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List of DuckTales characters

Promotional poster for DuckTales (2017), featuring multiple characters from the series.

This article includes a list of characters from the Disney DuckTales animated franchise, including the original 1987 series and the 2017 reboot series, as well as one theatrical movie and a variety of additional spin-off media merchandise, including video games (most notably DuckTales and its updated remake DuckTales: Remastered) and comics. Prior to the series, many of the characters appeared in the Uncle Scrooge comic book stories, in particular the ones created by Carl Barks.[1]

Overview

Main characters

Scrooge McDuck

Scrooge McDuck (voiced by Alan Young in the 1987 series, DuckTales the Movie, and DuckTales: Remastered; David Tennant in the 2017 series) is the richest duck in the world, a distinguished citizen of Duckburg, Calisota, the uncle of Donald Duck and Della Duck, the grand-uncle of Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck, and the main protagonist of the original series and the 2017 reboot series, originally created by Carl Barks for his 1947 story "Christmas on Bear Mountain".

In the 1987 series, Scrooge is constantly seeking ways to further increase his wealth (his favorite pastime appears to be treasure hunting), and to avoid losing it. He is a self-made billionaire who left Scotland in his youth and came to America with his Number One Dime, eventually establishing his home in McDuck Manor and erecting his famous Money Bin.[2] He sports a blue jacket with red cuffs and a red collar. Pat Fraley provided the voice for the younger Scrooge in flashback episode "Once Upon a Dime".[2][3]

In the 2017 series, Scrooge's Scottish heritage, the Money Bin, and the Number One Dime remains the same, but he is well known as a seasoned "adventure capitalist" and CEO of McDuck Enterprises. Born in Glasgow, Scotland in the mid-19th century and getting rich during the Klondike Gold Rush in the 1890s, his decreased aging has been explained by him spending time "stuck in a timeless demon dimension".[4] In his younger days he used to conduct adventures with his nephew Donald and niece Della joining him.[5] However, Della's disappearance led to Donald cutting off his relationship with his uncle, and Scrooge losing the spark for adventure.[6][7] Ten years later, as seen in the pilot episode, Scrooge regains his energy when he is reunited with Donald and introduced to his grandnephews for the first time.[5] The reboot sees him wearing a red jacket with visible pockets and black cuffs, spats, and collar, as per his comic book appearance.
According to Frank Angones, several lines involving Scrooge using Scottish slang or dialogue are improvised by Tennant, who is also Scottish, to provide an accurate depiction of Scottish people.[8][9]

Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck

Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck (all voiced by Russi Taylor in the 1987 series, DuckTales the Movie, and DuckTales: Remastered; Danny Pudi, Ben Schwartz and Bobby Moynihan in the 2017 series, respectively) are the nephews of Donald Duck, the sons of his sister Della Duck, friends of Webby, and the grand-nephews of their uncle Scrooge McDuck. They were originally created for the comics by Ted Osborne and Al Taliaferro in 1937.

In the 1987 series, the boys are sent to Scrooge to stay with him, while Donald leaves to join the navy.[10] All three tend to be playful and mischievous, while also being devoted members of the Junior Woodchucks scouts. They are identical in appearance and personality, and wear identical outfits – a cap and jumper – with the only difference between each of them being the color of their clothing: Huey wears red, Dewey wears blue, and Louie wears green. The introduction of this scheme by DuckTales was adapted for later use in future animations that featured the triplets. Avery Schreiber voiced the adult Huey, Dewey and Louie in a possible future scenario in the episode "Duck to the Future".[11][3]

In the 2017 series, Huey, Dewey, and Louie (short for Hubert, Dewford, and Llewellyn) are slightly older, and each have different appearances, voices, and personalities – Huey, wearing a red polo shirt and cap, is the intelligent older brother, and a devoted Junior Woodchuck; Dewey, wearing a blue T-shirt with a light blue long-sleeved T-shirt underneath, is the adventurous, courageous, and sensitive middle brother, and the one most eager to find out what happened to their mother Della; and Louie, wearing a green hoodie, is the laid-back, money-obsessed younger brother, and a resourceful schemer, jokingly described as the "evil triplet". Although all three are mischievous and sneaky around Donald, they are wide-eyed admirers of Scrooge's fortune and the legends of his adventures. Initially, the boys are sent to stay with Scrooge while Donald attends a job interview during "Woo-oo!",[5] but after renewing Scrooge's spirit for adventure, and Dewey accidentally wrecking their houseboat, Donald and the boys move into McDuck Manor and accompany him on his new adventures. Della had initially wanted to name her sons "Jet, Turbo, and Rebel", respectively; but Donald came up with their current names in her absence.[12]

Webby Vanderquack

Webbigail "Webby" Vanderquack (voiced by Russi Taylor in the 1987 series, DuckTales the Movie, and DuckTales: Remastered; Kate Micucci in the 2017 series) is the granddaughter of Mrs. Beakley and friend of Huey, Dewey and Louie Duck who, like them, also refers to Scrooge as Uncle Scrooge.

In the 1987 series, she visually resembles April, May, and June from the Disney comics. She is characterized as younger than the nephews, despite being the same size. She is a tenderhearted girl who is always seen carrying her "Quacky-Patch" doll. Her love for animals is a recurring theme, be it penguins,[13] koalas,[14] dinosaurs,[15] or even the Yeti.[16] Webby is typically wearing a pink shirt and a large bow on her head, she is usually rather timid, and often has difficulties being accepted by the boys,[17] although she is also a capable Junior Woodchuck scout.[18]

In the 2017 series, Webby is around the boys' age, being an intellectual nerd and somewhat of an athletic genius, with her character wearing a pink shirt with a blue sleeveless sweater vest, a purple skirt, and a smaller bow on the side of her head. She is also an enthusiastic adventure fan and Clan McDuck historian who idolizes Scrooge and Donald as two of the greatest adventurers of all time.[19] Having spent most of her life sheltered from the outside world by her grandmother, Webby's curiosity drives her towards new experiences as the boys' arrival in McDuck Manor finally causes Beakley to allow her more freedom. While the boys find her slightly intimidating upon their first meeting, they soon accept her as a close friend and surrogate sister, as her optimism and energy often help encourage them.[19][17] In the series finale "The Last Adventure!", it is revealed that Webby is actually a clone of Scrooge originally named "April", and was created by F.O.W.L. to find the Papyrus of Binding for them until she was rescued and raised by Beakley. Upon learning of this, Scrooge happily accepts Webby as his daughter.[20]

