangalore Falcon]]"
| 2x19
| 1x45
| [[February 14]], 1997
| [[February 14]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[Diamonds and Jade]]"
| "[[Diamonds and Jade]]"
| 2x20
| 1x46
| [[March 14]], 1997
| [[March 14]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[The Edge of Yesterday]]"
| "[[The Edge of Yesterday]]"
| 2x21
| 1x47
| [[March 17]], 1997
| [[March 17]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[The Haunted Sonata]]"
| "[[The Haunted Sonata]]"
| 2x22
| 1x48
| [[March 18]], 1997
| [[March 18]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[General Winter]]"
| "[[General Winter]]"
| 2x23
| 1x49
| [[March 26]], 1997
| [[March 26]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[Night of the Zinja]]"
| "[[Night of the Zinja]]"
| 2x24
| 1x50
| [[April 14]], 1997
| [[April 14]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[The Robot Spies]]"
| "[[The Robot Spies]]"
| 2x25
| 1x51
| [[April 15]], 1997
| [[April 15]], 1997
|-
|-
| "[[More Than Zero]]"
| "[[More Than Zero]]"
| 2x26
| 1x52
| [[April 16]], 1997
| [[April 16]], 1997
|}
|}
==Release==
Dates are in order of release:
* [[United States]]: August 26, 1996 at 7:00 am on TNT; August 26, 1996 at 3:35 pm on TBS; August 26, 1996 at 7:00 pm on Cartoon Network
* [[United Kingdom]] and [[Ireland]]: [[September 2]], 1996 at 5:30 pm on Cartoon Network; [[September 20]], 1996 at 4:10 pm on [[BBC One]]


==Cast==
==Cast==
Line 270: Line 279:
* [[George Segal]] (season one) and [[John De Lancie]] (season two) as [[Benton Quest|Dr. Benton Quest]]
* [[George Segal]] (season one) and [[John De Lancie]] (season two) as [[Benton Quest|Dr. Benton Quest]]
* [[Robert Patrick]] (season one), [[Granville Van Dusen|Sonny Van Dusen]] (season two; episodes 1-6), and [[Robert Foxworth]] (season two; episodes 7-26) as [[Race Bannon]]
* [[Robert Patrick]] (season one), [[Granville Van Dusen|Sonny Van Dusen]] (season two; episodes 1-6), and [[Robert Foxworth]] (season two; episodes 7-26) as [[Race Bannon]]
* [[Frank Welker]] as [[Bandit]]
* [[Frank Welker (actor)|Frank Welker]] as [[Bandit]]


==Celebrity guests==
==Celebrity guests==
Line 278: Line 287:
* [[Mayim Bialik]]
* [[Mayim Bialik]]
* [[Irene Bedard]]
* [[Irene Bedard]]
* Robert Foxworth
* Robert Foxworth, who was a guest before he joined the cast
* Carolyn Seymour
* [[Carolyn Seymour]]
* [[Earl Boen]]
* [[Earl Boen]]
* [[Theresa Saldana]]
* [[Theresa Saldana]]

Latest revision as of 23:46, 1 April 2024

This article is about the TV series. For other uses, see The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest.
The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest
TRA title card.png
Peter Lawrence: Maybe the people who cling to the old Quest and its attitudes are the same people who have lost American the great affection in which it was held worldwide.[1]
Created by Peter Lawrence
Takashi
Network TNT
TBS
Cartoon Network
Production company Hanna-Barbera
Distributor Warner Bros. Television Distribution
Original release August 26, 1996April 6, 1997
Run time 22 minutes
Starring J.D. Roth
Michael Benyaer
Jesse Douglas
George Segal
Robert Patrick
Frank Welker
Quinton Flynn
Rob Paulsen
John De Lancie
Robert Foxworth
Producer(s) David Lipman
John Eng
Jennifer Blohm
Margot McDonough
Davis Doi
Jennifer Pelphrey
Music composed by Gary Lionelli
Writer(s) Peter Lawrence
Michael Ryan
Glenn Leopold
Director(s) Davis Doi
Peter Lawrence (voices)
Kris Zimmerman (voices)
Series navigation
Previous Next
Second title card
CN's TRA title card.png
Cartoon Network taking credit where credit's undue.

The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, referred to on-screen as Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures, is an American animated sci-fi/action-adventure/supernatural television series produced by Hanna-Barbera (H-B) for TNT, TBS, and perhaps most importantly Cartoon Network. It ran from 1996 to 1997, airing 52 episodes that technically spanned one season, but is now commercially marketed as two due to major differences between the first 13 episodes and the last 13 episodes. It is the second and currently last series after the original Jonny Quest, which ran from 1964 to 1965, then again from 1986 to 1987.

Jonny Quest, now a full-fledged teenager, continues to follow his father, Dr. Benton Quest, all over the globe to explore the wonders and mysteries that man has yet to uncover. In Jonny's exciting adventures, he is also joined by his best friends, Hadji and Jessie, and their family bodyguard, Race Bannon.

Turner staged a massive marketing campaign to promote the series, supported by 33 licensees, despite the turbulent production schedules it suffered and never truly recovered from. The series ultimately failed to achieve the strong ratings it was striving for, and after the completed 52 episodes had aired, Cartoon Network pulled the QuestWorld plug for good.

