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Aaron's New Tom & Jerry Information Site

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The NEW Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show! The Tom & Jerry Show!

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Tom & Jerry celebrate their 35th anniversary with a return to Saturday Morning TV in 1975!

This little-seen and remembered, Hanna-Barbera produced, ABC Saturday Morning 1975-77 revival of the 1940-58/1961-67 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon short series featuring the Academy Award-winning cat and mouse duo has been my all-time favorite version for many years. In fact, it's my all-time favorite Hanna-Barbera cartoon. Period. And this is the world's first and only known web site devoted solely to the preservation and perpetuation of the 1975 version of Tom and Jerry! Here, in a much toned down, non-violent, Yogi Bear/Boo Boo-esque format (in order to satisfy ABC-TV Broadcast Standards and Practices), the long-popular Tom and Jerry, after years of rivalry, have become the best of friends (and Jerry dons a red bowtie, so the animators would be able to "fragment" his movements), in episodes wherein they roamed the world competing in sports, enduring on-the-job misadventures, running afoul of dastardly villains, solving mysteries and helping others. Having purchased rights from MGM to produce new Tom & Jerry cartoons for TV, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, T&J;'s brainchildren, screened some of their best MGM theatrical-era T&Js; for ABC execs. They laughed heartily at the antics of T&J; then sighed because it was a shame that network Broadcast Standards and Practices rule out such violence on Saturday Mornings, and thus begat The New Tom & Jerry Show. But, out of respect for the characters who helped them pave the way for their newfound careers, H&B; refused to cure Tom and Jerry of their all-too familiar trait: their uncanny inability to speak. Except for an occasional gulp, chuckle, gasp, pant, shriek and mumble provided by veteran Hanna-Barbera voice actor John Stephenson, Thomas "Tom" Cat and Gerald "Jerry" Mouse were entitled to their right to remain silent. (After all, they did win 7 Oscars, didn't they? It's the least they could do!) And Spike (seen @ right), a recurring regular in the T&J; theatrical releases, was also brought back by HB to be a recurring regular on New Tom & Jerry. Trivia footnote: New Tom & Jerry's animation director, Ed Barge, and key animator Ken Muse had a history with Hanna-Barbera and Tom and Jerry: they animated the bulk of the classic Hanna-Barbera MGM T&J; shorts in the 1940s and '50s; the late Xerographer Robert "Tiger" West worked for MGM as an assistant on the T&J; cartoons between 1950 and 1953.

Saturday, September 6, 1975—a day of INFAMY for diehard Tom and Jerry fans!

Click here to view the full 1975-76 ABC Funshine Saturday ad!Debuting at 8:30 (EST), Saturday Morning, September 6, 1975 on ABC-TV was the 60-minute New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show (sandwiched between Hong Kong Phooey repeats and The Lost Saucer, a new sci-fi sitcom from Sid & Marty Krofft, and airing opposite The Bugs Bunny/Roadrunner Hour on CBS and Sigmund And The Sea Monsters [another Krofft vehicle] and The Secret Lives Of Waldo Kitty on NBC), wherein each hour-long telecast was split into five segments in a specific format: alternating with three 7-minute New Tom & Jerry segments were two 10-minute ones concerning a 40-foot purple ape, Grape Ape (voiced by the late Bob Holt) and his fast-talking beagle buddy, a carnival hustler answering to the unlikely moniker of Beegle Beagle (voiced by Marty Ingels), or "Beegley Beagley," as G.A. would lovingly refer to him. This marked Tom & Jerry's return to Saturday Morning TV, after a 7-year run of their classic animated shorts on CBS Saturday (and Sunday) Morning (September 25, 1965 - September 17, 1972), as well as the first new T&J cartoons produced by Hanna-Barbera since 1958 (their producing credit for the mid-1960s MGM Tom & Jerry compilation cartoons Matinee Mouse [1966] and Shutter-Bugged Cat [1967], both of which were directed by NT&J animator Tom Ray and featured classic MGM/Hanna-Barbera T&J footage, was merely a homage to T&J's creators, as their wraparound segments were made in Chuck Jones' Sib Tower-12 studios). The only new series put out by Hanna-Barbera Productions for the fall of 1975 (T&J;'s 35th anniversary year), The New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show kicked off a trend of new Saturday Morning animated shows spawned from Golden Age-era cartoons (What's New, Mr. Magoo?, The All-New Popeye Hour, The New Adventures Of Mighty Mouse With Heckle And Jeckle, etc.). One reliable source on The Web states that the 1975 series marked the official television debut of Tom and Jerry (discounting the preceding CBS run), and it's just as well, what with all-new installments of the cat-and-mouse duo. A total of 48 7-minute New Tom & Jerry cartoons were made exclusively for TV and, along with 32 10-minute Grape Ape cartoons, packaged into 16 hour-long installments of The New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show, which were networkcast firstrun on ABC Saturday Morning over a 15-week period.*

