Histeria!

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Histeria!

The cast of Histeria! sings out their theme song.
Genre Animated series
Creator(s) Tom Ruegger
Starring Frank Welker
Tress MacNeille
Jeff Bennett
Laraine Newman
Luke Ruegger
Cody Ruegger
Nathan Ruegger
Maurice LaMarche
Billy West
Country of origin Flag of United States United States
No. of episodes 52
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Kids' WB!
Original run September 14, 1998October 1, 2000

Histeria! was a short-lived animated television series of the late-1990s, created by Tom Ruegger (who also created Tiny Toons, Animaniacs, and Pinky and the Brain) at Warner Bros. Animation. Unlike other similar shows by Warner Bros., Histeria!'s purpose was not simply to entertain, but to also attempt to teach history as well. A regular cast of characters would visit a different period or event in history and try to explain the event using humor.

The Annenberg Foundation, in its 1999 report on educational television for children, cited Histeria! as the best example of the genre of all children's programs running on network television at that time. Histeria! won the Emmy Award for best music composition in 1999.

One brief segment of the show featured a sequence in which many of the characters performed a carol asking their audience to please watch the show or it would be cancelled (to a beat reminiscent of the 1970s Coca-Cola commercial "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing").

Histeria! aired on Kids' WB from 1998 to 2001. More recently, it has been in reruns on Toontopia TV (part of In2TV), first from March to July 2006, and then returning in October. The direct link is here. As of March 2007, it is currently the only one of Kids' WB's classic comedy shows still broadcast there. Currently, no DVD set has been announced.

Histeria! may have been influenced by 1978 French TV series Il était une fois l'homme (Once Upon a Time... Man). The French series does not feature time travel. Instead, the familiar series cast reappears as the contemporary figures of every historical time.

Contents

  • Father Time (voiced by Frank Welker) - The 'host' of Histeria. According to one segment, he is the reason the cast 'travels' through time. Father Time has a white beard reaching down to the floor and resembles the character of Maestro from Il était une fois l'homme.
  • Big Fat Baby/Big Fat Baby Girl (Luke Ruegger) - Egg-shaped babies (There are sometimes several) who occasionally have dirty diapers, which one of the kids usually tries to get the current historical figure they're bugging to change, claiming that the last time it had a clean diaper, it was before a point in history that happened a long time ago. Aka Pella once said that Big Fat Baby had a diaper change a year before Noah's Ark.
  • Miss Information (Laraine Newman) - A ditzy tour guide who also leads the same group of tourists through various moments in history. Has a habit of getting facts wrong, like claiming that George Washington was named after the monument, rather than the other way around (she believes this because it isn't called "the George Monument").
  • Loud Kiddington (Cody Ruegger) - A young boy who talks extremely loudly (as the name suggests). Does segments with Father Time that depict really loud moments in history (e.g. the creation of gunpowder, the Big Bang, the first sonic boom, and the Wall Street Crash of 1929. Before these depictions, Father Time would request the viewing audience to turn the volume of their televisions up to their maximum levels.) As a running gag, he sometimes keeps watch of something whilst almost silently muttering "I see it..." repeatedly. When he loses sight of what he watches, he immediately switches into continuously shouting "DON'T SEE IT!!"
  • Pepper Mills (Tress MacNeille) - A crazy teenage girl who constantly bugs people in history for their autograph, thinking it is a pop cultural celebrity, only realizing the mistake after the autograph has been given (e.g. To Dwight D. Eisenhower - "Hey! You're not Elmer Fudd!").
  • Toast (Tress MacNeille) - A clueless surfer teen. Has a couple segments on the show called Ask Me If I Care, where a historic figure has three shots to try to tell Toast something that interests him, or they are ejected into space.
  • Froggo (Nathan Ruegger) - A frog-mouthed kid with a really low voice. Often asks historical figures for various strange items, and if he doesn't get them, he will either go into a panic or tell the person not to come crying to him later.
  • Charity Bazaar (Laraine Newman) - A little blonde girl who talks in a deadpan tone and is constantly unhappy ("I'm not happy"). She is frequently dressed as a pilgrim.
  • Aka Pella (Cree Summer) - A sassy African-American girl who also has a minor role on the show. Her name is a pun on acapella. She, Froggo, Loud, and Charity are the most frequent singers in the Histeria! Kid Chorus.
  • Cho-Cho (Tress MacNeille) - A little Chinese girl who frequently tries to sell useless items to the historical figures, usually with Lucky Bob assisting her.
  • Lucky Bob (Jeff Bennett) - An incredibly dumb kid who seems to have the worst luck, yet the other kids notice the bright side of his bad experiences, usually the fact that they haven't happened again. He is apparently a fan of Ed McMahon on The Tonight Show, as most of his dialogue consists of McMahon's catchphrases "Hiyooo!", "Yes, now!", "You are correct, sir!", and every once in a while, "You are correct, oh wise one!".
  • Fetch (Frank Welker) - Loud's aptly-named dog, who loves chasing tennis balls and frequently asks the historical figures if they want to play catch with him. He appears to be of the same breed of dog as Hunter from Road Rovers.
  • Pule Houser (Frank Welker) - A fat German boy who frequently takes abuse in some way, resulting in him whining, and occasionally is shown about to vomit. His name may be a takeoff on Kaspar Hauser.
  • Susanna Susquahanna (Tress MacNeille) - A Native American girl with beady eyes and a gap in her teeth that gives her a lisp not unlike that of Sylvester the Pussycat.
  • World's Oldest Woman (Tress MacNeille) - A really old woman who claims to have dated every historic man in history, dating all the way back to Adam in the Garden of Eden.
  • Mr. Smartypants (Rob Paulsen) - A strange person who wears his pants so high up, it covers half of his face. He apparently harbors romantic feelings for Miss Information.
  • Lydia Karaoke (Nora Dunn) - The 'network censor'. Appears at times in the show where the scene is considered 'inappropriate', such as nudity found in many classic works or art, and the entirety of the Vomitorium sketch.
  • Bill Straitman (James Wickline) - Perhaps the most sane person of the bunch, a man in a business suit whom, as his name would suggest, is the straight man to the other characters.
  • Chit Chatterson (Billy West) - A crazy salesman and image consultant who sounds like Phil Silvers.
  • Sammy Melman (Rob Paulsen) - A morally challenged TV executive.
  • Kip Ling, Crooked-Mouth Boy, and Bow-Haired Girl - Three generic children who only show up in songs, usually filling in for one or more the usual Kid Chorus members. Unlike the rest of the kids, they do not seem to have any personality quirks.
  • Nostradamus (Paul Rugg) - The real-life fortune teller. Predicts the future for the cast and predicts the next segment. As Baby Nostradamus, he resembles one of the Big Fat Babies and exclaims "I predict that I'm gonna make a poopoo in my pants!" His catchphrase is "SHUT UP!"
  • Molly Pitcher (Tress MacNeille) - A caricature of Mary Hays McCauly who constantly offers refreshments in the form of water, sometimes parodying the "Got Milk?" advertising campaign. Her personality is based on Martha Stewart.