Launchpad McQuack

Launchpad McQuack (voiced by Terry McGovern in the 1987 series, DuckTales the Movie, and DuckTales: Remastered; Beck Bennett in the 2017 series) is Scrooge's pilot, and an original DuckTales character. He is an able flyer, but is somewhat incompetent and rarely ever lands a plane safely, usually crashing them and walking away without injury.[21]

In the 1987 series, he uses the motto "If it has wings, I can crash it". He is introduced in the third part of the pilot episode,[22] but has been Scrooge's pilot since his early youth.[23] He is of Irish descent and his ancestor Rhubarb McQuack played an important role in the American Civil War,[24] and prior to the series Launchpad used to perform with his parents and sister as the stunt pilot team "The Flying McQuacks".[25] Aside from being a pilot, he is also a Junior Woodchuck scout leader.[26][18] His physical appearance is somewhat heroic, with his clothing being similar to that of early era pilots, including a leather cap with flight goggles, an aviation scarf, and a brown flight jacket with light brown pants. He later crossed over as a main character in Disney's Darkwing Duck.

In the 2017 series, Launchpad initially works for Scrooge as his limo driver, before being placed in charge of piloting various craft including the airplane "The Sunchaser", which becomes his signature vehicle. While his physical appearance is the same as his 1987 counterpart, he wears an outfit resembling that of private commercial pilots from the 40s/50s, including a baseball cap, a bomber jacket with a fur lined collar, a green undershirt, and white slacks. The goofy aspects of the character have been enhanced, often giving Launchpad the role of a comic relief. Like his 1987 incarnation, Launchpad is a Junior Woodchuck scout leader.[27][28] He is also an avid fan of the Darkwing Duck show-within-a-show (an allusion to his role in the original Darkwing Duck series), as evidenced by a bobblehead and a series of video tapes he owns as well as his watching the show with the family.[29][7][30][31]

Bentina Beakley

Bentina Beakley (voiced by Joan Gerber in the 1987 series and DuckTales the Movie; Wendee Lee in DuckTales: Remastered; Toks Olagundoye in the 2017 series), commonly named Mrs. Beakley by others, is the housekeeper and nanny of the household, and the maternal grandmother of Webby. Like her granddaughter, Beakley is an original DuckTales character.

In the 1987 series, she is shown as a gentle woman of upper middle age, sweet on her granddaughter, and typically wearing a purple dress and large white apron over her front and having two hairpins to maintain her hairstyle. She is hired by Scrooge as a nanny for the nephews in the third part of the pilot episode, not asking for any payment other than a shelter for herself and Webby.[22] She has been in the line of work for a long time and used to take care of the young Prince Greydrake,[32] and she has proven to be a capable opera singer.[33]

In the 2017 series, she is more down-to-earth than the other residents of McDuck Manor, often offering advice to Scrooge and the ducklings. She is much more resourceful than her 1987 counterpart and has worked for Scrooge for years before the series' start. Her backstory includes a career as Agent, later Director, 22 of the secret espionage organization S.H.U.S.H., through which she first met Scrooge and adopted his clone, April, as Webby Vanderquack, which led to her retiring as a spy.[34][35][20] Though her physical appearance is similar to her 1987 counterpart, with clothing similar to a nanny, and an apron around her waist, she takes offense at being treated as her employer's secretary, and has proven to possess impressive strength.[6] Her nationality has also been changed to British. After years of being overprotective of Webby, the nephews' arrival causes her to agree to let her be a part of Scrooge's adventures.[5] Donald and Della refer to her as "Mrs. B". Beakley and Donald did not get along at first; though when the kids are kidnapped by the Beagle Boys, they join forces and eventually gain respect for each other.[36] Initially, Beakley also dislikes Webby's friend Lena, regarding her as a bad influence, but after Lena saves her life she becomes more accepting of her.[37] Beakley's relationship with Scrooge's butler Duckworth is frosty, due to him criticizing her housework.[38]

Donald Duck

Donald Duck (voiced by Tony Anselmo) is a signature Disney character, originally debuting in the 1934 animated short "The Wise Little Hen", the nephew of Scrooge McDuck, the older twin brother of Della Duck, and the uncle of her sons Huey, Dewey, and Louie Duck.

In the 1987 series, his appearance was deliberately downplayed to give more focus to Scrooge and the boys.[39][40] After leaving his nephews with Scrooge to serve with the US Navy,[10][22] he makes occasional appearances while crossing paths with the rest of the Ducks during their adventures in the first season.[41][42][43][44][45][46] In the first-season finale, he returns to Duckburg to serve as best man at Scrooge's wedding to Millionara Vanderbucks. He is not seen in the later seasons so it is assumed that he was serving the navy full time or they didn't allow him to go ashore anymore. In the original show Donald wears clothing resembling his current attire but has some minor differences such as the accents on his sleeves are red, he has no bow tie and he wears a white navy sailor hat.

In the 2017 series, Donald's role is significantly increased to involve him in the adventures of Scrooge and his nephews, which included changing a part of his background with his uncle. In the show, he, Della, and Scrooge used to go for their adventures together, until Della's disappearance caused Donald to cut off contact with Scrooge; not speaking to him for the next decade and raising Della's children in her absence.[7] However, ten years later, as seen in the pilot episode, when Donald discovers his nephews' plan to be alone to cause some mischief with their houseboat, he reluctantly reunites with Scrooge to get him to babysit the boys.[5] After a mishap leads him to becoming involved in a new adventure with Scrooge, and losing his houseboat, Donald agrees to move his family to McDuck Manor while still trying to maintain his independence. In addition to increasing his appearance, the reboot also sees him wearing the black sailor suit that he wears in many of the comics upon which the show is based and has some features similar to his 1930s appearance, the white accents, the four buttons and the white sailor hat. Like in the comics, Donald's main character traits are his bad luck and short temper, though he is also trying to be a good parent figure to his nephews. In "Whatever Happened to Donald Duck?!", it is revealed that his anger stems from a fear that the world was out to get him and that no one could understand him. After Della had the boys and taking anger management counseling with Jones, he channeled his anger into protecting his nephews like they were his sons.[47] Additionally, Don Cheadle provides an alternate voice for Donald in "The Shadow War!"[48][30] and "Quack Pack!"[49][50] while Russi Taylor and Cristina Vee voice the young Donald in "Last Christmas!" and "The First Adventure!" respectively.[51][35] Chris Diamantopoulos also provided an alternate voice for Donald in "Moonvasion!"[52] when the sailor imitated a voice for a melon he found to keep himself from going insane.

