"Bully and Billy" | |
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Series Voyagers! Season 1, Episode 3 | |
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Air date | October 24th, 1982 |
Writers | B.W. Sandefur |
Director | Virgil W. Vogel |
Producers | Jill Donner; Robert Janes; Phyllis Morris; James D. Parriott; Robert Bennett Steinhauer; Dean Zanetos |
Starring | Jon-Erik Hexum; Meeno Peluce |
Episode guide | |
Previous "Created Equal" |
Next "Agents of Satan" |
"Bully and Billy" is the third episode of the science fiction time travel series Voyagers!, out of twenty episodes in total. It was directed by Virgil W. Vogel with a script written by B.W. Sandefur. It first aired on NBC on October 24th, 1982.
Synopsis[]
Cast[]
Principal Cast[]
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Guest Stars[]
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Co-Stars[]
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Notes & Trivia[]
- "Voyagers!: Bully and Billy" redirects to this page.
- This episode is included on the Voyagers! The Complete Series DVD collection, which was released in Region 1 format by Universal Studios on July 17th, 2007. The series was released in Region 2 format in the United Kingdom on October 29th, 2007. [1][2]
- This episode has also been made available through Amazon.com's streaming video service.
- Phyllis Morris is an associate producer with Scholastic Productions.
- Actor Miguel Sandoval is credited as Michael Sandoval in this episode.
- Actor Ismael Carlo is credited as East Carlo in this episode.
- This is the second and final episode of Voyagers! directed by Virgil W. Vogel.
- This is the only episode of Voyagers! written by B.W. Sandefur.
- Scenes with Billy the Kid in the desert were filmed at Vasquez Rocks State Park in California. This is the same location where Captain Kirk fought a Gorn in the "Arena" episode of the original Star Trek.
- The year that Phineas and Jeff meet Billy the Kid takes place in 1880.
- The setting for when Phineas and Jeff assist Benjamin Franklin is Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on May 10th, 1752.
- The Battle of San Juan Hill was part of the Spanish-American War and was fought in Santiago, Cuba on July 1st, 1898.
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.
Bloopers[]
- There are no bloopers 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. A blooper is any revealing mistake that can be found within the episode that the production crew may have missed during editing. This can range from inconsistent lines of dialogue to visible production equipment in the shot to mis-spoken lines of dialogue, or... dare we say it? A wardrobe malfunction.
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.