Some New Tom & Jerry cartoons were retreads of the original classic MGM T&J; theatricals; e.g., the basis for the first New T&J; produced, "Stay Awake Or Else...," was Sleepy-Time Tom (1951). "Mammoth Manhunt" was a combination rehash of both the 1953 MGM T&J cartoon Jerry And Jumbo and 1950's Jerry And The Lion. "The Egg And Tom And Jerry" was most likely remade from the 1949 Academy Award nominee Hatch Up Your Troubles (later made as a 1956 CinemaScope remake entitled The Egg And Jerry). And "The Kitten Sitters," to a great extent, was inspired by Puppy Tale (1954). Why, one New T&J;, "The Flying Sorceress," shared the exact same title as the 1956 MGM T&J cartoon...yet took on a whole different story altogether. Others reused animation or models of the classic T&J; shorts; for instance, the animation in "The Super Bowler" depicting Tom handling and delivering his bowling ball is heavily based on that in the 1942 classic MGM Tom & Jerry short, The Bowling Alley-Cat. In the scene in the show's opening title sequence, where Tom chases Jerry around the corner to the sleeping Spike, the animation is somewhat borrowed from a scene in the 1945 Oscar winner Quiet Please!. And the female skier seen in "The Ski Bunny" is a dead ringer for Tom's kitten girlfriend seen in 1956's Muscle Beach Tom. Plus, the color scheme for Tom's fur, which was originally dark blue, grey and white in the MGM theatricals, was now grey and white, patterned loosely after Tom's fur color in the Chuck Jones/Sib-Tower 12 T&Js; from the 1960s. (Jerry's fur remained the same, however.) However, despite the buddy-buddy chemistry between Tom & Jerry, there were several made-for-TV T&J; shorts which stayed extremely true to the age-old cat-and-mouse rivalry that was the epitome of the original shorts; for instance, there were the sports-themed New Tom & Jerries, wherein Tom, a dirty-tricks competitor, cheated his way through various types of sports competition with Jerry ("The Wacky World Of Sports," "The Super Bowler," "The Tennis Menace," and "The Super Cyclists"). There were also a couple regular NT&J installments wherein T&J; were pitted against each other ("No Way Stowaways," "The Ski Bunny," "An Ill Wind" and "The Sorcerer's Apprentices").

