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  1. Sarah Creef is one of the three eighth grade girls who wrote the script for the episode "Buster And Babs Go Hawaiian". She is a thirteen-year-old girl with short red hair, who wears a blue sweater and purple pants, but it is unknown what kind of shoes she wears due to her feet being blocked by...

    • IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE A MOVIE. Cartoons starring younger versions of established family-friendly characters were de rigueur in the mid-to-late 1980s, with shows like Muppet Babies, Tom & Jerry Kids, and The Flintstone Kids.
    • A FULL ORCHESTRA SCORED EACH EPISODE. Composer Bruce Broughton estimated that Spielberg’s commitment to making the music in Tiny Toon Adventures as close as possible to the original Carl Stalling compositions of the classic WB cartoons cost about $60,000 an episode.
    • 1200 ACTORS AUDITIONED WITHIN LESS THAN THREE MONTHS. Because they were working with a rather rushed production schedule, Tiny Toon producers needed to get all 65 episodes of the series made in 18 months, which meant they were auditioning approximately 100 actors per week.
    • MEL BLANC PASSED AWAY BEFORE HE COULD REPRISE HIS ROLES. Known as “The Man of 1000 Voices,” Blanc voiced almost every classic Warner Bros. character. So naturally, the producers planned to have him make a few cameo appearances.
    • The animator's followed the "Mother's House" rule. Unlike the original Warner Bros. cartoons, you never saw characters pointing guns at each other in Tiny Toon Adventures.
    • Steven Spielberg was the show's executive producer. He was involved in making a feature-length animated film that eventually morphed into Tiny Toon Adventures.
    • There were two spin-off shows. Producers tried to turn one of the show's recurring characters, Elmyra, into the star of her own cartoon. The tiny toon episode "Elmyra's Family" was actually a pilot for the new series, but it never took off.
    • Gogo the Dodo wasn't a new character. One of the show's most bizarre characters (and that's saying something) was Gogo the Dodo. While younger fans probably didn't realize it, Gogo was also based on a classic Warner Bros.
  2. Tiny Toon Adventures (TV Series 1990–1995) Gail Matthius as Shirley the Loon, Mitzi Avery, Madame Jete, Monty's Mother, Sarah Creef, Sherri Stoner, Shirley MacVaine, Winning Woman.

    • Brian Vanhooker
    • Ruth Clampett’s Seal of Approval. Clampett, daughter of one of the most celebrated Looney Tunes directors, Bob Clampett, said of Tiny Toon Adventures, “A lot of people I know talk about the early Looney Tunes cartoons and that there will never again be cartoons as great as that — that only the old stuff is good — and I don’t agree with that.
    • Elmyra’s Second Act. Six years after Tiny Toon Adventures, Elmyra returned for Pinky, Elmyra and the Brain. The cartoon was a restructuring of Pinky and the Brain stemming from Kids WB’s desire for more recurring characters than the two titular mice.
    • The Series Was Followed by Two Specials. While the main series ended in 1992 after 98 episodes, the characters returned in two animated specials: Tiny Toon Spring Break in 1994, and Tiny Toons’ Night Ghoulery in 1995.
    • One Episode Was Created by Three Teenage Fans. In 1991, three 13-year-old girls from Waynesboro, Virginia, wrote and drew a fan episode of Tiny Toons and sent it to Spielberg.
  3. Feb 1, 1991 · Creef, a friendly girl in oversize glasses who had been a little anxious about her first airplane ride, shook her head. ”You mean Steven Spielberg isn’t...

  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm1388861Sarah Creef - IMDb

    Sarah Creef is known for Tiny Toon Adventures (1990).

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