Della Duck

Della Duck (voiced by Paget Brewster[53]) is the mother of Huey, Dewey and Louie Duck, the younger twin sister of their uncle Donald Duck, and the niece of Scrooge McDuck. While the character had previously appeared in Disney comics, the 2017 Ducktales series marks her first on-screen appearance in any official animated media.[54]

Before the events of the series, she used to go adventuring with her brother and uncle, and just like how Donald mostly wears a sailor shirt, Della typically sports a pilot's outfit.[5] Her sons grew up without knowing their mother and the first season sees the ducklings – initially Dewey and Webby - investigating her disappearance.[6][55][56] Thus; she only appears in photos and paintings throughout most of season one, making her first major appearance within the franchise in a series of flashback stories in issue #2 and #3 of the IDW published DuckTales comic book.[57][58] The triplets eventually find out that days before they hatched, Della - a passionate pilot and aspiring astronaut - took off with a spaceship built by Scrooge; the Spear of Selene. When she got caught in a cosmic storm, Scrooge tried to guide her through it, but contact with the Spear was lost. Donald, blaming Scrooge for Della's disappearance, cut off all contact with his uncle and raised the triplets by himself, while Scrooge spent years trying to find his niece until his board of directors cut the expenses.[7] In "The Shadow War!", she is shown to be alive and well, though stranded on the Moon and unable to contact Earth.[30] Her fate following the crash is seen in season two – having lost her left leg, she built a prosthetic replacement and she managed to survive using Gyro's Oxy-Chew gum, which provided her with oxygen, water and nutrients, along with her skills as a former Junior Woodchuck. Ten years after the crash she encountered the hidden Lunar civilization of the Moonlanders.[59] She is eventually able to return to Earth, unaware that the Moonlanders have declared war on Earth and that her spaceship has left Earth with Donald on board,[60] and is reunited with her family (except Donald, until the events of "Moonvasion!").[12][52] In the series finale, "The Last Adventure!", it is revealed that Bradford told Della about the Spear of Selene to undermine Scrooge.[20] As seen in "Last Christmas", Della and Donald lived with Scrooge at McDuck Manor during their childhood[51] and when annoyed with his sister, Donald used to insult Della by calling her "Dumbella", a reference to her name in the 1938 animated short Donald's Nephews.

Main antagonists

The Beagle Boys

The Beagle Boys are a large family of dogs who constantly try to rob banks or Scrooge's Money Bin and the show's most frequently appearing antagonists. They were originally created by Carl Barks in 1951, and given individual names, looks, and personalities for their DuckTales incarnation.

The 1987 series version of the Beagle Boys, introduced in the five-part pilot,[10] includes seven main Beagle Boys, with four of them appearing throughout the series:

In the 2017 series, Babyface, Bankjob, and Bugle belong to a previous generation of Beagles led by Grandpappy Beagle, as seen in "Last Christmas!", in which the trio make a minor, non-speaking appearance.[51]

The 1987 series included several minor Beagle Boys who do not appear in the 2017 series:

In the 2017 series, several groups of minor Beagle Boys (all voiced by Eric Bauza) appear in "The Beagle Birthday Massacre!":[80]

Later on in the 2017 series, additional members of the Beagle family (voiced by Eric Bauza) also appear:

Additionally, Beagle Boys appear in the IDW comic book adaption of the 2017 TV series:

Flintheart Glomgold

Flintheart Glomgold (voiced by Hal Smith in the 1987 series; Brian George in DuckTales: Remastered; Keith Ferguson in the 2017 series[61]) is Scrooge's archenemy, and the second richest duck in the world, created by Carl Barks for the 1956 story "The Second-Richest Duck". Early Barks sketches for Scrooge and Glomgold show remarkable similarities, especially in temperament. While the comics originally depicted Glomgold as a native of South Africa, due to the internationally criticized South African apartheid politics of the 1980s, Glomgold was rewritten to be of Scottish descent for DuckTales.[83]

In the 1987 series, he first appears in the second part of the pilot episode,[84] and typically comes up with schemes to earn money at Scrooge's expense to surpass Scrooge as the world's richest duck.

In addition to his DuckTales role, Glomgold also makes a cameo appearance in the Darkwing Duck episode "In Like Blunt", along with the Beagle Boys and Magica De Spell.[85]

In the 2017 series, debuting in "Woo-oo!",[5] he runs Glomgold Industries and makes his fortune through personal branding; preferring to develop his products as cheaply as possible. In this series, Glomgold is characterized as comically unhinged, to the point where other characters do not take his schemes seriously. Additionally, his aversion towards Scrooge is both personal and professional, as he does not shy away from attempting to kill him and willingly shows up at his wake to celebrate his death.[86] In "The Ballad of Duke Baloney!", after recovering from amnesia caused by the events of "The Shadow War!",[30] it is revealed that Glomgold's birth name was "Duke Baloney", and that he was born and raised in South Africa. After meeting Scrooge, who refused to pay him properly for polishing his shoes in an attempt to teach him self-reliance and hard work, he changed his name to "Flintheart Glomgold" and swore to beat Scrooge in every way possible, including becoming the world's richest duck and proving himself as "the most Scottish" between them. After Glomgold gets his memory back, he makes a bet with Scrooge and, throughout season two, they compete to become the richest duck in the world by the end of the year, with the winner getting the loser's company.[87] In "GlomTales!", Glomgold forms an alliance with several of Scrooge's greatest enemies and Louie in a last ditch effort to win the bet. He seemingly wins after Louie convinces the other villains to pool their resources with Glomgold's, but he ends up losing everything to Louie because "Flintheart Glomgold" is not his real name and he signed a contract stating everything would revert to his partner, Louie, forcing him to escape from the angry villains after they turn on him.[72] Despite what happened, he returns in "Moonvasion!" to help Scrooge defeat the Moonlanders with one of his insane schemes since General Lunaris had a counter for all of Scrooge's plans, and trick him into returning his company to him.[52]

The name "Duke Baloney" is derived from "the Duke of Baloni", a one-time-only character created by Carl Barks three years prior to Glomgold, and the first character described by Barks as "the second-richest duck in the world".[88]

Magica De Spell

Magica De Spell (voiced by June Foray in the 1987 series and DuckTales: Remastered; Catherine Tate in the 2017 series[89]) is a powerful Italian sorceress, created by Carl Barks in 1961, and constantly after Scrooge's Number One Dime. Magica is convinced that the dime has magic powers that will help her to gain world domination.

