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The Beatles, also referred to as The Beatles Cartoon, is an animated television series featuring representations of the popular English rock band of the same name. [1] It was originally broadcast from 1965 to 1967 on ABC in the United States, with reruns airing until 1969.
1965–1966 Kimba the White Lion: 52 Japan: 1965–1967 Space Ace: 52 Japan: 1965–1966 Atom Ant: 26 US: 1965–1967 The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel Show: The Beatles: 39 UK, US, AUS: 1965–1967 DoDo, The Kid from Outer Space: 75 UK, US: 1965–1970 JOT the Dot: 30 US: 1965–1974 Syndicated Christian Cartoon Milton the Monster: 26 US: 1965–1967
September 1965 saw the launch of an American Saturday-morning cartoon series, The Beatles, that echoed A Hard Day's Night 's slapstick antics over its two-year original run. [153] The series was the first weekly television series to feature animated versions of real, living people. [154]
However, when Al Brodax brought both his Krazy Kat and Beetle Bailey cartoons to Australia for production, Campbell was recruited to work on the project. After Krazy Kat, Campbell went on to direct many installments of The Beatles television series for King Features. The show debuted on 25 September 1965, and remained number one in the ratings ...
The series, of which 39 episodes were produced, premiered on September 25, 1965, on ABC. He was later involved in the production of the Beatles' animated film, Yellow Submarine, for United Artists, as producer and co-screenwriter. From 1969 to 1980, Brodax worked as a freelance producer, writer, lyricist and director.
Beatles for Sale (1964) Lennon initially wrote “No Reply” for Tommy Quickly, a singer managed by Brian Epstein. Quickly, who’d retire from the music industry in 1965, didn’t release the song.
Also, in two parts of the episode, all 4 Beatles appear in their animated forms from The Beatles cartoon series and the Yellow Submarine film. [3] The Beatles appeared and were mentioned several times in The Simpsons. Specifically, the episode "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" roughly parallels the Beatles' story, providing numerous references. The ...
1965: Chatty Cathy Doll This talking doll may look creepy AF today, but Chatty Cathy was the second-most popular doll after Barbie in the '60s. Cathy had some big tiny shoes to fill.