Click here to view the full 1976-77 ABC Funshine Saturday ad!ABC renewed the show for a second season, whereupon 16 6-minute segments of The Mumbly Cartoon Show, a new Hanna-Barbera comedy-mystery revolving around the exploits of a snickering plainclothesman detective hound, Mumbly (voiced by the late Don Messick, patterned loosely after Muttley of Wacky Races [CBS, 1968-70] and Dastardly And Muttley In Their Flying Machines [CBS, 1969-71] fame, and a lampoon of Peter Falk's Lt. Columbo) and his schlocky stooge, Shnooker (voiced by John Stephenson, and a takeoff on Telly Savalas' Lt. Theo Kojak), were added to run with 2 reruns each of Tom and Jerry and Grape Ape. The revamped Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape/Mumbly Show soldiered on for 2 months until The Great Grape Ape parted ways with the cast (in order to enable ABC to make room for expanding the 60-minute Scooby-Doo/Dynomutt Hour to an extra 30 minutes [The Scooby-Doo/Dynomutt Show]) and left behind Tom & Jerry and Mumbly (whose main title theme was almost identical to T&J;, which was natural, since they ran together) in the half-hour Tom & Jerry/Mumbly Show. This tame, mild resurrection of Hanna-Barbera's beloved cat-and-mouse creations folded on September 3, 1977, in favor of the first half-hour of a new Hanna-Barbera creation, The All-New Super Friends Hour. Mumbly and Grape Ape, however, survived the fallout and were spun off in two new shows on ABC that same fall: the Laff-A-Lympics segment of the 120-minute Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics (Grape Ape was on The Yogi Yahooeys team, while the once law-abiding Mumbly, surprisingly, was on the other side of the fence as an aide of The Dread Baron, team captain of the villainous Really Rottens!) and the half-hour Great Grape Ape Show, which was repeated on ABC Sunday Mornings. While the torch would later pass to Filmation Associates to produce made-for-TV Tom & Jerry cartoons for The Tom & Jerry Comedy Show (CBS, 1980-82), T&J;'s originators, Hanna-Barbera, would wait 15 years to produce further animated installments of their cat-and-mouse duo; they eventually came out of left field in September 1990 with youthful incarnations of T&J;, for a 3-season run of The Tom & Jerry Kids Show on Fox (little Jerry retained his red bow tie, a staple of the 1975 series).

After the initial 2-season run on network TV, the 48 New Tom & Jerry cartoons from 1975 (now retitled The Tom & Jerry Show, which featured each 7-minute New Tom & Jerry cartoon framed in-between main and end title credits) were meshed with the backlog of theatrical-era MGM Tom & Jerry cartoons from 1940 to 1967 for syndication, where they played on and off local TV stations for many years (which is how I first came into them; more on that later). In 1986, the 1975 New Tom & Jerry cartoons debuted in cable television on Superstation TBS (then known as Superstation WTBS) on Tom & Jerry And Friends, which showcased both theatrical and made for TV T&J; shorts (including Filmation's 1980 Tom & Jerry TV 'toons), and continued to do so through 1989. In 1991 Turner Broadcasting grabbed up all theatrical and made-for-TV Tom and Jerry shorts as part of the Hanna-Barbera library for its new Cartoon Network, launched on October 1 the following year; they even went so far to be good enough as to record an instrumental remake of the 1975 Tom & Jerry theme to play during the commercial wraparounds of daily showings of the theatrical T&Js; (in May 2005, they were kind enough to re-add the 1975 Hanna-Barbera Tom & Jerry cartoons to their televised rotation of classic T&Js). Between 1997 and 2004, the Canadian all-cartoon channel Teletoon aired the 1975 Hanna-Barbera Tom & Jerry cartoons on its schedule (sometimes as part of its RetroNights package). For this purpose, a whole new package was fashioned, which boasted all 48 7-minute New Tom & Jerry cartoons from 1975 digitally remastered and fully restored from the original film interpositive masters and, for the first time anywhere, packaged in 16 1/2-hour episodes, arranged in original ABC-TV running order, unfortunately, with one drawback: the "floating" Turner logo unnecessarily plastered over the 1974 "rainbow" HB logo and MGM roaring lion title following the show's end credits, instead of just placing it after them! They briefly saw resurgence on Teletoon's after a 3-year absence, on its Saturday night Teletoon Retro block in September 2007, not long before they switched to Teletoon sister channel Teletoon Retro on October 1, 2007 where at this writing New Tom & Jerry is seen 3 times daily! Unlike the Teletoon airings, the 1975 T&J; shorts presented on the Turner cartoon channels are the same battered prints shown for many years on local stations, time-compressed and converted to digital videotape; and unlike the Turner cartoon channels, the cartoons have been shown with the main and end title credits intact on TBS and on the Teletoon channels. On Monday, April 2, 2001 @ 10 AM (CST), Cartoon Network's sister channel Boomerang showed them for the first time as part of a week-long T&J; marathon celebrating Boomerang's first year on the air (they repeated this every April until 2006); this would give rise to their "reconstructing" The New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show (amazingly, without locating and restoring the original bridging sequences!) by frequently showing the 1975 New Tom & Jerry cartoons in tandem with Grape Ape on its Saturday schedule (from August 2001 to January 2004). Also, individual 1975 Hanna-Barbera Tom & Jerry TV shorts were televised on the side (they briefly returned to the channel in April 2006). This was repeated on Cartoon Network's concurrent weekly sampling of Boomerang on Saturday mornings (sometimes a classic T&J short would be accidentally mixed in!). And along the lines of an official DVD release, Warner Bros. (which currently owns the rights to all Tom & Jerry cartoons - including the Chuck Jones, Gene Deitch and made-for-TV cartoons) states it plans to release the later post-MGM cartoons only until after the theatrical Hanna-Barbera cartoons are all released. (So keep your fingers crossed! We may just get our break yet!) The 1975 Tom & Jerry has seen many appearances in numerous artworks done by the late legendary H-B animator and Creative Producer Iwao Takamoto; Tom and Jerry's appearances in the 1989 2-hour TNT special Hanna-Barbera's 50th: A Yabba-Dabba-Doo Celebration was also patterned after their 1975 likenesses. 10 episodes of the show have even surfaced as "radio plays" in Germany on LP and cassette.