In the 1987 series, she makes her first appearance in "Send in the Clones",[67] living on a distant island inside a volcano in the shape of her head. She speaks with an Eastern European accent, and is often assisted by her brother Poe, who was trapped in the shape of a non-anthropomorphic raven.[67][90][91] While she mostly appeared in the show's first season, she makes one final appearance in the season three episode, "The Unbreakable Bin".[92]

In the 2017 series, she is "a vile sorceress with a mysterious, ancient grudge against Clan McDuck" who was trapped in a shadowy form.[30] Throughout season one, Magica pressures her "niece" Lena into gaining the Ducks’ trust so she can steal the Number One Dime and regain her corporeal form.[80][37][93] When Lena eventually attempts to come clean, Magica grows strong enough from an approaching eclipse to possess Lena's body and prevent her from doing so.[94] Magica's past is revealed in the season's finale "The Shadow War!": Fifteen years ago, Scrooge sealed her physical form in a pocket dimension within his Number One Dime. At the last second though, she used a spell to create Lena from a part of her shadow, thus remaining in contact with the outside world.[30] In the present, empowered by the eclipse, Magica regains her physical form and traps Scrooge in his Number One Dime while exacting her revenge by attacking Duckburg. After a climactic battle in Scrooge's Money Bin, Magica is defeated by the Ducks and rendered powerless, forcing her to escape.[30] In "A Nightmare on Killmotor Hill!", she returns to haunt Lena and the kids in their dreams using a telepathic helmet as Lena has part of her powers, but was ultimately foiled after Lena destroys her helmet.[95] In "GlomTales!", while forced to work as a birthday party magician, Magica joins Glomgold's alliance to destroy Scrooge and his family, only to be defeated once again.[72] In "The Phantom and the Sorceress", Webby, Lena, and Violet come to Magica for help in training Lena to use her magic to stop the Phantom Blot, which Magica reluctantly agreed to due to his vendetta against her for destroying his village. Once the Phantom Blot was defeated, Magica regained her powers, but is driven off by Lena.[96] In "The Life and Crimes of Scrooge McDuck!", it is revealed that she and Poe once ruled a village together until they first encountered and fought Scrooge and she accidentally turned Poe into a raven, who flew off after Scrooge refused to stop him. Magica tried to find Poe, but was unable to and swore revenge against Scrooge.[73]

Mark Beaks

Mark Beaks (voiced by Josh Brener[61]) is an African grey parrot[97] who is a young tech industry billionaire, the founder and CEO of Waddle, and an exclusive character to the 2017 series. He cares more about his own image and popularity than his fortune, going to great lengths to gain as many followers on social media, keeping several back-up phones on hand if any one of them gets destroyed,[98] and stealing others' ideas and passing them off as his own.[99] Debuting in "The Infernal Internship of Mark Beaks!", he takes on Huey and Dewey as interns while Scrooge and Glomgold get annoyed with their new competitor.[98] In "Beware the B.U.D.D.Y. System!", Gizmoduck saves Beaks' life when his autonomous car system, B.U.D.D.Y. (Beaks Unmanned Driver Drone Yay), malfunctions.[29] In "Who Is Gizmoduck?!", he hires Gizmoduck to work for Waddle. Growing jealous of the new star's rising popularity, however, he decides to wear the Gizmosuit himself, but ends up causing mayhem before he is stopped by Fenton.[100] In "The Dangerous Chemistry of Gandra Dee!", he uses Gandra Dee as a spy to get close to Gizmoduck and turn himself into a Hulk-like monster. Dubbing himself "Mega-Beaks", he severely damages Gyro's lab and the Gizmosuit, kidnaps Huey and Webby, and attacks his own company before being confronted by Fenton and Gandra, who manage to defeat him and turn him back to normal.[101] In "Happy Birthday, Doofus Drake!", Beaks found and re-purposed an android he dubbed B.O.Y.D. (Beaks Optimistic Youth Droid) to pose as his son to attend Doofus Drake's birthday party. Louie exposes Beaks' deception, leading Doofus to drop him into his "Honey Bin".[102][103] In "GlomTales!", Beaks joins Glomgold's alliance to destroy Scrooge and his family, though the alliance is foiled in the end.[72] In "Louie's Eleven!", he attempts to steal his mother Emma Glamour's phone, only to be thwarted by Donald and Daisy.[104] As of "Beaks in the Shell!", his popularity has plummeted and he attempted to steal gizmo-tech once more, only to be foiled.[99]
He has been described by the producers as "Gizmoduck's Lex Luthor".[105]

General Lunaris

General Lunaris (voiced by Lance Reddick) is a high-ranking Moonlander and an exclusive character to the 2017 series. In season two, he encounters Della during her decade on the Moon.[59] While initially appearing kind and understanding, he is secretly resentful of the Earth due to his father's fear of the planet and the Moon literally living in the Earth's shadow, and intends to one day assert the Moon's dominance over Earth's people. After Della fixes the Spear of Selene and returns to Earth, Lunaris deceives his people into thinking that Della is their enemy, and declares war on Earth.[60] When Donald accidentally ends up on the Moon, Lunaris takes him captive.[12] While overseeing preparations for the invasion, Lunaris' second-in-command Penumbra works against him to foil his plans, but he catches onto her quickly and stops her before she can destroy his rocket fleet. Though he nearly catches Donald, the determined duck manages to escape to Earth in Lunaris' prototype rocket, leading the Moonlander to believe he could not have survived.[47] In the season's finale, "Moonvasion!", Lunaris launches his invasion while developing countermeasures for any plan Scrooge could devise and using a planetary engine to force the Earth to revolve around the Moon. However, due to an unpredictable scheme conducted by Glomgold, he is defeated by the Ducks and Penumbra, leaving his engine adrift in Earth's orbit.[52]

While the Moonlanders' civilization was created for the 2017 series, it is inspired by the Moon Stage of the DuckTales and DuckTales: Remastered video games.[106] The soundtrack of the Moon Stage is also used in several of the show's Moon-based scenes – most notably as a lullaby sung by Della in the episode "Whatever Happened to Della Duck?!"[59] and "Moonvasion!" alongside Louie, who reveals Donald learned the song and sung it to the triplets while Della was missing.[52]

F.O.W.L.

