This needs a stretch. (Feel free to remove when satisfied of completion.) Needed: * Synopsis * Objects * Miscellaneous |
Where's Scooby-Doo? is the twelfth episode of The New Scooby and Scrappy Doo Show.
Premise[]
The kids are mysteriously sent train tickets to ride the Orient Express. But when they get there Scooby's bag is switched with another one, and when he goes in search of his bag full of Scooby Snacks, he turns up missing as well. Did the mummy kidnap Scooby, or the spy who stole the fuel formula?
Synopsis[]
Part 1[]
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Part 2[]
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Characters[]
Main characters:
Supporting characters:
- None
Villains:
- Mystery Club (only appearance)(redeemed)
- Sidney Gaspar (only appearance)(redeemed)
- Dr. Natasha (only appearance)(redeemed)
- Little Guy (only appearance)(redeemed)
- Beatrice Whimsey (only appearance)(female spy's disguise)
- Mummy (only appearance)(no lines)(Sidney Gaspar's disguise)
- Female spy (only appearance)
Other characters:
- People at train station (only appearance)(no lines)
- Newspaper boy (only appearance)
- Train conductor (only appearance)
- Police officer (only appearance)
Locations[]
- Train station
- Orient Express
- Vienna, Austria
Objects[]
- Suitcases
- Newspaper
- Coin
- Flour
- Rope
- Yarn
- Knitting needles
- Sarcophagus
- Tape
- Books
- Chairs
- Stereoscope
- Tables
Vehicles[]
Suspects[]
Suspect | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Sidney Gaspar | Looked in a sinister manner when the gang left him. |
Dr. Natasha | Also looked in a sinister manner when the gang left her. |
Beatrice Whimsey | Also looked in a sinister manner when the gang left her. |
Little Guy | He warned the gang about the mummy. |
Culprits[]
Culprit | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Mystery Club with Sidney Gaspar as the Mummy | Performing an initiation test. |
A female spy disguised as Beatrice Whimsey | Smuggling a secret formula encoded in a knitted sweater. |
Cast[]
Don Messick | Scooby-Doo Scrappy-Doo |
---|---|
Casey Kasem | Shaggy Rogers |
Heather North Kenney | Daphne Blake |
Hal Smith | Sidney Gaspar Mummy |
Full credits[]
The following credits are how they are seen on-screen (or as close as possible).
- Executive Producers: William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
- Producer: Art Scott
- Story Editor: Tom Ruegger
- Supervising Director: Ray Patterson
- Directors: Oscar Dufau, George Gordon, Carl Urbano, John Walker, Rudy Zamora
- Assistant Directors: Bob Goe, Bill Hutten, Tony Love, Don Lusk, Ann Tucker
- Story Direction: Jan Green, Alex Lovy, Lew Marshall, George Singer
- Recording Director: Gordon Hunt
- Animation Casting Director: Ginny McSwain
- Voices: Adrienne Alexander, Jack Angel, Ed Begley, Jr., Randy Bennett, Arthur Burghardt, Howard Caine, Phil Clarke, Henry Corden, Candace Craig, Brian Cummings, Jerry Dexter, Jeff Doucette, Cheri Eichen, Bernard Erhard, Ernest Harada, Joyce Jameson, Byron Kane, Casey Kasem, Phyllis Katz, Zale Kessler, Heather North, Larry Mann, Bill Martin, Mickie McGowan, Joe Medalis, Don Messick, Michael Mish, John Paragon, Vic Perrin, Henry Polic II, Tony Pope, Neilson Ross, Michael Rye, Marilyn Schreffler, Marla Scott, Michael Sheehan, Hal Smith, Tony Smyles, John Stephenson, Andre Stojka, Jean Vander Pyl, Janet Waldo, Vernee Watson, Peggy Webber, Lennie Weinrib, Jimmy Weldon, Noni White, Alan Young, Marian Zajac
- Title Design: Bill Perez
