Sabrina: The Animated Series
Sabrina: The Animated Series is an American animated television series based on the Archie Comics series Sabrina the Teenage Witch. Produced by Savage Studios Ltd. and Hartbreak Films in association with DIC Productions, L.P., the series is an animated prequel of the 1996–2003 live-action series Sabrina the Teenage Witch.
The series aired on ABC and UPN from September 6 to November 19, 1999. Sixty-five episodes were produced.
Premise
Unlike previous incarnations, Sabrina Spellman in this series is depicted as a half witch and half mortal attending school. As in the original comic series, Sabrina lives with her paternal witch aunts, Hilda Spellman and Zelda Spellman, and her loud-mouthed black cat Salem Saberhagen, all of whom advise Sabrina on the use of several magics. Most episodes center on the typical issues of middle school, along with those that emanated from Sabrina's inexperience with or misuse of several magic, witchcraft and extremely powerful and complex spells. Sabrina and her best friend Chloe Flan would often use magic for all types of perceived emergencies, ranging from trying to fit into skinny new clothes to turning Sabrina's crush Harvey into a superhero. By the end of every episode, Sabrina's innate magical abilities would unintentionally backfire and she would learn that using magic usually is not the solution to her everyday issues.Characters
Main
- Sabrina Spellman is a witch-mortal hybrid who lives in a comfortable house with her two aunts, Hilda and Zelda, and her black pet cat, Salem, in the town of Greendale. Sabrina won't become magically empowered until she turns sixteen, but she is still able to borrow spells from Hilda and Zelda using a magical "Spooky Jar," which she often does. However, she usually finds that her meddling turns situations from bad to worse. Sabrina's friend Chloe is aware of her magic, but Harvey Kinkle, another friend and her romantic interest, is not. Whenever she casts a spell, the magic is made in pink and yellow. Emily Hart is Melissa Joan Hart's real-life sister who played Sabrina's cousin Amanda in several episodes of the Sabrina the Teenage Witch TV series.
- Hilda Spellman and Zelda Spellman : While Hilda suggests they bend the rules sometime, and use magic to get ahead, Zelda is determined to say "No" right up until the moment she gives up. Hilda is more carefree and reckless than her cautious sister, Zelda, and, although they do butt heads sometimes, they are still sisters. In this series and Sabrina's Secret Life, Hilda and Zelda both have the appearance of teenagers, as this was the punishment they received from Enchantra for "abusing magic" in the past. Whenever Zelda casts a spell, the magic is always made in blue and yellow. When Hilda casts a spell, the magic is made in purple and yellow. Melissa Joan Hart is best known for playing Sabrina in the Showtime film adaptation and the ABC series.
- Salem Saberhagen knows the right buttons to push to talk Sabrina into just about anything, and he does it guiltlessly—until he's caught. Salem was once a powerful wizard, but he was locked into a cat-form because he was constantly trying to take over the world. However, he makes up for his predicament with magical charms that help Sabrina in some situations. Whenever Salem casts a spell, the magic is made in purple and blue. Nick Bakay is the only cast member to reprise his role from the 1996 Sabrina, the Teenage Witch TV series.
- Uncle Quigley is an original character created for the animated series, he is Sabrina's maternal great-uncle and the household's adult guardian, often behaving as a father figure to Sabrina. Despite all his eccentricities, Uncle Quigley does not have any magic powers; like Sabrina's mother, he is a mortal.
- Chloe Flan is Sabrina's best friend who, other than Uncle Quigley, is the only mortal who knows Sabrina's secret.
- Harvey Kinkle has a cute and sweet personality. While he only admits to Sabrina that she is his "best pal," he likes her very much. However, Harvey is unaware that Sabrina is a witch, although he often sees the results of the magic himself.
- Gem Stone is a snobby, popular, mean and spoiled girl who lives in a mansion with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stone, down the street. Gem occasionally sees Sabrina as her main competitor for Harvey's attention, though Harvey usually likes Sabrina more. She is inspired by Libby Chesler in the TV series.
Supporting
- The Spookie Jar is a genie who resides in a purple cookie jar in Sabrina's kitchen. Whenever Sabrina needs a special spell, she can get one from the Spookie Jar, but they rarely turn out the way she expects. Spookie Jar speaks entirely in rhymes.
- Perry "Pi" McDonald is Harvey's best friend and Sabrina and Chloe's friend, too. He is very smart and quite unusual in his own special way. His eyes are never seen because his pork pie hat obscures them. He has been described by Sabrina as "totally out of it and really smart at the same time." According to the episode "Upside Down Town," it is implied that he is of Chinese descent.
- Horace Slugloafe is an occasional bully to Harvey, though at times shows him respect. He usually refers to others by their surnames.
- Bernard is a small, bald, nerdy boy with glasses who is friends with Sabrina, Pi, Chloe and Harvey. He is often bullied by Slugloafe and easily bossed around by Gem.
