My Little Pony (TV series): Difference between revisions

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==External links==
* {{W|My_Little_Pony_(TV_series)|On Wikipedia}}


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:My Little Pony]]
[[Category:My Little Pony]]
[[Category:Television shows]]
[[Category:Television shows]]

Revision as of 15:18, 10 May 2023

This article may need to be rewritten from the ground up...
My Little Pony, My Little Pony, what will today's adventure be?

My Little Pony was the first animated series in the long-lived My Little Pony franchise that lasted from 1986 to 1987 with a total of 65 episodes, making it the second longest running My Little Pony television series, second to My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, which was over three times the length of original series.

Indeed, the original cartoon has had a long and impactful legacy, but best not to forget that it was also really weird. Plotlines were far more fantastical then even Friendship is Magic, and rarely had any real continuity. Episodes tended to introduce strange new species, places, and magical objects on the fly with little to any rhyme or reason, giving the show a very 'off the wall' vibe that kept things fresh and always interesting.

Synopsis

As mentioned above, this show was odd. It can best be described as a highly episodic show, though most individual episodes were apart of a much longer television story, the longest of these, "The End of Flutter Valley" lasted for 10 episodes, while most episodes tended to last between 3-4, but varied considerably. As the shows theme song implies, the show was highly adventurous, with most episodes taking place in entirely different places, with a surprisingly varied plot structure with imaginative and creative stories.

Production

'My Little Pony was animated by two companies, AKOM and Toei Animation, South Korean and Japanese companies respectively. The shows production itself was also handled by two different parties, Sunbow Productions and Marvel Productions. The series was apart of a programming block called My Little Pony 'n Friends, which aired additional cartoons as the titular "friends" of My Little Pony, including The Glo-Friends, Moon Dreamers, and The Mister Potato Head Show. The main series began airing three months after My Little Pony: The Movie and two years after "Rescue at Midnight Castle", with the first episode airing on September 15, 1986.

Episodes

Season 1 (1986)

# Episode Writer Release
1-10 "The End of Flutter Valley" George Arthur Bloom
11-14 "The Ghost of Paradise Estate" George Arthur Bloom
15 "The Great Rainbow Caper" Diane Duane
16-19 "The Glass Princess" Tracy Mann Hill & Michael Charles Hill
20 "Pony Puppy" Carla Joseph Conway & Gerry Conway
21-24 "Bright Lights" Barbara Petty
25 "Sweet Stuff and the Treasure Hunt" Cherie Dee Wilkerson
26-29 "The Return of Tambelon Michael Reaves
30 "Little Piece of Magic" Beth Bornstein
31-34 "The Magic Coins" Michael Reaves
35 "Mish Mash Melee" Bruce Faulk
36-37 "Woe Is Me" Gordon Kent
38-39 "Fugitive Flowers" Martin Pasko & Rebecca Parr
40 "Would Be Dragonslayer" Carla Joseph Conway & Gerry Conway
41-42 "Baby, It's Cold Outside" Gordon Kent
43-44 "Crunch the Rockdog" Linda Woolverton
45-46 "The Revolt of Paradise Estate" David Wise
47-48 "Through the Door" David Wise
49-50 "Rescue at Midnight Castle" George Arthur Bloom

Season 2

Characters

My Little Pony employed a large rotating cast of ensemble characters, though the most recurring of these was probably Megan Williams. Other recuring characters included Megan's siblings, Danny Williams and Molly Williams, and various ponies such as Wind Whister, Lofty, Twilight, and many more. Most episodes tended to include unique characters who only appeared in their respective stories, these usually took the forms of villains like King Charlatan, Grogar, and Somnambula (it should be noted that Tirac and Catrina technically didn't appear in the show, but in specials), but original heroic characters also appeared quite often, such as Scheherazade, Alonzo, and Garth.

Cast

Additional voices by Michael Bell, Joey Camen, Melanie Gaffin, Tress MacNeille, and Frank Welker

Broadcast history

My Little Pony was sold as syndication, and so it wasn't locked to a single network. Season 1 ran from September to November 1986 in almost continuous broadcast, seemingly only not airing on weekends.[citation needed] Season 2 only ran in September of the following year and reused material from the My Little Pony film series. Known networks it aired on was the Disney Channel and CBS, the former was used as the sources of DVD and VHS releases of the show.[citation needed]

In the 2020s, the show has moved to various streaming platforms, including VUDU, Amazon Instant Video, Tubi and Roku.[1]

International airings and dubs

Network Region Timespan Dub Ref
MTV Europe United Kingdom 1987 English [2]
London Weekend Television United Kingdom 1988-1990 English [3]
Sky Movies United Kingdom December 25, 1990 English [3]
The Movie Channel United Kingdom November 4, 1992 English [3]
The Children's Channel United Kingdom December 25, 1994 English [3]
Sky One United Kingdom September 1997 English [3]

External links

References

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