Fans of the Golden-Age era of Tom & Jerry harshly criticized New Tom & Jerry in droves mainly due to the tried-and-true battling buddies T&J; being nonviolent friends most of the time, and thoroughly dismissed it as a pale imitation of the originals. It's a rash of negative publicity which continues to thrive to this very day; on The Internet, hardly a conversation in any animation-themed newsgroup, blog or message board goes by without somebody taking cheap shots at the 1975 version of Tom & Jerry. (It can also be said that even those who don't watch this version still take to it with disdain!) In fact, the 1975 Tom & Jerry show may rank second with Scrappy-Doo as the least-favorite effort to spring from Hanna-Barbera's loins among animation fans! Now me, I myself never saw Hanna-Barbera's sadly underrated new version of T&J; on network TV as a kid, as I was only 3 going on 4 @ the time it premiered and too young to be aware of the fact it existed; that was before I first saw the 1975 New Tom & Jerry TV cartoons alongside the classic MGM Tom & Jerry shorts in a weekday afternoon slot (Monday-Friday @ 3:30) on the New Orleans ABC (now FOX) affiliate, WVUE-TV, in early 1979 (they later aired locally in The Big Easy on independent-turned-affiliate station WNOL-TV, sans the main and end title credits) and, mainly being a connoisseur of Hanna-Barbera's mid-to-late 1970s work, took a liking to them that has never abated. I later read more about it in Stuart Fischer's book Kids' TV: The First 25 Years that they originally aired on ABC in 1975 on The (New) Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show. I remember thinking, "Ah! So that's where they came from!" This is also how I learned of The New T&J;'s originally pairing with The Great Grape Ape, which I only discovered via repeats on ABC Sunday Mornings! Childhood memories of afterschool viewings New Tom & Jerry (in addition to inspiration by Randy A. Simcox's T&J; info site) led to my building this webpage: to show all and sundry that there was someone out there who took interest in them and, to a degree at least, put an end to all the bad press they've been getting. Don't get me wrong, I don't have anything against the classic MGM T&Js (there are a few T&J; theatrical 'toons which I do like), but, for my cash the 1975 version is and shall forever remain the best version, despite what others think of it! (CN and  Boomerang, however, should give some thought to adding a separate slot on their schedules for the '75 series; maybe reintroduce the main/end title credits as well. After all, Boomerang had a separate slot for Tom & Jerry Kids.) There are 5 reasons which contribute to my being a big fan of the 1975 New Tom & Jerry Show:

And, undoubtedly the best reason of them all:

