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A number of Television Program s based on the Super Mario Bros. Video Game series have been created. After appearing alongside Donkey Kong in 1983 and starring in a few Anime specials released only in Japan , the protagonist Mario starred in several American Animated Television Series , produced by DiC Entertainment . Three series were produced by DiC, each with a different title and based around a different game (or games). BEFORE DIC Prior to having his own animated series, Mario starred as a regular character on the '' Donkey Kong ''-based segments of CBS 's'' Saturday Supercade ''. Voiced by Peter Cullen , Mario, along with Pauline (who was his niece as opposed to his girlfriend, as she was in the game) was constantly on the trail of escaped circus gorilla Donkey Kong (his primary nemesis in the game). In ''. This film is very obscure, even in Japan where it was released, and not much is known about it; even the video release of the movie has become hard to find. The video was produced by Japanese animation company Grouper Productions , and it marked the animated debut of Mario's brother Luigi , damsel-in-distress Princess Peach , and his nemesis, the reptilian Bowser (Koopa in Japan). The plot, based off of the first ''Super Mario Bros.'' game, revolves around Mario and Luigi entering a parallel world in order to rescue Princess Peach from Koopa. An unrelated anime OVA trilogy was also released only in Japan. The trilogy was released on August 3 , 1989 , about a month before '' The Super Mario Bros. Super Show '' began airing. These three Direct-to-video 15-minute films feature characters from '' Super Mario Bros. 3 '' retelling classic fairy tales - '' Momotaro '', '' Issunboshi '', and ''Shiroyukihime'' ('' Snow White ''). Chronologically, these films would mark the actual animated debut of the Koopalings and several other enemies from ''Super Mario Bros. 3'', excluding the Japanese commercial for the game. THE SUPER MARIO BROS. SUPER SHOW! See Also: List of Super Mario episodes ''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!'' is the only one of the three American Mario animated series to air in syndication. The first and last parts of each episode were live action and showed Mario (played by "Captain" Lou Albano ) and Luigi ( Danny Wells ) living in Brooklyn , where they would often be visited by celebrity guest stars. Some of them were popular TV stars, such as Nedra Volz , Norman Fell , Donna Douglas , Eve Plumb , Vanna White , Jim Lange , Danica McKellar , Nicole Eggert , Clare Carey and Brian Bonsall or professional athletes such as Lyle Alzado , Magic Johnson , Roddy Piper and Sgt. Slaughter . Occasionally, the main actors would be playing guest stars themselves, forcing their regular characters to leave when it came time for their other characters to show up. In the fifth episode, Ernie Hudson appeared as a Ghostbuster using his own name rather than Winston Zeddemore . The second part of each episode was a 13-minute cartoon based loosely on the '' Super Mario Bros. '' and '' Super Mario Bros. 2 '' video games, where Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool (as Peach was called in North America until the release of '' Yoshi's Safari ''), and her loyal mushroom retainer Toad battle against the reptilian villain King Koopa ,a.k.a. Bowser , often in a movie or pop-culture parody. Getting into the spirit of these parodies, Koopa usually had a different outfit for each one. Wart, the main antagonist of the second game, was never in any of the episodes, yet most of his minions appeared in the show. The cartoons were meant to take place after the timeline of the Super Mario Bros. game where the Princess was rescued. It was revealed that the Mario Brothers accidentally were warped into the Mushroom Kingdom while working on a bathtub drain in Brooklyn, NY, and in appearing presented a challenge to King Koopa's plots to overtake the kingdom. The brothers and Toad had to protect the Princess, as they believed she had the power to save her people as well as to get the Mario Brothers back to Brooklyn. It was never explained whether the live action segments were meant to be the Mario Brothers before they found the Mushroom Kingdom, or if they had successfully made it back to Brooklyn and returned to operating their plumbing business as before. The ''Super Mario Bros.'' cartoon was shown on Mondays through Thursdays. On Fridays, the show would air the ''Legend Of Zelda'' cartoons based on The Game Of The Same Name , in which the elf-like hero Link and Princess Zelda fight against the forces of the evil wizard Ganon . Scenes from the episode were shown during the live-action segments on the preceding days as sneak previews. During the summer of 1990, Club Mario replaced the Mario Bros. live-action segments. This featured rock and roll and Mario obsessed teenagers (Chris Coombs, Michael Rawlins, and Victoria Delany) goofing around, and in at least one episode, running around the DiC studios and harassing Andy Heyward. Coombs and Delany played Siblings Tommy and Tammy Treehugger. An additional added segment was a 1-2 minute viewing of "Spaced Out Theater", which was edited from the TV series, '' Photon ''. The show ran from September 4 to December 1 1989 . DVD box sets of SMBSS were released on March 28 , 2006 (Volume 1) and October 31 , 2006 (Volume 2) by Shout! Factory . Cast
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Home Video Releases
THE ADVENTURES OF SUPER MARIO BROS. 3 See Also: List of Super Mario episodes ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'' was the second Mario animated series produced by DiC. Based on the '' Super Mario Bros. 3 '' video game, the cartoon shows Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool, and Toad fighting against Bowser Koopa and his Koopaling s, who went by different names on the show. On the show, the Koopalings were called:
Although the reason for their name change is disputed among fans, it is most likely that DiC did not have access to their real names during production of the show, for the company was probably using the Japanese version of '' Super Mario Bros. 3 '' as reference. In the game, the Koopa Kids were not originally given names until it was brought over into the US, shortly before ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'' went on air. The made-up names were added in place. Apparently, DiC was never informed of the add-on at first glance. Oddly enough, bits from the American version of the game were inserted ("Kooky ''von'' Koopa" or referring to King Koopa as " Bowser "), which clearly shows DiC became aware of the change later. DiC likely retained the show names to avoid confusion among viewers. Like the previous Mario cartoon series, the animation was done by Sei Young Animation Co. Ltd, however this show was co-produced by Reteitalia S.P.A., hence the slight differences in character design. Since the show was based on ''Super Mario Bros. 3'', the enemies and Power-ups were also seen in the show. In addition to being more faithful to the Mario gameplay, the series was given an established sense of continuity, something that the previous series lacked. The show was also known for having many of its episodes set in " The Real World ", with "actual" human beings appearing from time to time. Episodes took place in locations such as London , Paris , Venice , New York City , Cape Canaveral , Los Angeles and even Washington, D.C. . One memorable episode entitled " 7 Continents For 7 Koopas " was about the seven Koopa Kids invading each of the seven Continents . This cartoon was shown in an hour-length '' in its original run in 1990 . All further airings of the series separated it from ''Captain N''. It has more recently been released on DVD in Australia in a full box set made by MRA Entertainment , Europe which one volume out of the four has only been released in Germany, and one single DVD release in the US by Sterling Entertainment Group in 2003 . Due to the success of the DVD sets of ''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show'', Shout! Factory released a 3-disc box set of ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'' on June 26 2007 . Cast
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SUPER MARIO WORLD See Also: List of Super Mario episodes ''Super Mario World'' (also sometimes referred to unofficially as '''''The Super Mario World Show''''' and originally known as '''''Captain N and the New Super Mario World''''' when it was originally aired with the last 7 episodes of ''Captain N'') was the last of the three American Mario cartoons. The show was based largely on The Super Nintendo Game Of The Same Name , but with small yet noticeable changes. The show takes place in Dinosaur Land (called "Dinosaur World" in the series), and features the then-new character Yoshi , as well as a preadolescent caveman named Oogtar (who did not appear in the games). This time, Toad was not in the cast, as he was not in the game itself. Unlike in the game, Yoshi's Island was populated with cavemen (who were the Comic Relief of the show) instead of Yoshis, and many of the locations had different names. For example, the Forest of Illusion was called the Enchanted Forest while the Vanilla Dome was referred to as the Lava Pits ''Super Mario World'' episode " The Wheel Thing " . Also, enemies featured in the game were rarely called by their in-game names on the show, but rather by whichever real-life creatures they resembled. Also in the show were minor aspects that were never shown in the game, such as Yoshi's Aquaphobia (although tropical Yoshis could not survive in water on the later game '' Super Mario Sunshine ''). Also, in this show, as in ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'', Mario and Luigi still used their red and green overalls, respectively, with a blue shirt when Nintendo already started depicting them with blue overalls. Another noticeable difference is that it was animated by a different animation studio, Pacific Rim Productions, Inc, hence the difference in character designs, not only for Princess Toadstool (the most obvious), but also for Mario and Luigi. An intro animated by the Japanese was also conceived for the series (due to the better resources and production values, it was better than the show's actual western animation) Like the third season of "Captain N: The Game Master," (which aired the same year), the animation and writing quality suffered, perhaps due to a smaller budget. The theme song was written by Mark Mothersbaugh , who also wrote the '' Rugrats '' theme music, which coincidentally, premiered in the same month and year. It was the only Mario cartoon to air on Network Ten in Australia. This was on Cheez TV from Monday to Wednesday. In the UK and Australia, " King Scoopa Koopa " was aired before " The Night Before Cave Christmas " as when it was aired in Australia, it followed the Captain N production order and the UK followed the original production order. All the episodes are currently available on DVD in Australia. However, except for part of a Christmas videotape released in 1996, it has never had any NTSC home video releases (thus far). All of the episodes except The Night Before Cave Christmas and A Little Learning have been released on VHS in the UK. At first, the chances of a DVD release of Super Mario World were slim, due to copyrights on Yoshi's character. But, it has been announced that both Super Mario World and the final season of Captain N will be released on DVD on November 13 , 2007 . http://tvshowsondvd.com/newsitem.cfm?NewsID=7838 Cast
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MARIO ALL-STARS ''Mario All-Stars'' was released in 1994 on Cable Television , first airing on The Family Channel (now ABC Family ), then later in edited reruns on the USA Network . It featured 39 episodes of the animated segments from ''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show'' and all the ''Super Mario World'' episodes with time-compressed footage. Oddly enough, the commercials aired for this show featured clips from ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'', which was never actually featured on this show, and claimed to feature the Mario Bros. in "40 brand-new adventures". KING KOOPA'S KOOL KARTOONS King Koopa's Kool Kartoons was a local, live-action children's television show broadcast in Southern California during the holiday season of 1989/1990. The show starred King Koopa (also known as Bowser), the central arch-villain from Nintendo's popular Super Mario Bros. video game series. The 30-minute program was originally broadcast during the after-school afternoon time-slots on Los Angeles-based KTTV Fox 11. Because of its limited broadcast area and brief appearance, the show is largely forgotten in the greater Super Mario Bros. series. SEE ALSO
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