The New Daffy Duck Show (lost pilot script for unproduced animated series; 1997-1998): Difference between revisions

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|title=<center>The New Daffy Duck Show</center>
|title=<center>The New Daffy Duck Show</center>
|image=Daffy duck sellsheet.jpg
|image=Daffy duck sellsheet.jpg
|imagecaption=Ad for The New Daffy Duck Show
|imagecaption=Ad for ''The New Daffy Duck Show''.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}
'''The New Daffy Duck Show''' was a planned, written, developed, and almost produced cartoon based on the Looney Tunes character ''Daffy Duck'' (mostly his Space Jam counterpart considering it had just came out the year before). The show had been planned to be apart of the regular Saturday morning block on the now-defunct WB block ''Kid's WB''.
'''''The New Daffy Duck Show''''' was a planned, written, developed, and almost produced cartoon based on the Looney Tunes character Daffy Duck (mostly his ''Space Jam'' counterpart considering it had just came out the year before). The show had been planned to be apart of the regular Saturday morning block on the now-defunct WB block Kid's WB!.<ref>[http://zvbxrpl.blogspot.com/2009/04/cartoons-that-never-happened-daffy-duck.html Cartoons That Never Happened: ''The Daffy Duck Show''.] Retrieved 12 Apr '09</ref>


==Details==
==Details==
'''The New Daffy Duck Show''' was going to be one of those "show within a show" cartoons, featuring skits and other stuff going on behind the scenes. However, the writers found a problem within this format considering all the skits they'd wrote were going nowhere for what was supposed to be a prime-time cartoon.  
''The New Daffy Duck Show'' was going to be one of those "show within a show" cartoons, featuring skits and other stuff going on behind the scenes. However, the writers found a problem within this format considering all the skits they'd wrote were going nowhere for what was supposed to be a prime-time cartoon.  


Production on the project had gone on for months. Jamie Kellner, chief executive officer of Turner Broadcasting System Inc. at the time, had ordered for the cartoon before being unhappy with how it was going and cutting work on it entirely. The crew working on the show at the time were Spike Brandt, Tony Cervone, Doug Langdale, John McCann, and Paul Rugg, possibly later Joe Alaskey as he was considered for the voice of Daffy.  
Production on the project had gone on for months. Jamie Kellner, chief executive officer of Turner Broadcasting System Inc. at the time, had ordered for the cartoon before being unhappy with how it was going and cutting work on it entirely. The crew working on the show at the time were Spike Brandt, Tony Cervone, Doug Langdale, John McCann, and Paul Rugg, possibly later Joe Alaskey as he was considered for the voice of Daffy.  
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<blockquote>We had all worked months on the project. Jamie Kellner didn't like it. In all honesty, it was the best thing we had done at Warners.</blockquote>
<blockquote>We had all worked months on the project. Jamie Kellner didn't like it. In all honesty, it was the best thing we had done at Warners.</blockquote>


It is unknown if any other material or a copy of the script existed. The only other known material was an ad found in a promotional package for '''Kid's WB'''. (Found in the main image) The ad read:
It is unknown if any other material or a copy of the script existed. The only other known material was an ad found in a promotional package for Kid's WB!. (Found in the main image) The ad read:


<blockquote>What do the "in" kids want for breakfast every Saturday? Duck. Daffy Duck that is.  
<blockquote>What do the "in" kids want for breakfast every Saturday? Duck. Daffy Duck that is.  


Based on his outstanding performance in last year's blockbuster, SPACE JAM, Daffy has finally gotten what he's always wanted (besides speech therapy): his own new show! For the first time in a generation, Daffy is back in front of the TV cameras with attitude, action and an all-new show that will blow the competition out of the pond. (Look for Daffy to pull some of his other Looney co-stars into his new shows.)</blockquote>
Based on his outstanding performance in last year's blockbuster, ''Space Jam'', Daffy has finally gotten what he's always wanted (besides speech therapy): his own new show! For the first time in a generation, Daffy is back in front of the TV cameras with attitude, action and an all-new show that will blow the competition out of the pond. (Look for Daffy to pull some of his other Looney co-stars into his new shows.)<ref>[http://zvbxrpl.blogspot.com/2009/06/and-now-its-time-once-again-for-1997.html And Now It's Time Once Again For 1997 Flashback Theatre.] Retrieved 08 Jun '09</ref></blockquote>


==References==
==References==
*[http://zvbxrpl.blogspot.com/2009/06/and-now-its-time-once-again-for-1997.html And Now It's Time Once Again For 1997 Flashback Theatre] Retrieved 08 June '09
{{reflist}}
*[http://zvbxrpl.blogspot.com/2009/04/cartoons-that-never-happened-daffy-duck.html Cartoons That Never Happened: The Daffy Duck Show] Retrieved 12 Apr '09


[[Category:Lost animation]]
 
[[Category:Lost literature]]
[[Category:Lost animation|New Daffy Duck Show]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Lost literature|New Daffy Duck Show]]
[[Category:Lost TV|New Daffy Duck Show]]

Revision as of 08:52, 15 February 2019

Daffy duck sellsheet.jpg

Ad for The New Daffy Duck Show.

Status: Lost

The New Daffy Duck Show was a planned, written, developed, and almost produced cartoon based on the Looney Tunes character Daffy Duck (mostly his Space Jam counterpart considering it had just came out the year before). The show had been planned to be apart of the regular Saturday morning block on the now-defunct WB block Kid's WB!.[1]

Details

The New Daffy Duck Show was going to be one of those "show within a show" cartoons, featuring skits and other stuff going on behind the scenes. However, the writers found a problem within this format considering all the skits they'd wrote were going nowhere for what was supposed to be a prime-time cartoon.

Production on the project had gone on for months. Jamie Kellner, chief executive officer of Turner Broadcasting System Inc. at the time, had ordered for the cartoon before being unhappy with how it was going and cutting work on it entirely. The crew working on the show at the time were Spike Brandt, Tony Cervone, Doug Langdale, John McCann, and Paul Rugg, possibly later Joe Alaskey as he was considered for the voice of Daffy.

When asked about the show, Spike Brandt said:

It was kind of a cross between Jack Benny and Larry Sanders. Instead of a talk show it was a variety show where you could put on skits. So you could have stuff happening both on stage as short-like things, and then all the shenanigans going on behind the scenes. That didn't go anywhere.

Fate

During production, a script for the pilot had been written. No art had been created as of yet but, the crew had been ready to start on such things before Jamie Kellner pulled the project.

On crew member Paul Rugg's last day at Warner Animation, Greg Shepherd, John McCann, Doug Langdale, Spike Brandt, and Rugg himself burned the pilot script for the show.

Crew burning the script.

Despite the negative reception of the man who had ordered the show in the first place, Paul Rugg is quoted as saying:

We had all worked months on the project. Jamie Kellner didn't like it. In all honesty, it was the best thing we had done at Warners.

It is unknown if any other material or a copy of the script existed. The only other known material was an ad found in a promotional package for Kid's WB!. (Found in the main image) The ad read:

What do the "in" kids want for breakfast every Saturday? Duck. Daffy Duck that is. Based on his outstanding performance in last year's blockbuster, Space Jam, Daffy has finally gotten what he's always wanted (besides speech therapy): his own new show! For the first time in a generation, Daffy is back in front of the TV cameras with attitude, action and an all-new show that will blow the competition out of the pond. (Look for Daffy to pull some of his other Looney co-stars into his new shows.)[2]

References