Charlie Brown & Co.

Charlie Brown & Co. is a British-American animated series featuring characters from the Charles M. Schulz comic strip Peanuts. It aired on Saturday mornings on the RKO Network from September 6, 1986 to July 22, 1988, and was rerun on in 1991 under the alternate title of The New Charlie Brown & Snoopy Show. The series was produced by in  in association with Charles M. Schulz Creative Associates. The series ran for three seasons of 84 episodes - the first two comprised 65 episodes in total with an additional 20 for the third.

Cast
The child characters were performed by real children, and there was a large cast turnover throughout the show's run due to the child actors maturing out of their roles. Due to union and contract issues, and the voice actors for Charlie Brown were the only actors from the specials to reprise their roles, they recorded in separate sessions in  while the rest of the cast recorded in,.


 * as Charlie Brown (1986-1987)
 * Sean Collins as Charlie Brown (1988)
 * Rebecca Cynthia Gawley as Sally Brown (1986)
 * Eileen Pritchard as Sally Brown (1987-1988)
 * Lucas Pelphrey as Linus van Pelt (1986)
 * Liam Pritchard as Linus van Pelt (1987)
 * Harold Cook as Linus van Pelt (1988)
 * Samantha Phipps as Lucy van Pelt (1986-1988)
 * Kevin MacCruddan as Schroeder (1986)
 * Andrew Maxwell as Schroeder (1987)
 * Shawn Gannis as Schroeder (1988)
 * Serah Leftwich as Peppermint Patty (1986-1988)
 * Colleen Moat as Marcie (1986)
 * Karen Kells as Marcie (1987)
 * Madeline Howfield as Marcie (1988)
 * Shawn Browne as Franklin (1986-1988)
 * as Snoopy/Woodstock

Additional Cast Members

 * as The Narrator ("Great Moments in History" skits)
 * as The Red Baron ("Great Moments in History" skits)
 * as George Washington ("Peanuts History Lesson - America")
 * Norman Gannis as Benjamin Franklin ("Peanuts History Lesson - America")
 * as Thomas Jefferson ("Peanuts History Lesson - America")

Season 1

 * Episode 1 - Happiness Is A Warm Puppy / Great Moments In History - The Red Baron / Peanuts History Lesson - The Evolution of Man, etc. / Where Do the Ice Cream Trucks Go In the Winter?
 * Episode 2 - An Entire Charlie Brown Baseball Season In Close to 2 Minutes / Great Moments In History - Industry / Peanuts History Lesson - America / No Dogs Allowed
 * Episode 3 - Sweet History / Great Moments In History - The Rise of American Industry / Peanuts History Lesson - Religion / Peppermint & Marcie
 * Episode 4 - The Peanuts Gang Make A Movie / Great Moments In History - Rockin' in the USA / Peanuts History Lesson - Science / Peppermint & Marcie Pt. 2
 * Episode 5 - Peppermint Patty's Procrastinated Essay / Great Moments In History - The Red Baron Strikes Again / Peanuts History Lesson - Math / Charlie vs. Lucy
 * Episode 6 - Football Gag / Great Moments In History - Baseball / Peanuts History Lesson - Literature / Out for Lunch
 * Episode 7 - The Peanuts Marching Band / Great Moments In History - Comics / Peanuts History Lesson - Cartoons / Snoopy and Spike Switch Places
 * Episode 8 - You're In Japan, Charlie Brown / Great Moments In History - Japanese Fables / Peanuts History Lesson - Japan / Welcome Home, Charlie Brown
 * Episode 9 - A Charlie Brown Christmas Bloopers / Great Moments In History - Christmas Specials / Peanuts History Lesson - Christmas / Franklin the Hockey Player
 * Episode 10 - Shermy's Return / Great Moments In History - Peanuts Specials / Peanuts History Lesson - Charles M. Schulz / The Little Red Haired Girl Is Moving Out, Charlie Brown!
 * Episode 11 - Woodstock's Stormy Night / Great Moments In History - Shopping / Peanuts History Lesson - Natural Disasters / Why Do We Hang Out at the Brick Wall?

Trivia

 * This series is notable for some of the animators of the show teaming up to form the animation company British Motion Co. after the series ended.
 * This was one of the few series at the time to have very little to no animation produced in Asian countries as a cost-saving measure, thus, the series' budget often skyrocketed (and only saved money by recycled animation and the generally simplistic art style of the Peanuts series) and was one of the main reasons the series ended.
 * The series was behind production schedule and relied on stock footage from earlier Peanuts specials and pencil tests for the episodes in promos, however, the first episode was completed in time for the premiere of the show.