Various historical celebrities as they appeared on Histeria!, from left to right: the Statue of Liberty, Confucius, Abraham Lincoln, George and Martha Washington, Joan of Arc, Attila the Hun, Napoleon Bonaparte, and Tutankhamen.
Various historical celebrities as they appeared on Histeria!, from left to right: the Statue of Liberty, Confucius, Abraham Lincoln, George and Martha Washington, Joan of Arc, Attila the Hun, Napoleon Bonaparte, and Tutankhamen.

Most of the real-life historical figures in Histeria were portrayed as caricatures of real-life celebrities from the modern era. The intent was to make analogies to contemporary individuals in terms of personalities and attitudes.

Karl Marx imitating Groucho on Histeria!
Karl Marx imitating Groucho on Histeria!

Occasionally, a historical figure would be portrayed by a member of the regular cast.

Historical figure Character
Charles Babbage Bill Straitman
Grace Bedell Pepper Mills
William Blake Froggo
Cleopatra World's Oldest Woman or Pepper Mills
John Hancock Chit Chatterson
Samuel Johnson Froggo
Herman Melville Froggo
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Loud Kiddington
Mary Shelley Charity Bazaar
Ivan IV Vasilyevich Froggo

The Histeria! Kid Chorus usually consisted of (from left to right) Loud Kiddington, Charity Bazaar, Froggo, and Aka Pella.
The Histeria! Kid Chorus usually consisted of (from left to right) Loud Kiddington, Charity Bazaar, Froggo, and Aka Pella.
  1. Inventors Hall of Fame - Part II
  2. Inventors Hall of Fame - Part I
  3. The U.S. Civil War - Part I
  4. The Attack of the Vikings
  5. The Wild West
  6. The American Revolution - Part I
  7. More Explorers
  8. The Know-It-Alls
  9. The Renaissance
  10. The U.S. Civil War - Part II
  11. Really Oldies But Goodies
  12. The American Revolution - Part II
  13. A Blast from the Past
  14. China
  15. Tribute to Tyrants
  16. The Montezuma Show
  17. Loud Kiddington's Ancient History
  18. Great Heroes of France
  19. The Terrible Tudors
  20. The Wheel of History
  21. When Time Collides
  22. Around the World in a Daze
  23. Histeria Satellite TV
  24. General Sherman's Campsite
  25. Return to Rome
  26. Megalomaniacs1
  27. The Russian Revolution
  28. The Thomas Jefferson Program
  29. Hooray For Presidents
  30. The Legion of Super Writers
  31. Return to China
  32. Writers of the Purple Prose
  33. History Of Flight
  34. Presidential People
  35. Histeria Around the World I
  36. When America Was Young
  37. Super Amazing Constitutions
  38. Better Living Through Science
  39. The Dawn of Time
  40. Music
  41. World War II
  42. The Teddy Roosevelt Show
  43. Communuts!
  44. Histeria Around the World II
  45. Americana
  46. 20th Century Presidents
  47. The French Revolution
  48. North America
  49. Histeria Goes to the Moon
  50. Heroes of Truth & Justice
  51. Euro-Mania
  52. Big Fat Baby Theatre

1 - Two versions of this episode exist: a sketch about Custer's Last Stand (in which the kids mistakenly believe he's running a custard stand) replaced a sketch depicting the Spanish Inquisition as a game show called "Convert or Die" after a complaint from the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, who claimed the sketch "[taught] children to reject Catholicism". It has since been restored on In2TV.

Bugs Bunny shows up to ask Doc Holiday "what's up?"
Bugs Bunny shows up to ask Doc Holiday "what's up?"
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