That said, The New Tom & Jerry Show deserved far better than it recieved. In the days of political correctness, this was the only way Hanna-Barbera could return Tom & Jerry to TV, and that's exactly what they did! But then, P.C.-ness has nothing to do with my fascination for this series. I believe it was Dan McCormick, devotee of The Adventures Of Hoppity Hooper, who said it best when he declared, "there are other enchanting worlds...which have not been given the recognition they deserve." Such a world is The New Tom & Jerry Show: just because a Tom & Jerry cartoon, be it old or new, is nonviolent does not mean it cannot be watched and enjoyed. And a final word to those of you diehard devotees of Hanna-Barbera's classic MGM Tom & Jerry theatricals from 1940-58 who decree any version out of the realm of this scope as inferior, and plan to raise a big stink should CN or Boomerang ever decide to put  the 1975 H-B New T&J made-for-TV shorts back on the air (even temporarily), just remember 2 important things: 1) Your TV set has an "Off" button and a remote control! 2) You don't have to watch the 1975 H-B New T&J cartoons if any hint of their probable return to cable and satellite (and/or release on DVD!) makes you squirm! Below I have included a complete telecast history of The New Tom & Jerry Show's existence on ABC-TV, all of the lyrics to the The New Tom & Jerry Show's main title theme, and a table of contents leading to other areas of this site, including a complete list of all 48 7-minute New Tom & Jerry cartoons from 1975, with links to individual episode pages depicting detailed synopses and trivia of each show, a listing of production credits, links to information on Tom & Jerry's mid-'70s component series co-stars Mumbly and Grape Ape (since this site concerns them as well as T&J;) and links to a dozen neat Tom & Jerry and other toon-related sites on the WWW. Enjoy!

*Although there were 16 New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Shows in all, the reason that it aired first run for 15 weeks can be attributed to the fact that, in late November 1975, 2 firstrun New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Shows were telecast on ABC on 2 different days in the same week. One was shown @ a special day and time: Noon (EST), Thursday afternoon, November 27, 1975, a Thanksgiving, as part of ABC's Thanksgiving Funshine Festival; the other was shown at its regularly scheduled time 48 hours later.



THE NEW SHOW BROADCAST HISTORY

THE NEW TOM & JERRY/GRAPE APE SHOW
September 6, 1975—September 4, 1976, ABC Saturday 8:30 - 9:30 A.M. (EDT)
THE TOM & JERRY/GRAPE APE/MUMBLY SHOW
September 11—November 27, 1976, ABC Saturday 8:00 - 9:00 A.M. (EDT)
THE TOM & JERRY/MUMBLY SHOW
December 4, 1976—September 3, 1977, ABC Saturday 8:00 - 8:30 A.M. (EDT)


THE (NEW) SHOW'S MAIN TITLE THEME
Words and Music by William Hanna, Joseph Barbera and Hoyt Curtin;
published by Anihanbar Music, Inc. (BMI)

Set your dial for a while!
Have a laugh, wear a smile!
It's The Tom & Jerry Show!
You'll begin with a grin
When you first tune us in
On The Tom & Jerry Show!

Introducing that world-famous cat...TOM!
And that magnificent mouse...JERRY!

(instrumental solo)

Lots of zing, lots to sing!
Everything's gonna swing!
So, get ready - here we go!
Big or small, short or tall,
You will all have a ball
On The Tom & Jerry Show!

 

Mark Yurkiw provides us with info on the lyrics to the original 1975 theme from The New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show.

The original New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show theme was the same melody that was heard at the top of the cartoons when they were later shown alongside the classic T&J; cartoons in syndication, but the line "It's The Tom & Jerry Show" originally was "The Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show!". When Mumbly was added, they dubbed in a spoken voice after this line, saying "And Mumbly, too!" I don't remember if there were any different lyrics, but there may well have been. Also, there was a spoken part before the instrumental break, and I don't remember the exact wording, but it was something like "Introducing that famous cat and mouse, Tom and Jerry, and (something something something) The Great Grape Ape!" Don't quote me on that, it's not verbatim. This, of course, was changed on the reruns.

 

And here's Darryl Heine's $0.02 on the lyrics.

