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Hello Kitty's Furry Theater is an American-Japanese co-produced animated series based on the popular Japanese character, Hello Kitty. The series involved her and her friends doing their own version of popular fairy tales and stories. Each of the 13 half-hour episodes consisted of two 11-minute cartoons, for a total of 26 “shows”; each show was a spoof of a well-known fairy tale or movie.

Characters and voices[]

  • Hello Kitty (Tara Strong in the American version, Kyōko Hikami in the Japanese version) is the star of the show; also in the cast are family members Grandma Kitty, Mama Kitty (both voiced by Elizabeth Hanna), Grandpa Kitty (Carl Banas), and Papa Kitty (Len Carlson).
  • Tuxedo Sam (Sean Roberge), a large penguin in a bow tie, is usually cast in a heroic role, and often as Hello Kitty’s love interest.
  • My Melody (Mairon Bennett), a small white bunny, was usually cast as a helpless little girl who needed protecting or rescuing; a major exception was in the cartoon “Kittylocks and the Three Bears,” when My Melody was one of the bears Kittylocks was running away from.
  • Chip (Noam Zylberman), a small white seal, is often cast as the protagonist’s sidekick.
  • Catnip (Cree Summer) is a tall blue Siamese cat who wishes that she was the star instead of Hello Kitty; she’s usually cast as a villain.
  • Fangora (Denise Pidgeon), Catnip’s mother, is a big fat cat in sunglasses who doesn’t appear in every episode; whenever she does, she’s cast as the villain.
  • Grinder (Greg Morton) is a huge, strong bulldog who’s not very smart; he’s usually cast as either the villain’s henchman or a misunderstood monster.
  • Mowzer (Fred Savage-Special Guest Star) is a little mouse who likes playing tricks. He only appeared on the final episode, "Phantom of the Theater".

Format[]

Each cartoon opens with the theater filling up with patrons, and usually a look at some comical goings-on backstage. The play then begins (with Hello Kitty saying “Once upon a meow”) and the stage transforms into whatever setting the story calls for (outer space, the American Old West, et cetera). Each show is a lighthearted takeoff of a children’s story or a popular movie; subjects include Frankenstein, Crocodile Dundee, “Goldilocks,” and “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” At the end, the stage returns to normal, and the actors take their bow.

One exception to this format is the cartoon “The Phantom of the Theater,” which begins after the actors have finished a show; all the action in this story takes place backstage.

Cartoon list[]

Ep. Cartoon Spoof of:
1 The Wizard of Paws The Wizard of Oz
Pinocchio Penguin Pinocchio
2 Cinderkitty Cinderella
The Pawed Piper The Pied Piper of Hamelin
3 KT — The Kitty Terrestrial E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
Peter Penguin Peter Pan
4 Kittylocks and the Three Bears Goldilocks and the Three Bears
Paws — The Great White Dog Shark Jaws
5 Cat Wars Star Wars
Tar-Sam of the Jungle Tarzan of the Apes
6 Sleeping Kitty Sleeping Beauty
Kitty and the Kong King Kong
7 Kitty and the Beast Beauty and the Beast
Little Red Bunny Hood Little Red Riding Hood
8 Snow White Kitty and the One Dwarf Snow White
Frankencat Frankenstein
9 Catula Dracula
Paws of the Round Table The Sword in the Stone
10 Rumpeldogskin Rumpelstiltskin
Robin Penguin Robin Hood
11 Hello Mother Goose Various nursery rhymes
Crocodile Penguin Crocodile Dundee
12 Grinder Genie and the Magic Lamp Aladdin
The Ugly Quackling The Ugly Duckling
13 How Scrinchip Stole Christmas How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
The Phantom of the Theater The Phantom of the Opera

Availability[]

Two VHS videocassettes were released, each containing four cartoon shorts, as well as the opening and closing sequences.

In 2003, five DVDs were released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, each containing five cartoon shorts; the only one of the 26 not to be included was “How Scrinchip Stole Christmas.” The opening and closing sequences are not included.

VHS videos[]

  • Hello Kitty: Kitty and the Beast (also includes “Grinder Genie and the Magic Lamp,” “Hello Mother Goose,” and “Little Red Bunny Hood”)
  • Hello Kitty: Wizard of Paws (also includes “Snow White Kitty,” “Sleeping Kitty,” and “Peter Penguin”)

On October 31, 1989, Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater", contained in "Hello Kitty and Friends Get Along was released as part of The Video Collection.

DVD list[]

  • Hello Kitty Becomes a Princess
  • Hello Kitty Goes to the Movies
  • Hello Kitty Plays Pretend
  • Hello Kitty Saves the Day
  • Hello Kitty Tells Fairy Tales

iTunes[]

In 2008, all thirteen episodes where made available to download on iTunes for $1.99 an episode or $21.99 for the entire series. To promote the series, iTunes offered the episode "Wizard of Paws/Pinocchio Penguin" as a free download for a limited time.

External links[]

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