Histeria!
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Histeria! | |
|---|---|
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The cast of Histeria! sings out their theme song. |
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| 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 | |
| No. of episodes | 52 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 30 minutes |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Kids' WB! |
| Original run | September 14, 1998 – October 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.
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.
- Joseph Stalin was depicted as a despot with the saying "Kill all my enemies with secret police and famine" and "I am Stalin. I have a way of making people disappear." In the Superfriends sketch, he looked like Blanka from Street Fighter.
- Joan of Arc acted a little like a Valley Girl and looked like Shirley MacLaine. As she was burned at the stake in real life, she constantly puts out all flames near her.
- Napoleon Bonaparte talked like Hervé Villechaize who played Tattoo from Fantasy Island. In one point, he gets injured and groans: "The pain boss! The pain!", a parody of Tattoo's famous line. Like Napoleon's depiction, Villechaize too is French and short in stature.
- Plato was depicted as a Greek version of Fred Rogers, while his mentor Socrates is a dry stand-up, similar to Bing Crosby.
- Julius Caesar was made to look and sound like Frank Sinatra and performs a musical number called "That's Why They Stabbed Me in the Back."(Members of the Roman Senate resembled other members of the Rat Pack)
- Cassius is portrayed as Sammy Davis Jr.
- Brutus is depicted as Peter Falk.
- Marc Antony is portrayed as Dean Martin.
- Confucius was depicted in the style of John McLaughlin of the McLaughlin Group.
- Attila the Hun was similar in stature, voice, and temperament to the Tasmanian Devil.
- General Sherman was a parody of Pee-Wee Herman and even has his own segment called "Sherman's Campsite", complete with Pee-Wee's Playhouse-esque characters.
- George Washington acted like Bob Hope, and sometimes even seen with a golf club in hand.
- Abraham Lincoln acted like Johnny Carson. One sketch also re-did some of the politics of the Civil War like an episode of Seinfeld, with Lincoln as Jerry, Mary Todd as Elaine Benes, George B. McClellan as George Costanza and Jefferson Davis as Newman.
- Captain Meriwether Lewis of the Lewis and Clark Expedition acted like Jerry Lewis (voiced by Paul Rugg, who also used his Jerry Lewis impression on several episodes of "Animaniacs"). While William Clark spoke and acted like Dean Martin, he was drawn to look like the DC Animated Universe version of Clark Kent.
- Moctezuma II was shown as an easygoing, hospitable man who always offers a drink of water to other characters, who wisely decline.
- Alexander the Great was shown as a young adult constantly seeking approval of father, who would always tell him his conquests made him good, but never great. The show also parodies that numerous cities in the Middle East are named Alexandria by having one character ask another the direction to Alexandria several times, getting different directions each time until they find out they're already in the Alexandria they're looking for. His voice seemed to be a parody of Jimmy Stewart.
- Aristotle was depicted as Alex Trebek.
- Christopher Columbus showed resemblance to Joe Pesci.
- Genghis Khan showed resemblance to John Wayne. A reference to Wayne's portrayal of Khan in The Conqueror.
- Kublai Khan resembled Sylvester Stallone.
- Thomas Jefferson acted like Jack Benny, who had an assistant who sounded like Rochester.
- The Wright Brothers acted like Abbot and Costello.
- Leif Ericson spoke like Arnold Schwarzenegger.
- Eric the Red spoke and looks like Kirk Douglas.
- Father Time portrayed King Solomon talking like Bill Cosby.
- Admiral David Farragut resembling John Wayne.
- Charles Lindbergh resembled James Stewart, who also portrayed Lindbergh in The Spirit of St. Louis.
- William Dawes resembled William Shatner.
- Edgar Allan Poe spoke like Peter Lorre.
- Nikola Tesla resembled Christopher Walken.
- Sappho made a brief appearance in one episode as a member of a league of villains based on literary figures. When mentioned, World's Oldest Woman interrupted to say, "She wasn't really into boys."
- Lizzie Borden was depicted as a raving lunatic with purse full of weapons and a tendency to scream "WHACK 'EM!" while brandishing her axe in a sketch about female figures of history in a support group. In that sketch, she described herself as "The O.J. of the 1840s", referring to how she was accused of murder and was acquitted.
- Cleopatra was overweight and talks about food a lot.
- Emily Dickinson was part of a team of superhero writers and is friends with Death. She resembled and spoke like Katharine Hepburn.
- Vincent van Gogh had an accent mimicking Vincent Price.
- Karl Marx notably imitated Groucho Marx and Friedrich Engels filling the role of Chico Marx.
- Billy the Kid was the host of a kids' show where he was in jail and encouraged kids to get a rifle from the shed so he can escape. Lydia Karaoke interrupts the sketch to point out how dangerous this action is and dresses Billy the Kid as a girl to bring in more female viewers.
- Stonewall Jackson was made to imitate Karl Childers (Billy Bob Thornton's character) from the film Slingblade. He may also be an indirect parody of Bob Dylan and/or Tom Petty, due to his indecipherable voice. The joke was he talked "like a stonewall".
- Samuel Prescott was an imitation of Cliff Clavin from Cheers.
- Romulus spoke like Sean Connery.
- Gutzon Borglum was played by a moustached Elmer Fudd.
