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Useful Notes / Noteworthy Tiny Toon Adventures Staff

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Composers:

  • Julie Bernstein: "Spring Break Special" (with Richard Stone, Carl Johnson, and Steve Bernstein)
  • Steve Bernstein: "Spring Break Special" (with Richard Stone, Carl Johnson, and Julie Bernstein) and "Night Ghoulery" (with Richard Stone)
  • Steven Bramson: "Hero Hamton", "Psychic Fun-omenon Day", "How Sweetie it is", "Henny Youngman Day", "The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain". Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation.
  • Bruce Broughton: "Her Wacky Highness", "Journey to the Center of ACME Acres", "It's Buster Bunny Time", "Hare-Raising Night", "You Asked For It", "Son of Looniversity Daze" (with Morton Stevens), "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool" (with Joel McNeely), "Tiny Toons Music Television" (the wraparounds and "Top Secret Apprentice"), "Hog-Wild Hamton", "Toon TV" (the wraparounds, "Toon Out, Toon In", and "The Name Game"). Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation. Also composed the theme music (contrary to popular belief, it was not by Richard Stone).
  • Don Davis: "You Asked For It Part II", "A Ditch in Time", "Whale's Tales" (with William Ross), "No Toon is an Island", "Pledge Week". Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation.
  • John Debney: "Hollywood Plucky" and "Gang Busters".
  • Ron Grant: "The Wheel O'Comedy", "Test Stressed", "Starting From Scratch", "The Weirdest Story Ever Told" (with Mark Watters), "Playtime Toons" (with Albert Lloyd Olson)
  • Les Hooper: "The Buster Bunny Bunch"
  • Carl Johnson: "Spring Break Special" (with Richard Stone, Steve & Julie Bernstein)
  • Elliot Kaplan: "Who Bopped Bugs Bunny" (with Ralph Kessler)
  • Arthur Kempel: "Strange Tales of Weird Science", "The ACME Bowl", "Europe in 30 Minutes", "Toons From the Crypt"
  • Ralph Kessler: "Who Bopped Bugs Bunny" (with Elliot Kaplan)
  • Albert Lloyd Olson: "The ACME Acres Zone", "Wake Up Call of the Wild", "Sawdust and Toonsil", "Fairy Tales For the '90s" (with Mark Watters and Hummie Mann), "Son of the Wacko World of Sports", "Here's Hamton", "Playtime Toons" (with Ron Grant), "Sepulveda Boulevard", "Take Elmyra, Please", "Fox Trot", "Toons Take Over", "Buster's Directorial Debut", "Best of Buster Day". Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation.
  • Hummie Mann: "Fairy Tales For the '90s" (with Mark Watters and Albert Lloyd Olson), "Viewer Mail Day"
  • Dennis McCarthy: "Citizen Max", "Best O'Plucky Duck Day"
  • Joel McNeely: "Looking Out For the Little Guy", "Inside Plucky Duck", "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool" (with Bruce Broughton), and the "Toon Out, Toon In" music video in "Toon TV" (uncredited)
  • Peter Myers: "Life in the '90s"
  • Laurence Rosenthal: "Prom-Ise Her Anything"
  • William Ross: "Rainy Daze", "Fields of Honey" (he won an Emmy for this episode), "Looniversity Daze", "Whale's Tales" (with Don Davis), "Elephant Issues", "Kon Ducki", "New Class Day", "Two-Tone Town", "Washingtoon"
  • Arthur B. Rubinstein: "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow", "A Quack in the Quarks", "Furrball Follies"
  • J. Eric Schmidt: "Sports Shorts"
  • David Slonaker: "Weekday Afternoon Live"
  • Fred Steiner: "Stuff That Goes Bump in the Night", "Rock 'n Roar", "Spring in ACME Acres", "Career Oppor-Toon-Ities", "New Character Day", "Toon Physics", "What Makes Toons Tick"
  • Morton Stevens: "The Looney Beginning", "Buster and the Wolverine", "The Wacko World of Sports", "Son of Looniversity Daze" (with Bruce Broughton)
  • Richard Stone: "Dating, ACME Acres Style", "Animaniacs!", "Ask Mr. Popular", "The ACME Home Shopping Show", "You Asked For It Again", "Brave Tales of Real Rabbits", "Going Places", "Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian", "Thirteensomething", "Flea For Your Life", "The Return of Batduck", "Grandma's Dead", "Music Day", "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toon Christmas Special", "Spring Break Special" (with Carl Johnson, Steve & Julie Bernstein), "Night Ghoulery" (with Steve Bernstein). Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation)
  • Stephen James Taylor: "High Toon". Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation)
  • Mark Watters: "Fairy Tales For the '90s" (with Albert Lloyd Olson and Hummie Mann), "The Return to the ACME Acres Zone", "The Weirdest Story Ever Told" (with Ron Grant), "Pollution Solution", "K-ACME TV", "ACME Cable TV", "Love Disconnection", "A Cat's Eye View". Also a contributor for Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation)

