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  1. Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of "Acme Acres", where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend "Acme Looniversity", a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny , Daffy Duck , Porky Pig , Sylvester the Cat ...

    • September 14, 1990 –, December 6, 1992
  2. Aug 25, 2023 · For a time in the mid-’90s, Animaniacs and its predecessor, Tiny Toon Adventures, both produced by Warner Bros. Animation, were the two most popular weekday cartoons on TV, a one-two punch...

  3. Steven Spielberg Presents Tiny Toon Adventures, usually referred to as Tiny Toon Adventures, is an American animated television series created by Tom Ruegger and produced by Amblin Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation.

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    • Background
    • Characters
    • Production
    • Films and Specials
    • Spin-Offs
    • Response
    • Merchandise
    • History

    Premise

    Tiny Toon Adventures is a cartoon set in the fictional town of Acme Acres, where most of the Tiny Toons and Looney Tunes characters live. The characters attend Acme Looniversity, a school whose faculty primarily consists of the mainstays of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons, such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, Sylvester, Wile E. Coyote, and Elmer Fudd. In the series, the university is founded to teach cartoon characters how to become funny. The school is not featured in every episode,...

    Tiny Toon Adventures consists of a wide variety of characters who attend a school called Acme Looniversity to be the next generation of Looney Tunes characters. Most of the Tiny Toons characters were designed to resemble younger versions of Warner Bros.' most popular Looney Tunesanimal characters by exhibiting similar traits and looks.

    Screenwriters

    The series and the show's characters were developed by series producer, head writer and cartoonist Tom Ruegger, division leader Jean MacCurdy, associate producer and artist Alfred Gimeno and story editor/writer Wayne Kaatz. Among the first writers on the series were Jim Reardon, Tom Minton, and Eddie Fitzgerald. The character and scenery designers included Alfred Gimeno, Ken Boyer, Dan Haskett, Karen Haskett, and many other artists and directors. One episode, "Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian", wa...

    Casting

    Voice director Andrea Romano auditioned over 1,200 voices for the series and chose more than a dozen main voice actors. The role of Buster Bunny was given to Charlie Adler, who gave the role, as producer Tom Ruegger said, "a great deal of energy." The role of Babs Bunny was given to Tress MacNeille. Writer Paul Dini said that MacNeille was good for the role because she could do both Babs' voice and the voices of her impressions. Voice actors Joe Alaskey and Don Messick were given the roles of...

    Animation

    In order to complete 65 episodes for the first syndicated season, Warner Bros. and Amblin Entertainment contracted several different animation houses. These animation studios included Tokyo Movie Shinsha (now known as TMS Entertainment), Wang Film Productions, AKOM, Freelance Animators New Zealand, Encore Cartoons, StarToons, and Kennedy Cartoons. Tokyo Movie Shinsha also animated the series' opening sequence. Warner Bros. staff disliked working with Kennedy Cartoons due to the studio's incon...

    A feature-length movie was released direct-to-video in 1992, entitled Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation. This was later re-edited and aired as part of the series. The length of the movie is 73 minutes. Fox aired It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special in primetime on 6 December 1992. This episode is a parody of It’s a Wonderful Li...

    Main articles: Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, The Plucky Duck Show, and Pinky, Elmyra & The Brain Tiny Toon Adventures was so successful that it managed to pick up five spin-off series. All five spin-offs, in addition to Tiny Toons, were co-produced by Amblin Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation (that means Warner Bros. only owns half the cop...

    Awards and Nominations

    Daytime Emmy Awards: 1. Won award for Outstanding Animated Program (presented to Steven Spielberg, Tom Ruegger, Ken Boyer, Art Leonardi, Art Vitello, Paul Dini, and Sherri Stoner) (1991) 2. Won award for Outstanding Music Direction and Composition (presented to William Ross for “Fields of Honey”) (1991) Won award for Outstanding Original Song (presented to Bruce Broughton, Wayne Kaatz, and Tom Ruegger for "the main title theme") (1991) 3. Nominated for Outstanding Animated Program (Steven Spi...

    Print

    Among the same time that Tiny Toon Adventures premiered, a quarterly children's magazine based on the series was published for at least seven issues. Also, various storybooks were published by Little Golden Books, including a few episode adaptations and some original stories (Lost in the Fun House and Happy Birthday, Babs!). Tiny Toon Adventures also had a comic book series made by Warner Bros. and DC Comics. The characters also made occasional cameo appearances in the Animaniacs and Pinky an...

    Toys and Video Games

    Since its debut, numerous video games based on Tiny Toons have been released. There have been no less than nine titles based on the series released after its original television run and as recently as 2002. Many companies have held the development and publishing rights for the games, including Konami (during the 1990s), Atari, NewKidCo, Conspiracy Games, Warthog, Terraglyph Interactive Studios, and Treasure. Toys for the series included plush dolls and plastic figures.

    Home Video

    On 29 July 2008, Warner Home Video released Season 1, Volume 1 of Tiny Toon Adventures on DVD in Region 1. Much like the concurrent DVD releases of Animaniacs and Pinky and the Brain, the series was released concurrently on DVD with Freakazoid. How I Spent My Vacation was released on DVD on 21 August 2012. The third volume, entitled Tiny Toon Adventures - Volume 3: Crazy Crew Rescue was released on 8 January 2013. It includes all 13 season 2 episodes and the first 4 episodes from season 3. In...

    Preproduction

    According to writer Paul Dini, Tiny Toons originated as an idea by Terry Semel, then the president of Warner Bros., who wanted to "[…] inject new life into the Warner Bros. Animation department," and at the same time create a series with junior versions of Looney Tunes characters. Semel proposed that the new series would be a show based on Looney Tunes where the characters were either young versions of the original Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodiescharacters or new characters as the offsprings...

    Post-Series Syndication

    Tiny Toon Adventures, along with Animaniacs, continued to rerun in syndication through the 1990s into the early-2000s, after production of new episodes ceased. In the US, the series re-ran on Nickelodeon from 1995–1999 and again from 2002–2004 (albeit the Warner Bros. logo omitted from the intro), and also aired on Kids WB from 1997–2000, Cartoon Network from 1999–2001, and finally on Nicktoons Network from 2002–2005. The series aired on broadcast television once again 27 October 2012 on Vort...

  5. Mar 5, 2024 · Opening Theme Lyrics. Buster: We're Tiny! Babs: We're Toony! We're all a little Loony! And in this cartoony, we're invading your TV! We're comic dispensers. Buster: We crack up all the censors. On Tiny Toon Adventures, get a dose of comedy. So here's Acme Acres, It's a whole world of apart.

  6. Warner Bros. Entertainment Wiki. in: Television, Tiny Toon Adventures, Warner Bros. Animation, and 18 more. Tiny Toon Adventures. Genre. Comedy-drama Slapstick/Satire Animated. Format. 2D Animation Drawing. Created by. Tom Ruegger. Directed by. Ken Boyer Rich Arons Art Leonardi. Voices of.

  7. Apr 21, 2024 · The series follows the many antics of a group of younger counterparts to the popular Looney Tunes characters, all students of the Acme Looniversity, set up by the original characters themselves to teach cartoon characters lessons on comedy.

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