The entire series has been released on DVD.

Production

Development

Casting

The casting department went for actors who had rarely done voice acting before, or in Jesse Douglas's case, very little acting. J.D. Roth and George Segal, who played Jonny and Doctor Quest, respectively, had both done work for the Nickelodeon series Aahh! Real Monsters, while Robert Patrick, best known for Terminator 2: Judgement Day, had done voice work for SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron and Captain Planet and the Planeteers. Patrick was directed to use a good ole' country boy accent.

When the production team shifted halfway through the series, so did the voice cast. Segal and Patrick weren't suitable for the vision the new team was aiming for, which in part was to be faithful to the continuity of the original series. While they could have kept Patrick, they didn't think it was fair to him to suddenly drop the accent.

Having released everyone from their contracts (except for Frank Welker as Bandit and Jeremia Surd), soundalike Quinton Flynn replaced Roth, while the mostly soundalike Jennifer Hale replaced Douglas (who then disappeared into the Hollywood abyss), while past actors, Don Messick, Rob Paulsen, and Granville Van Dusen (now credited as Sonny Van Dusen), reprised their roles of Doctor Quest, Paulsen, and Race, respectively.

It was discovered early on that Messick had become too weak to perform certain aspects required of Doctor Quest, so he was replaced with John De Lancie, who rerecorded all of Messick's lines. Due to a misshape, however, one of Messick's lines is left in "Rock of Rages," when Doctor Quest responds to Race's timely save with, "And not a moment too soon!"

Another actor who had auditioned for Doctor Quest was Robert Foxworth, who made such an impression on the creative team that they had Foxworth replace Van Dusen after six episodes.

Filming

Aftermath

Although a commercial and ratings failure, Lance Falk, a writer and artist for the second pod, had planned to write the first episode of the next season, which was tentatively titled "Rachel," named after Jonny's late mother.

Music

The music was composed by Gary Lionelli based on the original theme by Hoyt Curtin. The music director was Bodie Chandler.

The end credits of each episode always touted Kid Rhino's CD that you could buy, although one never existed.

Episodes

Episode Number Original air date
"The Darkest Fathoms" 1x01 August 26, 1996
"Escape to Questworld" 1x02 August 27, 1996
"In the Realm of the Condor" 1x03 August 28, 1996
"Rage's Burning Wheel" 1x04 August 29, 1996
"Ndovu's Last Journey" 1x05 August 30, 1996
"Manhattan Maneater" 1x06 September 2, 1996
"East of Zanzibar" 1x07 September 3, 1996
"Assault on Questworld" 1x08 September 4, 1996
"Ezekiel Rage" 1x09 September 5, 1996
"Alien in Washington" 1x10 September 6, 1996
"Return of the Anasazi" 1x11 September 9, 1996
"The Alchemist" 1x12 September 10, 1996
"Trouble on the Colorado" 1x13 September 11, 1996
"In the Wake of Mary Celeste" 1x14 September 12, 1996
"Amok" 1x15 September 13, 1996
"Besieged in Paradise" 1x16 September 14, 1996
"The Spectre of the Pine Barrens" 1x17 September 17, 1996
"Heroes" 1x18 September 18, 1996
"The Ballad of Belle Bonnet" 1x19 September 19, 1996
"In the Darkness of the Moon" 1x20 September 23, 1996
"The Secret of the Moai" 1x21 September 24, 1996
"Expedition to Khumbu" 1x22 September 25, 1996
"Ice Will Burn" 1x23 September 26, 1996
"Future Rage" 1x24 October 29, 1996
"Alligators and Okeechobee Vikings" 1x25 November 1, 1996
"To Bardo and Back" 1x26 January 2, 1997
"The Mummies of Malenque" 1x27 September 18, 1996
"Rock of Rages" 1x28 September 28, 1996
"Bloodlines" 1x29 December 13, 1996
"Race Against Danger" 1x30 December 16, 1996
"The Dark Mountain" 1x31 December 17, 1996
"Cyberswitch" 1x32 December 18, 1996
"Undersea Emergency" 1x33 December 19, 1996
"Nemesis" 1x34 December 20, 1996
"DNA Doomsday" 1x35 December 23, 1996
"Ghost Quest" 1x36 December 25, 1996
"Nuclear Netherworld" 1x37 December 26, 1996
"Eclipse" 1x38 December 27, 1996
"Without a Trace" 1x39 December 30, 1996
"Village of the Doomed" 1x40 December 31, 1996
"Dark Sentinel" 1x41 February 10, 1997
"Other Space" 1x42 February 11, 1997
"Digital Doublecross" 1x43 February 12, 1997
"Thoughtscape" 1x44 February 13, 1997
"The Bangalore Falcon" 1x45 February 14, 1997
"Diamonds and Jade" 1x46 March 14, 1997
"The Edge of Yesterday" 1x47 March 17, 1997
"The Haunted Sonata" 1x48 March 18, 1997
"General Winter" 1x49 March 26, 1997
"Night of the Zinja" 1x50 April 14, 1997
"The Robot Spies" 1x51 April 15, 1997
"More Than Zero" 1x52 April 16, 1997

Release

Dates are in order of release:

Cast

Celebrity guests

References