F.O.W.L., the Fiendish Organization for World Larceny, is a global criminal organization. Inspired by the terrorist organization S.P.E.C.T.R.E. from Ian Fleming's James Bond novels, F.O.W.L. is first introduced in the 1987 DuckTales episode, "Double-O-Duck" (where the "F" stood for "Foreign" instead), when they plotted to destroy all the world's money; leading the Duckburg Intelligence Agency to ask Launchpad to infiltrate their ranks due to his strong resemblance to one of their agents. Their members included Dr. Nogood, Odd-Duck, Bruno Von Beak, and Feathers Galore.[107] F.O.W.L. was later reworked for the Darkwing Duck animated series, appearing as recurring antagonists opposed by the spy agency S.H.U.S.H.[108]

In the 2017 series, F.O.W.L. was founded in the 1960s by Bradford Buzzard and Black Heron after S.H.U.S.H. rejected Bradford's proposal to rein in the world's chaos by taking it over.[35] The organization is introduced during a flashback to the 1960s, when Mrs. Beakley (then known as Agent 22), teams up with Scrooge as part of a S.H.U.S.H. assignment to prevent F.O.W.L. from obtaining the gummiberry juice potion needed to create an army of super soldiers.[34] Following the Moonlander invasion, F.O.W.L. decides that Scrooge and his family are too much of a risk to their organization and the world, and starts planning to eliminate them.[52] Throughout season three, they race against the Ducks to find several lost artifacts after they discovered the legendary explorer Isabella Finch's journal.[28][109][110][111] Their membership is as follows:

Supporting characters

Appearing in both series

Duckworth

Duckworth (voiced by Chuck McCann in the 1987 series, DuckTales the Movie, and DuckTales: Remastered; David Kaye in the 2017 series) is Scrooge's longtime, no-nonsense butler, the jack-of-all-trades of McDuck Manor, and an important member of Scrooge's staff, created for the DuckTales series. Despite having "Duck" in his name, he is actually an anthropomorphic dog.

In the 1987 series, he worked for Scrooge even before the nephews moved in, and was Scrooge's only household servant until the hiring of Mrs. Beakley. He first appears in the first part of the pilot episode,[10] and appears as a supporting character throughout the series, serving both as butler and chauffeur. He plays a bigger part in the episode "Duckworth's Revolt", where he and the nephews get abducted by aliens where he explained the difference between employment and slavery to their fellow prisoners,[123] and in the episode-segment "Take Me Out of the Ballgame" where he acts as the temporary coach of the Junior Woodchuck baseball team.[74]

In the 2017 series, he died years prior to the series' beginning and was mentioned to be the only one who throws Scrooge parties. After accidentally being summoned back to the world of the living by Black Arts Beagle in "McMystery at McDuck McManor!",[38] he rescues Scrooge from Black Arts, Glomgold, Mark Beaks, and Ma Beagle by ejecting them in the form of a shadowy demon, later nicknamed "Demonworth".[124] His ghost has since returned to his duties as Scrooge's faithful butler.[38][125][51][124][72][52][104][35][20]

Gyro Gearloose

Gyro Gearloose (voiced by Hal Smith in the 1987 series; Chris Edgerly in DuckTales: Remastered; Jim Rash in the 2017 series[61]) is a skilled inventor, originally created by Carl Barks in 1952. His inventions often help drive an episode's plot, as they do not always work as designed.

In the 1987 series, he is characterized as a relatively easy-going country bumpkin with super-intellect and everlasting optimism, even when his inventions backfire, but often stretches himself thin with work and feels underappreciated.

In the 2017 series, he is characterized drastically different, being irritable and eccentric, and has a younger appearance than his original counterpart.[6] He works as Scrooge's head of research and development, and for half of the first season, is Fenton's boss.[29][100] In spite of his arrogance and stubbornness, he has good intentions, even when he and his inventions are wildly misunderstood.[30][125][52] In the episode "Astro B.O.Y.D.", his sour personality is later revealed to stem from being manipulated and abused by his mentor, Dr. Akita, and his creation 2-BO's apparent malfunctions. Upon discovering that 2-BO's incident was not his fault and defeating Akita, Gyro resolves to be a better boss to Fenton.[103] Gyro later appeared in "The Last Adventure!" he joined the Ducks in foiling F.O.W.L's plan to rid the world of adventuring.[20]

Doofus Drake

Doofus Drake (voiced by Brian Cummings in the 1987 series; John Gemberling in the 2017 series) is an acquaintance of Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and an original DuckTales character.

In the 1987 series, he was friends with the boys and Launchpad. He was often seen with the boys during their Junior Woodchuck events, and was also seen with Launchpad, who referred to him as his "little buddy".[citation needed]

In the 2017 series, he is a selfish, insane, sociopathic rich kid after inheriting a fortune from his late grandmother, "Gummeemama" Francis Drake. He forces his parents to work as his servants, invites other people over to hurt them, and breaks things for his amusement.[27][124] In "Happy Birthday, Doofus Drake!", he invites several people to his birthday party and attempts to take Goldie as his replacement grandmother. However, Louie saves her by reprogramming the android B.O.Y.D. to serve as his brother, who transfers half of Doofus' inheritance to his parents' account, freeing them from his servitude and allowing them to ground him.[102] In "The Life and Crimes of Scrooge McDuck!", Doofus attempts to seek revenge by taking Louie and Scrooge to karmic court and taking Scrooge's fortune away to compensate his enemies. However, Louie makes amends with Doofus, who stands down.[73]

Mrs. Featherby / Mrs. Quackfaster

Mrs. Featherby (1987) or Mrs. Emily Quackfaster (2017) (voiced alternately by Tress MacNeille, Joan Gerber, Susan Blu, and June Foray in the 1987 series; June Foray in DuckTales the Movie; Susanne Blakeslee in the 2017 series), named Miss Quackfaster in the original comic books, was created by Barks in 1961, as Scrooge's faithful secretary.

In the 1987 series, she is Scrooge's mild-mannered and capable, albeit gossipy, secretary.[126][15][64] "Super DuckTales" (non-speaking),[70][127][128][129]

In the 2017 series, debuting in "The Great Dime Chase!", she is the archivist of Scrooge's personal archive, having served him for the last 50 years. Dedicated to the point of obsession, she is perfectly willing to terrorize the ducklings if they refuse to heed her bizarre set of rules.[6] In the second season, she is seen defending the archive from harpies,[130] attending Scrooge's fake funeral,[86] working part-time at Duckburg's public library,[31] conducting tours at Fort Duckburg,[131] and assisting Scrooge in repelling the Moonlander invasion.[52]

Goldie O'Gilt

Goldie O'Gilt, a.k.a. Glittering Goldie (voiced by Joan Gerber in the 1987 series; Allison Janney in the 2017 series[61]) is Scrooge's longtime love interest and an original Carl Barks character from the 1952 comic book story "Back to the Klondike". The producers of the 2017 series has called her the Catwoman to Scrooge's Batman.[61]