- Ernest Hemingway was a big, muscular action hero character in the Super Writers, voiced by Adam West.
- Moliere was a stereotypical French man who farted a lot, and behaved similarly to John Cleese portraying the taunting French man in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
- Benedict Arnold behaved in an insecure manner similar to Woody Allen.
- Adolf Hitler was depicted as Satan and sounded like Dr. Claw with a German accent.
- Noah was depicted as a constant worrier sounding like Richard Lewis.
- King Solomon was portrayed by Father Time, but sounded and sometimes acted in a manner similar to that of Bill Cosby.
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 |
- Inventors Hall of Fame - Part II
- Inventors Hall of Fame - Part I
- The U.S. Civil War - Part I
- The Attack of the Vikings
- The Wild West
- The American Revolution - Part I
- More Explorers
- The Know-It-Alls
- The Renaissance
- The U.S. Civil War - Part II
- Really Oldies But Goodies
- The American Revolution - Part II
- A Blast from the Past
- China
- Tribute to Tyrants
- The Montezuma Show
- Loud Kiddington's Ancient History
- Great Heroes of France
- The Terrible Tudors
- The Wheel of History
- When Time Collides
- Around the World in a Daze
- Histeria Satellite TV
- General Sherman's Campsite
- Return to Rome
- Megalomaniacs1
- The Russian Revolution
- The Thomas Jefferson Program
- Hooray For Presidents
- The Legion of Super Writers
- Return to China
- Writers of the Purple Prose
- History Of Flight
- Presidential People
- Histeria Around the World I
- When America Was Young
- Super Amazing Constitutions
- Better Living Through Science
- The Dawn of Time
- Music
- World War II
- The Teddy Roosevelt Show
- Communuts!
- Histeria Around the World II
- Americana
- 20th Century Presidents
- The French Revolution
- North America
- Histeria Goes to the Moon
- Heroes of Truth & Justice
- Euro-Mania
- 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.
- The Looney Tunes characters made occasional cameos:
- Bugs Bunny is brought onto a talk show hosted by Miss Information to deliver his famous line to Doc Holiday. He also makes a cameo in a "hat shop" sketch featuring Abe Lincoln, and he also makes an even briefer cameo in "The Invasion Song", alongside the hillbilles from the Looney Tunes short "Hillbilly Hare".
- During a D-Day interview with Dwight D. Eisenhower (Whom had been moved to Omaha Beach for the interview), Daffy Duck takes offense to Loud Kiddington's repeated calls to take cover (i.e.: "DUCK!").
- Elmer Fudd portrays Gutzon Borglum (the man who sculpted Mount Rushmore).
- Porky Pig and Foghorn Leghorn make a cameo appearance in "The Dawn of Time", and in the same sketch, the Tasmanian Devil dons a cow suit to play the role of the Aurochs. Also in that episode, the leprechauns who antagonized Porky in the Chuck Jones short "Wearing of the Grin" made a cameo appearance (although one was miscolored).
- The Battle of Yorktown is covered like the Super Bowl, including commentary by John Madden.
- Washington's crossing of the Delaware is told as a poem to the tune of The Night Before Christmas
- A song about William Howard Taft is sung to the tune of the Theme from Shaft.
- A musical number about Theodore Roosevelt and his anti-trust campaign was sung to the theme of Ghostbusters. Roosevelt was depicted as a 'Trust-Buster' (complete with tan flight suit and proton pack) busting various analogies for trusts, including giant piggy banks.
- In "The Wild West", Father Time is shown watching Animaniacs on TV. Also, in "Really Oldies But Goodies", the kids sing to the Animaniacs theme tune when introducing Alexander the Great, and the Pinky and the Brain theme music can be heard during an offscreen mummification, specifically at the point mentioning the removal of the brain.
- The show's theme music is the march, Manhattan Beach, by John Philip Sousa.
- Occasionally, the show's theme song is replaced by a parody of the theme song to another television show. Among those are the intros to Saturday Night Live, The Addams Family, and The Simpsons.
- Loud Kiddington once spoofed Green Eggs and Ham with George H. W. Bush. In this sketch, Loud chases Bush with a plate a broccoli while trying to convince him to eat it (Bush: "I do not like that broccoli, now go away and let me be!").
- In "The Renaissance" episode, Leonardo da Vinci spoofs the 1960s Batman series under the alias "Renaissance Man".
- At the end of a sketch debating their existence, King Arthur, Sir Lancelot, and Sir Galahad opt to retreat, shouting out "Run away!" like in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Also, in the Salem Witch Trials sketch in "When America Was Young", the characters paraphrase a portion of the scene from Holy Grail where a woman is accused of being a witch.
- A sketch based on the Boston Tea Party borrows wholesale from the Cheese Shop sketch from an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus. In this sketch, a British soldier approaches an American running a "tea stand" in front of Boston Harbor, and every time the soldier asks if they have a particular kind of tea, an off-screen splash sound-effect is heard and the American running the "stand" says that they're "out" of it, meaning it has just been dumped into the Harbor.
- In "Return to China", at the end of the Great Wall sketch, when the man freaks out when he sees the kids, he quotes some sayings from Mr. Director from Animaniacs.
- Histeria! at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Histeria! at the Internet Movie Database