Here are details about the New Tom &  Jerry/Grape Ape lyrics: "The Tom & Jerry Show" is substituted as "New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show". In the instrumental background: As Grape Ape walks around - "There it is, it's The Grape Ape" "I am, I am, Grape Ape, Grape Ape" "Love that Tom & Jerry". After the "here we go" is sung, Beegle Beagle says "HERE WE GO!"

Now, let's compare the two, shall we?

The Tom & Jerry Show.............The Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show
Syndicated/Cable (1977—Current).................. Original (ABC, 1975—76)
Set your dial for a while!
Have a laugh, wear a smile!
It's The Tom & Jerry Show!
You'll begin with a grin
When you first tune us in
On The Tom & Jerry Show!

Introducing that world-famous cat...TOM!
And that magnificent mouse...JERRY!

(instrumental solo)

Lots of zing, lots to sing!
Everything's gonna swing!
So, get ready - here we go!
Big or small, short or tall,
You will all have a ball
On The Tom & Jerry Show!

Set your dial for a while!
Have a laugh, wear a smile!
The Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show!
You'll begin with a grin
When you first tune us in

The Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show!

Introducing that famous cat and mouse...TOM & JERRY!
And featuring... THE GREAT GRAPE APE!
("I am, I am, Grape Ape, Grape Ape!" "Love that Tom and Jerry!")

(instrumental solo)

Lots of zing, lots to sing!
Everything's gonna swing!
So, get ready - here we go! (Beegle Beagle: "HERE WE GO!")
Big or small, short or tall,
You will all have a ball
On The Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show!


UPCOMING TV SCHEDULES
 

The Great Grape Ape

Cartoons from The Great Grape Ape Show can be seen on The Boomerang Zoo
Mondays-Fridays @ 10:00 AM (CST).

Airdate Timeslot (CDT) Episode
Monday 5/26 10:00 AM "The Purple Avenger" (79-12)
Tuesday 5/27 10:00 AM "The First Grape In Space" (79-25)
Wednesday 5/28 10:00 AM "To Sleep Or Not To Sleep" (79-27)
Thursday 5/29 10:00 AM "The Indian Grape Call" (79-24)
Friday 5/30 10:00 AM "Movie Madness" (79-3)

And Great Grape Ape Episode #79-3, "Movie Madness," can be viewed online for free anytime, anyplace and anywhere, in 2 parts at The Saturday Morning Forever Theater, main and end title credits and all!

New Tom & Jerry

SET YOUR DIALS FOR AWHILE, CANADIAN 1975 T&J; FANS!
Begin with a grin when you tune in
The (New) Tom & Jerry Show 3 times daily on Teletoon Retro,
@ 8:30 am, 4:30 pm and 2:00 am!

The 1975 T&J; cartoons are currently not shown here in The States on Boomerang or Cartoon Network,
as both are apparently heavily into rerunning the theatrical releases.

The Mumbly Cartoon Show

From what I've seen perusing Yahoo!'s Image Search, Mumbly is being shown on a foreign version of Boomerang. It has yet to be shown on American TV again, however! The last  such occurrence was in Summer 1994 on The Family Channel's Toon Toast.


 


NEW TABLE OF CONTENTS

THE NEW TOM & JERRY SHOW EPISODE INDEX

A chart that lists all 48 7-minute New Tom & Jerry TV cartoons from 1975 grouped among threes in 16 half hour shows, along with original ABC-TV airdate and episode and production numbers. Each episode number is linked to an individual episode page which details and documents each and every one of the 16 half-hour segments of The New Tom & Jerry Show.

NEW TOM & JERRY TECHNICAL ERRORS

Numerous errors, flubs, goof-ups and mistakes as seen in the 1975 New Tom & Jerry cartoons, analyzed by J.

THE NEW TOM & JERRY SHOW PRODUCTION CREDITS

A full listing of the personnel from Hanna-Barbera Productions responsible for bringing us the 1975 NT&J; TV 'toons!

TOM & JERRY'S MID-70S CO STARS!

