Gettin' Twiggy With It

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Gettin' Twiggy With It
PPG catch Mitch.png
Premiere date September 22, 2000
Starring Catherine Cavadini
Tara Charendoff
E.G. Daily
Tom Kenny
Jennifer Hale
Frank Welker
Music composed by Thomas Chase
Steve Rucker
James L. Venable
Writer(s) Chris Reccardi
Storyboard artist(s) Chris Reccardi
Director(s) John McIntyre
Craig McCracken
Genndy Tartakovsky (voices)
Animation director(s) Robert Alvarez
Art director(s) Don Shank
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Title card
PPG 1998 305A title card.png

"Gettin' Twiggy With It" is the first part of episode five of The Powerpuff Girls season three, and the fifty-eighth overall. It aired on September 22, 2000 on Cartoon Network. It was written by Chris Reccardi, directed by John McIntyre and series creator, Craig McCracken, and voice directed by Genndy Tartakovsky.

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Narrator (voice only) Tom Kenny
Julie Bean N/A
Harry Pitt N/A
Elmer Skloo N/A
Twiggy Frank Welker
Mitch Mitchelson Tom Kenny
Blossom Utonium Catherine Cavadini
Buttercup Utonium E.G. Daily
Bubbles Utonium Tara Charendoff
Ms. Keane Jennifer Hale
Mitch's grandma N/A
Speed Buggy (toy) N/A


Organizations

Locations

Objects

  • Speed Buggy toy

Vehicles

  • None

Production

Development

Filming

It was copyrighted in 2000.

Music

The main title theme and music were composed by Thomas Chase, Steve Rucker, and James L. Venable. The end credits song was performed by the Scottish indie-pop band Bis. The music was edited by Glenwood Editorial.

Crew credits

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: September 22, 2000 on Cartoon Network

Behind the scenes

  • The episode title is an allusion to Will Smith's 1997 song "Gettin' Jiggy Wit It."
  • The calendar in Mitchel's trailer is dated 1972.

Errors

  • Mitch's character in this episode doesn't really match up to how he's portrayed in his other appearances.
  • Frank Welker is credited for voicing the grandma, but she doesn't talk.

Legacy

Critical reception

In other languages

Language Name Meaning

Home availability

References