"The Great Scarecrow Scare" | |
---|---|
Series The Batman/Superman Hour Season 1, Episode 9/2 | |
![]() | |
Air date | November 9th, 1968 |
Writers | Bill Butler |
Director | Hal Sutherland; Rudy Larriva; Amby Paliwoda; Don Towsley; Lou Zukor |
Producers | Norm Prescott; Lou Scheimer |
Starring | Olan Soule; Casey Kasem; Ted Knight; Jane Webb |
Episode guide | |
Previous "The Crime Computer" |
Next "A Game of Cat and Mouse" |
"The Great Scarecrow Scare" is the second vignette from episode nine of season one of The Batman/Superman Hour cartoon series by Filmation Associates. It is the thirty-second story in the series overall. The episode was directed by a team of animation supervisors consisting of Hal Sutherland, Rudy Larriva; Amby Paliwoda, Don Towsley, and Lou Zukor with a script written by Bill Butler. It first aired on Saturday morning on CBS on November 9th, 1968.
Featuring the voices of[]
- Olan Soule as Batman, Bruce Wayne & Alfred Pennyworth
- Casey Kasem as Robin, Dick Grayson
- Ted Knight as Commissioner Gordon, the Penguin, the Scarecrow, and the Narrator
- Jane Webb as Batgirl, Barbara Gordon
Notes & Trivia[]
- Batman was create by writer Bill Finger and artist Bob Kane.
- This is the first television appearance of Jonathan Crane, aka the Scarecrow. The comic book version of the Scarecrow was introduced in World's Finest Comics #3 in the Fall of 1941.
Allusions[]
- There are no allusions available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. An allusion is an incidental reference made to a character, person, event or other miscellaneous piece of media that can be found somewhere in the episode itself. In most cases, this refers to characters or events from previous episodes.
Quotes[]
- There are no quotes available for this episode at this time. Be the first to add some! Just click on the edit tab under the section heading and start typing. The preferred format for quotes is an asterisk, followed by the character's name (bold and hyper-linked), semi-colon then the quote itself (without quotation marks. Quotes should be separated by four elipses (....) unless multiple quotes are used between characters as part of a conversation.