Extensive info on the characters who costarred with T&J; in 1975 and 1976: The Great Grape Ape and Mumbly!

TOM & JERRY TOON LINKS

Links to other Tom & Jerry and toon-related sites on The World Wide Web!

THE NEW TOM & JERRY/HANNA-BARBERA MESSAGE BOARD!

Feel free to post anything on the 1970s edition of T&J;, Mumbly, Grape Ape, or other Hanna-Barbera 'toons!

NEW TOM & JERRY DISCOVERY! Details of a New Tom & Jerry merchandising item from Germany!
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

A list bearing thanks to those for their contributing to the existence, love and support, and maintenance of this site.

5/17/08 - added The Deep Archives to the list, for the New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show intertitle.

CARTOON NETWORK 1990s COMMERCIAL WRAPAROUNDS

WAVs of commercial wraparound segments of T&J; on Cartoon Network in the 1990s which featured a remake of the 1975 T&J; theme!

THE NEW TOM & JERRY/ GRAPE APE SHOW EPISODE GUIDE

A well-detailed episode guide for The New Tom & Jerry/Grape Ape Show that was shown on ABC Saturday Morning in 1975-76, in its original telecast order.

THE NEW TOM & JERRY BLOG

Title sez it all.


Do you, like me, enjoy the 1975 New Show? Or Mumbly and Grape Ape?
If so, simply e-mail me!

E-mail Cartoon Network @ cartoonnetwork@turner.com!
E-mail Boomerang @ boomerang@cartoonnetwork.com!

Call/write/petition your local cable operator and demand they pick up Boomerang!

Subscribe to The New Tom & Jerry Group!
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This page was established Wednesday, March 12, 1997, and last updated Saturday, May 24, 2008.
It defected from Yahoo!GeoCities on Monday, October 8, 2001, after 4 years, switched from Tripod on Sunday, February 24, 2002, bolted from 0catch (indeed!) on March 30, 2002, and tore loose from TopCities on Monday, September 9, 2002.
Images © Turner Entertainment. Many originally appeared on eBay.
Maintained by Microsoft FrontPage 6.0
Conceived, edited, researched, cross-checked and written by Aaron Handy III.
The New Tom & Jerry Show © 1975 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. and Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc.
The Great Grape Ape Show © 1975 Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc.
The Mumbly Cartoon Show © 1976 Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc.
All rights reserved. This site is non-profit and is intended for entertainment and tv research only; the images and sounds used on this website are believed to be in the public domain or fall within the boundaries of the US Supreme Court's Fair Use Act (US Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 107).


In Memoriam
VICTOR O. SCHIPEK (1912—1977)
VEVE RISTO (1902—1981)
JOE E. ROSS (1914—1982)
BOB HOLT (1928—1985)
PAUL DeKORTE (1935—1985)
KENNETH L. MUSE (1910—1987)
DAWS BUTLER (1916—1988)
ALEX LOVY (1913—1992)
DAVID TENDLAR (1909—1993)
HAL SMITH (1916—1994)
EDWARD H. LOVE (1910—1996)
DON MESSICK (1926—1997)
XENIA DeMATTIA (1913—1998)
RICHARD L. THOMPSON (1914—1998)
JEAN VANDER PYL (1919—1999)
EVELYN SHERWOOD (1914—2000)
HOYT STODDARD CURTIN (1922—2000)
WILLIAM DENBY HANNA (1910—2001)
WILLIAM KEIL (d. 2003)
VOLUS JONES (1914—2004)
HENRY CORDEN (1920—2005)
PAUL WINCHELL (1922—2005)
ROBERT "TIGER" WEST (1923—2006)
LEONARD WEINRIB (1935—2006)
JOSEPH ROLAND BARBERA (1911—2006)
IWAO TAKAMOTO (1925—2007)
ALLAN MELVIN (1922—2008)
DON SHEPPARD (1917—2008)


Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc., Thomas "Tom" Cat, Gerald "Jerry" Mouse, Grape Ape, Beegle Beagle, Mumbly, Shnooker, ABC Saturday Morning, 1975-77, Aaron Handy III


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