In the 1987 series, she first appears in the episode based on and named after the Barks story, where her origins as a music hall singer in Dawson is shown.[132] She reappears in the episodes "Scroogerello", as a figment of Scrooge's dream,[68] "'Till Nephews Do Us Part", interrupting Scrooge's wedding to Millionara Vanderbucks,[46] and "Ducky Mountain High", where Scrooge and Glomgold fight for Goldie's property, only to see Goldie walking out on top.[79]

In the 2017 series, she first appears in "The Golden Lagoon of White Agony Plains!", as Scrooge's former girlfriend, partner, and rival; out-smarting both him and Glomgold. Alongside Scrooge, she took part in the Klondike Gold Rush in the late 19th century, and explains her advanced age by claiming to have found "a fountain of youth in Ronguay". While she admittingly "always loved gold more than she loved Scrooge", the pair's mutual affection and respect runs deep.[4] In the second season, she first makes a non-speaking appearance at the first annual McDuck Enterprises Christmas party,[51] before returning in a major role in a flashback depicted in "The Outlaw Scrooge McDuck!", in which she joins forces with Scrooge, a time-traveling Gyro, and Fenton's ancestor Sheriff Marshall Cabrera against John D. Rockerduck.[116] In "Happy Birthday, Doofus Drake!", she reappears in the present day after Louie invites her to McDuck Manor to help him become a better con artist, before getting caught up in a scheme to con Doofus Drake out of several million dollars in party favors. Following a series of double-crosses and being held hostage by Doofus, Goldie eventually gets what she came for, but keeps a picture of Louie to remember him by.[102] In "The Forbidden Fountain of the Foreverglades!", she competes with Scrooge to find the eponymous fountain, only to rekindle her romance with him.[117] She was later captured by F.O.W.L. in "The Last Adventure!" but was rescued by the Ducks.[20]

Ludwig Von Drake

Ludwig Von Drake (voiced by Corey Burton) is an established Disney character, appearing in several Disney animation productions beginning in 1961.[133] Often referred to as Donald's uncle, he is usually described as scientist and self-proclaimed universal expert.

In the 1987 series, he only makes one appearance, as a psychiatrist treating Launchpad in "The Golden Fleecing".[134]

In the 2017 series, he is an old colleague of Scrooge's,[135] and debuts in "From the Confidential Case Files of Agent 22!", appearing in a flashback segment set in 1968 as the resourceful director of international spy organization S.H.U.S.H.[136][34][35] In the present day, Von Drake's children Corvus, Anya, and Klara have taken over some of his duties, including the management of his Arctic "doomsday vault" (inspired by the Svalbard Global Seed Vault[137]), established in case of worldwide disaster.[135] As of the series finale, "The Last Adventure!", Von Drake was captured by F.O.W.L. and forced to help them with their plans, which he claims kept him busy enough to live into the present. He is eventually rescued by the Ducks amidst their final battle with F.O.W.L.[20]

S.H.U.S.H. was first introduced, albeit without Von Drake, as a recurring organization in the Darkwing Duck animated series.[108]

Gladstone Gander

Gladstone Gander (voiced by Rob Paulsen in the 1987 series; Paul F. Tompkins in the 2017 series[61]) is Donald's cousin, debuting in Carl Barks' "Wintertime Wager" from 1948. Much to his relatives' annoyance, he is unfailingly lucky.

In the 1987 series, he foremost appears in "Dime Enough for Luck", where Magica tries to use his good luck to steal Scrooge's Number One Dime,[138] but he is also seen bidding at an auction in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. McDuck"[139] and he makes non-speaking cameo appearances in "Sweet Duck of Youth"[140] and "'Till Nephews Do Us Part".[46]

In the 2017 series, he is introduced in "The House of the Lucky Gander!", living in the Macau-like city Macaw where he is a prisoner of Toad Liu Hai until Scrooge, Donald, and the kids manage to free him.[141] In "The Shadow War", he is shown to have returned to Duckburg where his shadow is stolen by Magica De Spell.[30] He later appears in "Treasure of the Found Lamp!", during the nephews' hunt to reclaim D'jinn's lamp,[124] and "Moonvasion!", where he teams up with his cousin, Fethry, to rescue Donald, Della, and the kids before taking them back to Duckburg to help Scrooge stop the Moonlanders.[52] He makes a minor appearance in "The Phantom and the Sorceress!" after the Phantom Blot steals his luck and seeks out Webby, Lena, and Violet's help to regain it.[96] He later made an appearance in "The Last Adventure" where he participated at Webby's birthday party and was seen with his family when Bradford was defeated.[20]

Downy and Fergus McDuck

Downy and Fergus McDuck (voiced by June Foray and Don Messick in the 1987 series; Ashley Jensen and Graham McTavish in the 2017 series, respectively) are Scrooge's parents. While the mother and father of Scrooge occasionally have appeared or been referred to in the comics, the names Downy and Fergus were created for Don Rosa's 12-part comic book series "The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck".[142]

In the 1987 series, Scrooge's parents are simply referred to as "MacMama" and "MacPapa", and they appear in flashbacks in the episode "Once Upon a Dime",[2] where they are shown living as farmers in a small cottage. They are also alluded to in the episode "The Curse of Castle McDuck", which also mentioned the family castle being built by Scrooge's great-great-grandfather Silas McDuck, a character who makes his only appearance here.[143]

Initially in the 2017 series, Downy and Fergus only appear in portraits at McDuck Manor,[5] after which they make their proper debut in "The Secret(s) of Castle McDuck!".[56] Due to Scrooge using magical druid stones to rebuild their ancestral castle so his parents could move back in there, Downy and Fergus have become immortal, and the castle is only accessible to the rest of the world once every five years. Scrooge and Fergus' relationship is shown to be a conflicted one, while Downy happily greets her visiting family.[111]

Along with Scrooge's parents, the 2017 series pilot also refers to several additional members of Clan McDuck and the Duck family, including Scrooge's grandfather Dingus and sister Matilda, and Donald's parents Hortense (sister of Scrooge and Matilda) and Quackmore.[5] Several additional ancestors are referred to in "The Secret(s) of Castle McDuck!",[56] and further evolved upon in the tie-in book "DuckTales: Solving Mysteries and Rewriting History!”.[136] Their physical appearances and much of their character traits are taken from "The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck" and related work.

