Mighty Mouse's light-operatic singing was eliminated except for his trademark, "Here I come to save the day!", which was sometimes interrupted. Pearl Pureheart was not always the damsel in distress and many episodes did not feature her at all. The original Mighty Mouse villain Oil Can Harry made a couple of appearances. It gave Mighty Mouse the secret identity of Mike Mouse, a sidekick in the form of the orphan Scrappy Mouse (who knows the hero's secret identity), heroic colleagues such as Bat-Bat and his sidekick Tick the Bug Wonder and the League of Super-Rodents, as well as introduced antagonists like Petey Pate, Big Murray, Madame Marsupial and the Cow (actually a bull, because he is Madame Marsupial's boyfriend and he possesses male traits). It differed from the earlier incarnations of Mighty Mouse in many ways. The series was a commercial half-hour format (22 minutes plus commercials), and each episode consisted of two self-contained 11-minute cartoon segments. The quality of Mighty Mouse as compared with other 1980s animated television series is considered by animation historian Jerry Beck to "foreshadow the higher quality boom coming in the next decade." It was one of the first Saturday morning cartoons on CBS to be broadcast in stereo. It was briefly rerun on Saturday mornings on Fox Kids in November 1992. Hyde) and Terrytoons, it aired on CBS on Saturday mornings from fall 1987 through the 1988–89 season. Produced by Bakshi-Hyde Ventures (a joint venture of animator Ralph Bakshi and producer John W. It is a revival of the Mighty Mouse cartoon character. Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures is an American animated television series. Kent Butterworth (senior director, series 2) John Kricfalusi (senior director, series 1) Mighty Mouse in Ralph Bakshi's adaptation
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