Directors:

  • Alfred Gimeno: Had been with the series from the beginning, and became a director during season 2. Episodes directed: "ACME Cable TV", "Washingtoon", "Grandma's Dead", "Music Day", and "Sports Shorts" (all co-directed with David West).
  • Art Leonardi: Famous for joining the Warner Bros. cartoon unit during the mid '50s, and later worked on The Pink Panther cartoons, as well as other animated series. Episodes directed: "The Buster Bunny Bunch", "Journey to the Center of ACME Acres", "Stuff That Goes Bump in the Night", "It's Buster Bunny Time", "You Asked For It Part 1" segment "Sleight of Hare", "Buster and the Wolverine", "You Asked For It Part 2", "Europe in 30 Minutes", "Rainy Daze", "Psychic Fun-omenon Day", "Career Oppor-Toon-Ities", "Strange Tales of Weird Science" segments "Pit Bullied" and "Duck in the Muck" (uncredited), "Weirdest Story Ever Told", "Viewer Mail Day", "How Sweetie It Is" segment "Let's Do Lunch", "No Toon Is an Island", "K-ACME TV" (with Ken Boyer and Kent Butterworth), "Playtime Toons" segments "Happy Birthday Hamton" and "Fit to Be Toyed", "Toon Physics", "Buster and Babs Go Hawaiian" (uncredited). Left after the second season.
  • Art Vitello: More known for producing the follow-up Taz-Mania, his unit directed a few episodes in season 1: "A Quack in the Quarks", "The Wheel O'Comedy", "Looking Out For the Little Guy", "Hare-Raising Night", "Furrball Follies", "Rock 'N' Roar", "Cinemaniacs!" segments "Superbabs" and "Pasadena Jones", "You Asked For It Part 1" segment "Debutante Devil", "Citizen Max", "Hollywood Plucky", "A Ditch in Time", "Animaniacs!", "Inside Plucky Duck", "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool", "Tiny Toons Music Television".
  • Barry Caldwell: Directed only one short, the "Pledge Week" short "It's All Relatives".
  • Byron Vaughns: Headed one of the newer units on the series, starting during season 2. Episodes directed: "Elephant Issues" segment "Why Dizzy Can't Read", "Playtime Toons" segment "Strung-Along Kitty", "Love Disconnection", "Sepulveda Boulevard", "New Class Day", "What Makes Toons Tick", "Toons Take Over", "A Cat's Eye View", "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Special" (additional direction).
  • Dave Marshall: Mainly known as an overseas supervisor at Wang Film Productions (such as on Garfield and Friends and Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures), he was given co-director credit on "The Looney Beginning", presumably because Wang had to step in on extremely short notice to do additional animation to get the episode ready for air on time.
  • David West: Always a co-director with Alfred Gimeno. Episodes: "ACME Cable TV", "Washingtoon", "Grandma's Dead", "Music Day", "Sports Shorts".
  • Eddie Fitzgerald: Previously known for Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures, his unit mostly directed in the first season before he left for The Ren & Stimpy Show, although one short of his debuted during season 2. Episodes directed: "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow" (with Ken Boyer), "You Asked For It Part 1" segment "Duck Out of Luck", "Spring in ACME Acres" segments "Love Among the Toons" and "Spring Cleaning", "Strange Tales of Weird Science" segment "Scentimental Pig", "The ACME Home Shopping Show" segment "Oh For Arts Sake", "New Character Day" segment "The Return of Pluck Twacy", "Going Places" segment "That's Art Folks!"
  • Gerard Baldwin: Famous for his work on Rocky and Bullwinkle. His unit was short-lived, only directing "Dating, ACME Acres Style" (segment "Buster's Guide to Dating"), "Looniversity Daze", "Hero Hamton", and "Son of Looniversity Daze".
