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The Frankenstones

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Created by
  
First appearance
  
1979

Creator
  
Hanna-Barbera

Last appearance
  
1982

The Frankenstones The Frankenstones Cast Images Behind The Voice Actors

Similar
  
The Gruesomes, Pearl Slaghoople, Dino, Shmoo, Mr Slate

The flintstones meets the frankenstones rare theme song


The Frankenstones are an animated family of fictional characters created by Hanna-Barbera who were introduced in 1979 and appeared in different versions on various television spin-offs and specials of The Flintstones through the early 1980s. The family has been described as a sort of fusion of The Flintstones and The Munsters.

Contents

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Introduction

The Frankenstones Classic Hanna Barbera by david Nimitz at Coroflotcom

The first version of the Frankenstones were introduced on September 15, 1979 in the episode "Fred and Barney Meet the Frankenstones" of The New Fred and Barney Show. They were featured as the managers of a condorstonium development called Deadrock Arms that Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble considered moving their families into.

This Frankenstone family consisted of:

The Frankenstones Webrock The Flintstones FAQ

  • Frank Frankenstone, a Frankenstein-style father (voiced by John Stephenson)
  • Hidea Frankenstone, his wife (voiced by Gay Autterson)
  • Atrocia Frankenstone, their giggly teenage daughter (voiced by Jean Vander Pyl)
  • "Little Freaky" Frankenstone, their son (voiced by Jim MacGeorge)
  • Frank's voice was patterned after Boris Karloff by voice actor John Stephenson, and Hidea had a pseudo-Transylvanian accent.

    Television specials

    A Frankenstone monster (voiced by Ted Cassidy of The Addams Family) appeared in the 1979 Halloween special, The Flintstones Meet Rockula and Frankenstone. This version of Frankenstone was Count Rockula's unfinished creation, awoken prematurely when lightning strikes the machinery in Rockula's laboratory. Despite the strong resemblance, he is not to be confused with the Frank Frankenstone character that first appeared in The New Fred and Barney Show or featured in subsequent television specials and series.

    The second version of the Frankenstones moved in next door to the Flintstones in the September 1980 television special The Flintstones' New Neighbors, the first of The Flintstone Special limited-run prime-time revival of The Flintstones which aired on NBC from 1980–1981.

    This time, the family consisted of:

  • Frank Frankenstone (voiced by John Stephenson)
  • Oblivia Frankenstone, his wife (voiced by Pat Parris)
  • Hidea Frankenstone, their daughter who resembles the original Atrocia (voiced by Julie McWhirter)
  • Stubby Frankenstone, their son who closely resembles Freaky (voiced by Jim MacGeorge)
  • Again, the family is odd, and a friendship developed between the Flintstones and the Frankenstones. Frank's voice was still patterned after Boris Karloff by John Stephenson. This version of the Frankenstones continued to appear throughout the run of the specials: Fred's Final Fling in 1980, Wind-Up Wilma and Jogging Fever in 1981.

    The Flintstone Comedy Show

    The Frankenstones starred in their own weekly segment on The Flintstone Comedy Show on Saturday mornings which premiered in November 1980. This third and final version of the Frankenstone family more closely resembled the version previously seen in The New Fred and Barney Show than the Frankenstones that just moved in next door in the prime-time specials.

    This version of the family consisted of:

  • Frank Frankenstone (voiced by Charles Nelson Reilly)
  • Hidea Frankenstone, his wife (and previously their daughter's name in the prime-time specials) (voiced by Ruta Lee)
  • Atrocia Frankenstone, their kooky daughter who is now the youngest child (voiced by Zelda Rubinstein)
  • Freaky Frankenstone, their son who is now a teenager (voiced by Paul Reubens)
  • The Frankenstones also have a pet monster named Rockjaw, who devoured anything and was voiced by Frank Welker. The previously soft-natured Frank is now hot-tempered and wired with his voice now provided by Charles Nelson Reilly in his traditional high-pitched, hyper-whiny style. Frank became volatile at the drop of a hat, especially when he dealt with his annoying neighbor and rival Fred Flintstone. Frank and Fred were both frustrated by the friendships between their wives (Hidea and Wilma) and children (Freaky and Pebbles), and they always seemed to be thrust into one mess after another because of each other.

    The Flintstone Comedy Show ran for two seasons (1980–1982), and consecutively with two more prime-time specials in 1981 (which both revert to John Stephenson's version of Frank with his wife Oblivia, and children Hidea and Stubby). The continuity of the prime-time Flintstones and Saturday morning Flintstones drift farther apart because both have their own version of Frankenstone neighbors. In September 1982, reruns of The Frankenstones and the other various segments from The Flintstone Comedy Show were repackaged for two seasons in half-hour formats under the title The Flintstone Funnies (1982–1984).

    The Flintstone Comedy Show ended in 1982. There have been no futher appearances of the Frankenstones since, with the exception of Frank Frankenstone's cameo as an enemy character in the 1991 Nintendo video game The Flintstones: The Rescue of Dino & Hoppy at the haunted dungeon stage.

    References

    The Frankenstones Wikipedia