Bubba the Caveduck

Bubba the Caveduck (voiced by Frank Welker in the 1987 series and DuckTales: Remastered; Dee Bradley Baker in the 2017 series) is a young caveduck that Scrooge adopts. The character was originally pitched by Tad Stones as "Bubbaduck".[144][145]

In the 1987 series, he first appears in the five-part episode "Time Is Money", which opens season two.[146] He and his pet Triceratops Tootsie arrive in the present after hiding in Gyro's time-machine, the Millennium Shortcut, and Bubba quickly befriends Huey, Dewey and Louie. To accommodate Bubba, Scrooge builds a replica of his original habitat on the McDuck Manor property, and eventually he starts attending the same school class as Webby and the boys.[147]

In the 2017 series, Bubba and Tootsie are introduced in "Timephoon", when Louie's latest get-rich-quick scheme involving Gyro's Time Tub causes historical people to appear in the present while sending his family to different time periods. Bubba proves to be highly adaptive, immediately adjusting to life in the future, and is implied to be the original ancestor of Clan McDuck. Meanwhile, Tootsie is re-imagined as an aggressive young dinosaur with no relationship with Bubba due to being from an earlier time period than him.[148]

Fenton Crackshell (-Cabrera) / Gizmoduck

Fenton Crackshell (1987) or Fenton Crackshell-Cabrera (2017) (voiced by Hamilton Camp in the 1987 series; Eric Bauza in DuckTales: Remastered; Lin-Manuel Miranda in the 2017 series) is an everyday office clerk who accidentally becomes the robotic superhero Gizmoduck. The Gizmoduck character was originally pitched by Tad Stones as "Roboduck" (inspired by the film RoboCop), alongside "Bubbaduck" (which evolved into Bubba the Caveduck) and "Spaceduck" (who never made it to the show), and made his debut in the second season.[144][145]

In the 1987 series, he doubles as Scrooge's accountant (as himself) and his personal bodyguard (as Gizmoduck), hired by Scrooge in the five-part story "Super DuckTales".[70][149] He can count at a blazing speed, but he generally is incompetent with almost everything else. Furthermore, his regular dogged attempts to rectify his mistakes tends to make things worse until he ultimately succeeds. He exhibits a remarkably different personality in his role as Gizmoduck (a dual identity only known to Scrooge and Fenton's mother), as his high-powered suit gives him courage to make daring decisions and act as a strong leader and a hero. Aside from Fenton, other characters temporarily use the Gizmosuit, such as Launchpad,[150] M'Ma,[151] the boys, and Webby.[152] Gizmoduck (Fenton) also makes a few guest appearances in Darkwing Duck.[153][154][155][156][157]

In the 2017 series, he is re-imagined as a Latin-American intern and semi-competent scientist working under Gyro,[158] and debuts in "Beware the B.U.D.D.Y. System!".[29] While the character remains similar to the 1980s version, this version is more optimistic. After receiving the Gizmosuit, Fenton is hired by Scrooge to guard Duckburg.[100][86][101][52] In "Astro B.O.Y.D.!", Fenton is promoted to full-time and unofficially made a doctor.[103] In "The Last Adventure!", he joined the ducks in foiling F.O.W.L's plan to rid the world of adventuring and also reunited with Gandra, the latter being held prisoner by F.O.W.L.[20]

M'Ma Crackshell / M'Ma Cabrera

M'Ma Crackshell (1987) or M'Ma Cabrera (2017) (voiced by Kathleen Freeman in the 1987 series; Selenis Leyva in the 2017 series) is Fenton's mother.

In the 1987 series, she is a couch potato who spends most of her time in her trailer home watching soap operas in her bathrobe and her hair constantly in curlers, and debuts alongside her son in the five-part story "Super DuckTales".[70][63][159] She then returns to play bigger parts in "My Mother the Psychic", when she gains the ability to foresee the future,[160] "Blue Collar Scrooge", when she begins to date an amnesiac Scrooge,[127] "The Duck Who Knew Too Much", when she takes on the Gizmosuit and saves Fenton from international spies,[151] and "New Gizmo-Kids on the Block", when she accidentally shrinks the Gizmosuit.[152] Additionally, she makes minor appearances in "The Big Flub" and "A Case of Mistaken Secret Identity".[161][150]

In the 2017 series, she is re-imagined as a no-nonsense Latina detective for the Duckburg Police Department.[162] While she lives an active lifestyle and is deeply concerned with her son's well-being, she is also a devoted telenovela fan, as seen in her debut in "Who Is Gizmoduck?!".[100] She makes non-speaking appearances in "The Shadow War!", "Storkules in Duckburg!" and "Louie's Eleven!", when she is seen foiling crimes.[30][130][104] She also has a minor speaking role in "The Dangerous Chemistry of Gandra Dee!", when she gives her son dating advice,[101] and a major role in "Moonvasion!", when she assists Scrooge in repelling the Moonlander invasion alongside her son, to whom she reveals that she always knew about his secret identity since she is a detective and his mother.[52] In "Beaks in the Shell!", she learns of Fenton's relationship with Gandra, and accepts her warmly.[99]

Gandra Dee

Gandra Dee (voiced by Miriam Flynn in the 1987 series; Jameela Jamil in the 2017 series[163]) is Fenton's love-interest.

In the 1987 series, she was introduced as a minor character in the five-part episode "Super DuckTales", which ended with her and Fenton's first date.[70][63][159] Gandra reappears in "Metal Attraction", when she and Fenton have become a couple amidst the robot Robotica's attempts to kill her after falling in love with Fenton as Gizmoduck;[164] "The Big Flub", when she stars in a series of commercials directed by Fenton so he can get promoted;[161] and "The Duck Who Knew Too Much", when she and Fenton accidentally become involved with international spies while on vacation.[151]

In the 2017 series, she is re-imagined as a rebel scientist. Debuting in "The Dangerous Chemistry of Gandra Dee!", she meets Fenton at a tech store and they go on a date, but she is soon revealed to be a spy for Mark Beaks. While initially assisting Beaks, she turns on him when he endangers Huey and Webby and helps Fenton stop him before making a stealthy exit.[101] She is later revealed to be a cyborg after experimenting on herself and an agent of F.O.W.L.[52][109][110] Despite this, she maintained her relationship with Fenton and eventually decided to leave F.O.W.L., only to be caught by Bradford and imprisoned in the Library of Alexandria.[99] She was later rescued by Fenton and the Ducks.[20]

Dijon / Faris D'jinn

Dijon (1987) or Faris D'jinn (2017) (voiced by Richard Libertini in the 1987 series and DuckTales the Movie; Omid Abtahi in the 2017 series[165]) is a Middle Eastern acquaintance of the Ducks, created for DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp.