- Graphics: Iraj Paran, Tom Wogatzke
- Musical Director: Hoyt Curtin
- Musical Supervisor: Paul DeKorte
- Creative Producer: Iwao Takamoto
- Design Supervisor: Bob Singer
- Character Design: Flor Dery, Jim Stenstrum, Lew Ott, Alice Hamm, Jean Gilmore, Mel Keefer, Gabriel Hoyos
- Layout: Charlie Grosvenor
- Key Layout: Terry Lee Keil
- Layout: Tom Coppola, Andrew Gentle, Carol Holman, Terry Hudson, Raymond Jacobs, Karenia Kaminski, M. Mike Kawaguchi, Ken Landau, Greg Martin, Alex McCrae, Jim Mueller, David O'Day, Michael O'Mara, Linda Rowley
- Animation Supervisors: Don Patterson, Jay Sarbry, Roger Chiasson, Sean Newton, Don Spencer
- Animation: Robert Alavarez, Frank Andrina, Tom Barnes, Bob Bemiller, Lefty Callahan, Rudy Cataldi, Daniel De La Vega, Joan Drake, Jim Duffy, David Feiss, Hugh Fraser, Jeff Hall, Bill Hutten, Ken Kessel, Bob Kirk, Rick Leon, Hicks Lokey, Ernesto Lopez, Ed Love, Tony Love, Ken Muse, Ron Myrick, Margaret Nichols, Kevin Petrilak, Virgil Ross, Bob Shellhorn, Ken Southworth, Tim Walker, Alan Wilzbach
- Assistant Animation Supervisor: Joanna Romersa
- Background Supervisor: Al Gmuer
- Backgrounds: Lorraine Andrina, Fernando Arce, Robert Gentle, Martin Forte, Jonathon Goley, Bonnie Goodknight, Phil Lewis, Andrew Phillipson, Bill Proctor, Ron Roesch, Gloria Wood
- Checking And Scene Planning: Paul B. Strickland
- Xerography: Star Wirth
- Ink And Paint Supervisor: Alison Victory
- Sound Direction: Alvy Dorman, Phil Flad
- Technical Supervisor: Jerry Mills
- Camera: Bob Marples, Bob Cohen, Steve Altman, Curtis Hall, Ralph Migliori, Joe Ponticelle, Jerry Whittington, Roy H. Wade
- Supervising Film Editor: Larry C. Cowan
- Dubbing Supervisor: Pat Foley
- Music Editor: Cecil Broughton
- Effects Editors: Jon Johnson, Carol Lewis
- Show Editor: Gil Iverson
- Negative Consultant: William E. DeBoer
- Post Production Supervisor: Joed Eaton
- Production Coordinator: Peter Aires
- Production Manager: James Wang
- Production Assistant: Robin Carmichael
- Executives In Charge Of Production: Jayne Barbera, Jean MacCurdy
- Supervising Executive: Margaret Loesch
- A Hanna-Barbera Production
- "Scooby-Doo" and "Scrappy-Doo" ©1983 Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc.
- Hanna-Barbera Productions
Notes/trivia[]
- This is one of two episodes of this series to be a full half-hour episode (the other one being the following episode, Wedding Bell Boos!).
Cultural references[]
- The idea of many characters conspiring on the Orient Express was employed in Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express.
- The Orient Express was the name of a long-distance passenger train that ran from Paris to Budapest, Athens or Istanbul; service began in 1883 and lasted until 2009 when it was discontinued.
Animation mistakes and/or technical glitches[]
- During the first part, when the train is seen at a distance, you can see Scooby, Shaggy and the female spy on the outside the train which is something that doesn't happen until the third act of the second part.
Inconsistencies/continuity errors and/or goofs/oddities[]
- After Scooby-Doo was covered in flour, he coughed from it. Which resulted in removing the tape that gagged him. However, in the last frame before it cuts to Daphne, Shaggy, and Scrappy, the tape was back on his mouth.
Home media[]
- TBA
Quotes[]
|
External links[]
- TBA
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Scooby ala Mode | The New Scooby and Scrappy Doo Show | Wedding Bell Boos! |