  • Glen Kennedy: The founder of the Kennedy Cartoons animation studio received directorial credit on two episodes: "The Looney Beginning" (with Ken Boyer and Rich Arons) and "High Toon". Unlike most of the other directors on this list, he wasn't an employee of Warner Bros. Animation. TTA declined to use Kennedy Cartoons after the first season, but his studio soon started receiving work for Disney Television Animation.
  • Greg Reyna: Only directed one episode, "The Horror of Slumber Party Mountain". Also a director for Night Ghoulery.
  • Jon McClenahan: The founder of StarToons. Had previously done freelance work for Kennedy Cartoons before his studio got a chance to produce three shorts themselves: "Henny Youngman Day", "Thirteensomething", "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special". They got more work on the follow-up series Animaniacs.
  • Ken Boyer: "The Looney Beginning" (with Rich Arons and Glen Kennedy), "Her Wacky Highness", "Starting From Scratch", "The ACME Acres Zone", "Prom-ise Her Anything", "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow" (with Eddie Fitzgerald), "Cinemaniacs!" segment "Duck Trek", "Gang Busters", "Fields of Honey", "The ACME Bowl", "Dating, ACME Acres Style" segment "Love Stinks", "Fairy Tales for the '90s", "Pollution Solution", "You Asked For it Again", "How Sweetie It Is" segments "Egged on Eagle" and "The Raven", "New Character Day" segment "The Roches", "K-ACME TV" (with Art Leonardi and Kent Butterworth), "Elephant Issues" segments "C.L.I.D.E. and Prejudice" and "One Beer", "Take Elmyra Please", "Fox Trot", "Flea For Your Life" (with Tony Craig), "Toons From the Crypt", and "Two-Town Town".
  • Kent Butterworth: More famous for his work on Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog, his unit first directed: "The Wacko World of Sports", "Spring in ACME Acres" segment "That's Incredibly Stupid!", "The Wide World of Elmyra", "Whale's Tales", "Who Bopped Bugs Bunny?", "The Return of the ACME Acres Zone", "K-ACME TV" (with Art Leonardi and Ken Boyer), and "Pledge Week" segment "The Kite". As with Art Leonardi, his unit was disbanded after season 2.
  • Michael Gerard: An additional director of "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special". Also directed the Spring Break Special and Night Ghoulery.
  • Norm McCabe: Previously known for directing some early '40s Looney Tunes shorts and the first three seasons of The Transformers. He was mainly a timing director for the series, but fully directed one short: "Lifeguard Lunacy" in "Pledge Week".
  • Rich Arons: The main title director for Animaniacs. His unit directed: "The Looney Beginning" (with Ken Boyer and Glen Kennedy), "Test Stress", "Life in the 90's", "Wake Up Call of the Wild", "Sawdust and Toonsil", "Dating, ACME Acres Style" segment "Dream Date Game", "Best o' Plucky Duck Day", "Ask Mr. Popular", "The ACME Home Shopping Show" segments "The Teddy Bear's Picnic" and "I Was a Teenage Bunny-sitter", "Son of the Wacko World of Sports", "Brave Tales of Real Rabbits", "Here's Hamton", "Going Places" segments "When You're Hot..." and "Slaughterhouse Jive", "Hog Wild Hamton", "Kon Ducki", "The Return of Batduck", "Buster's Directorial Debut", "Toon TV", "Weekday Afternoon Live", "Best of Buster Day", "It's a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special" (additional director). Also co-directed Night Ghoulery.
  • Rusty Mills: During his time on Animaniacs, he was one of the directors for Night Ghoulery.
  • Tony Craig: More famous for his extensive work for Disney Television Animation, Tony directed one episode: "Flea For Your Life" (with Ken Boyer).

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