In the 1987 series, Dijon debuted in the film as an inept thief with kleptomania, working for the wizard Merlock. Thereafter, he returns for three of the last five episodes of the series. In the episode "Attack of the Metal Mites", he is seen working for Glomgold,[166] and in the two-part series finale "The Golden Goose", he is reunited with his estranged brother, Poupon.[167][168]

In the 2017 series, he is re-imagined as a jackal and a fierce adventurer named Faris D'jinn – an ally of Scrooge, noted for being the descendant of an actual genie. He debuts in "Treasure of the Found Lamp!", when he looks for his lost lamp that was passed between Gladstone, Doofus, and Ma Beagle after it was part of a garage sale overseen by Duckworth's ghost.[124] During the Moonlander invasion, Djinn was seen with Amunet and the living mummies fighting the Moonlanders in Egypt.[52]

Gene the Genie

Gene the Genie (voiced by Rip Taylor in DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp; Jaleel White in the 2017 series) is the genie of the titular lamp. As such, he is targeted by the evil sorcerer, Merlock, but eventually ends up becoming a real boy and befriends the kids of McDuck Manor.

In the 2017 series, Gene was trapped in the Lost Lamp of Collie Baba in the year 1990. In "Quack Pack!", amidst the Ducks' search for the lamp, Donald wished for a normal family life, which Gene obliged by erasing the Ducks' memories and sending them into a 1990s sitcom. While the Ducks went through the motions of an episode plotline, Gene made "guest appearances" in commercials and as a photographer. The Ducks eventually realized what happened to them and demand Gene send them back, but he reveals that only Donald can undo the wish since he was the one who made it. Despite Donald initially refusing to do so and the wish fighting to maintain itself when the Ducks try to escape, Donald is convinced to use his second wish to undo the first, and uses his last wish for a framed family photo.[169][50] Following this, Gene remains behind in his treasure cavern before he is kidnapped by F.O.W.L. and eventually rescued by the Ducks.[109][20]

Poe De Spell

Poe De Spell (voiced by Frank Welker[3] in the 1987 series; Martin Freeman[170] in the 2017 series) is Magica's brother and familiar, always seen in the shape of a non-anthropomorphic raven, and assisting her in three episodes.[67][90][91] In Poe's debut episode, "Send in the Clones", it is stated that he was somehow permanently transformed into a raven and cannot be turned back by conventional magic.[67] His name is a reference to author Edgar Allan Poe, and Poe often ends his stanzas with the word "nevermore", quoting the poem "The Raven".[90]

Poe appears in a flashback in the 2017 series episode "The Life and Crimes of Scrooge McDuck!" Unlike his 1987 counterpart, Poe is initially presented as an anthropomorphic duck instead of a raven and was Magica's twin brother. Together with her, Poe ruled over a small village and terrorized its people, keeping Magica in check and making sure she did not go overboard with her magic. During a battle with the De Spells, Scrooge riled up Magica, causing her to ignore her brother's warnings and accidentally transform Poe into a non-verbal, non-anthropomorphic raven. Despite Magica begging for help, Scrooge allowed Poe to fly out of a broken window, never to be seen again. A grieving Magica swore vengeance against Scrooge and merged Poe's discarded amulet with her own to form her staff.[73]

Exclusive to the 1987 series

Exclusive to the 2017 series

While the trio is a 2017 series creation based on Roman hero Hercules, the Moon goddess Selene, and the Greek deity Zeus, the island of Ithaquack (based on Homer's Ithaca) first appeared in the 1987 series.[42]

Minor characters

Appearing in both series

Exclusive to the 1987 series

Exclusive to the 2017 series

Spin-off media characters

List of guest characters

In the 1987 series

In the 2017 series

References

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  129. ^ a b "Yuppy Ducks". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 88. 1989-11-13.
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  141. ^ a b "The House of the Lucky Gander!". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 6. 2017-10-14.
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  160. ^ a b "My Mother the Psychic". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 80. September 22, 1989.
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  184. ^ "DuckTales Episode Title: (#202) "The Depths of Cousin Fethry!"".
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  186. ^ DuckTales #20 (IDW Publishing, April 2019)
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  201. ^ a b c d e f g "The Uncrashable Hindentanic". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 57. 1987-12-08.
  202. ^ a b c "Time is Money (Part 3): Bubba Trubba". DuckTales. Season 2. Episode 68. 1988-11-24.
  203. ^ a b c "The Masked Mallard". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 92. 1989-11-17.
  204. ^ "The Quiverwing Quack". Darkwing Duck. Season 1 (Disney Afternoon). Episode 61. 1992-05-16.
  205. ^ "Paint Misbehavin'". Darkwing Duck. Season 3. Episode 85. 1992-10-24.
  206. ^ "Treasure of the Golden Suns (Part 5): Too Much of a Gold Thing". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 5. 1987-09-18.
  207. ^ a b c "Ducky Horror Picture Show". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 64. 1987-12-31.
  208. ^ a b "Attack of the Fifty-Foot Webby". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 91. 1989-11-16.
  209. ^ a b "Duckman of Aquatraz". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 15. 1987-10-02.
  210. ^ a b c d "Sir Gyro de Gearloose". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 17. 1987-10-06.
  211. ^ a b c "Hotel Strangeduck". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 13. 1987-09-30.
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  215. ^ "Catch as Cash Can (Part 4): Working for Scales". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 39. 1987-11-05.
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  236. ^ a b c "Master of the Djinni". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 12. 1987-09-29.
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  239. ^ "Micro Ducks from Outer Space". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 32. 1987-10-27.
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  244. ^ a b c "The Right Duck". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 46. 1987-11-23.
  245. ^ a b "Luck o' the Ducks". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 49. 1987-11-26.
  246. ^ a b "Time is Money (Part 2): The Duck Who Would Be King". DuckTales. Season 2. Episode 67. 1988-11-24.
  247. ^ a b "Bubbeo and Juliet". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 78. 1989-09-20.
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  249. ^ "Scrooge's Last Adventure". DuckTales. Season 4. Episode 98. 1990-11-17.
  250. ^ a b "The Impossible Summit of Mt. Neverrest!". DuckTales. Season 1. Episode 9. 2017-12-02.
  251. ^ a b c d "The Lost Harp of Mervana!". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 51. 2020-04-18.
  252. ^ a b c d "The Rumble for Ragnarok!". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 54. 2020-05-09.
  253. ^ a b c d "The Trickening!". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 57. 2020-10-05.
  254. ^ "How Santa Stole Christmas!". DuckTales. Season 3. Episode 65. 2020-11-30.

External links