- Tim is a witch hunter who appears in "Most Dangerous Witch," "Documagicary" and "Enchanted Vacation". He was previously bullied by witches as a child due to his lack of magical powers, except his immortality, even though his mother was a witch. For this reason, he viewed witches as evil and so he collects them as trophies for revenge along with his sidekick aardvark named Elton. Tim wears a hat with a witch cauldron marked with a prohibition sign on it.
- Queen Enchantra is the ruler of all witches and head of the Witches' Council. When she casts spells, the magic is made in red and purple.
- Mr. and Mrs. Stone are Gem's parents and the richest people in town. They first appeared in "Witch Switch"; when Sabrina wishes herself to be rich, they almost sent Sabrina to Cambridge when they found out she got a C in her report, but later changed their mind after Sabrina is not wished herself as being rich. They also appeared in "Stone Broke" when they lost their money and had Gem move into Sabrina's house until their dog struck oil.
- Edward Spellman is Sabrina's long-lost father who is a very strong warlock and Zelda and Hilda's older brother. Some years after he and his mortal wife, Diana, mutually separated, he ended up falling for another human named Futura, whom he intended to marry until a jealous Sabrina tried to break them up.
- Diana Spellman is Sabrina's human mother and Quigley's sister who is an archeologist and works at a dig site in Egypt. She is heard in the episode "Picture Perfect".
Production
Sabrina had previously appeared in an animated format on The Archie Show, but the popularity of the live-action Sabrina the Teenage Witch sitcom formed part of the basis for this spin-off series. The series was developed by Savage Steve Holland and Kat Likkel and Holland served as showrunner and executive producer of the series. As such, the series reflected some of the irreverent style of humor seen in Eek! The Cat. Celebrity voice cameos in this series included Downtown Julie Brown, Mr. T, Long John Baldry and "Weird Al" Yankovic. Melissa Joan Hart, who starred as Sabrina in the live-action sitcom, served as producer of this series, but her younger sister, Emily Hart, voiced Sabrina. Melissa instead voiced Sabrina's two aunts, Hilda and Zelda, originally played on the live-action series by Beth Broderick and Caroline Rhea, respectively. Nick Bakay reprises his role as Salem from the live-action series. The theme music is performed by the Irish girl group B*Witched.The series was announced to be in production in November 1998, where 65 episodes were commissioned by Disney to air on UPN's then-upcoming Disney block, and would also air on ABC. Disney's Buena Vista Television was announced as the television distributor for the series while DIC Entertainment and Viacom Consumer Products would share merchandising rights. In January 1999, it was announced that Buena Vista International Television would handle international television sale rights. Disney's rights to the series expired in 2004, and the rights were sold back to DIC.
Broadcast
United States
The series aired in syndication on UPN and on ABC from September 6 to November 19, 1999; it remained on ABC until October 13, 2001 and UPN until September 6, 2002. Around the same time the show was pulled from UPN, the series moved to both Disney Channel and Toon Disney. Sabrina: The Animated Series returned to syndication as one of the launch programmes broadcast on the Syndicated DIC Kids Network E/I block on September 1, 2003, followed by the spinoff series Sabrina's Secret Life which premiered the following November.On September 16, 2006, the series returned as part of CBS' new KOL Secret Slumber Party on CBS and was briefly part of the KEWLopolis cartoon lineup until October 27, 2007, when the series along with Trollz were replaced with Sushi Pack and DinoSquad the following Saturday. On September 19, 2009, the series returned to CBS, this time as part of the network's Cookie Jar TV cartoon lineup, later joined by the sequel series, Sabrina's Secret Life on September 18, 2010, before both shows were replaced with Horseland and Trollz on February 5, 2011. Reruns aired on This TV through the "This Is for Kids" block, from September 24, 2012, to October 25, 2013.
From 2017 to 2020, reruns of the series started airing on the Starz channel, Starz Kids & Family; the series is also available on Starz Play. As of 2024, the series is also available on Pluto TV's Rainbow Squad channel.
International
In Canada, the series aired on Teletoon from October 1999 to December 2003, before being replaced by the sequel series, Sabrina's Secret Life on January 5, 2004, reruns of the series eventually returned to the network in September 2004, which would continue until Spring 2005. The French version of the series Sabrina Apprentie Sorcière, aired on Télétoon in Québec. But unlike the English version, the French version continued to air on the network as late as around 2006 or 2007. The sequel series never aired on the French network. The series also aired on many Disney Channel networks internationally.Beginning in 2004, many broadcasters who already aired the series began to air it as part of a package with Sabrina's Secret Life titled "Totally Sabrina." The package was pre-sold to TF1 in France, RTÉ in Ireland, Mediaset in Italy, ORF in Austria, Alter Channel in Greece, FORTA in Spain, SBT in Brazil, Teletoon in Canada, Super RTL in Germany, Arutz Hayeladim in Israel and Saran in Turkey, in addition to Disney Channel and Toon Disney networks in the United Kingdom, Asia, Taiwan, Australia, France, Latin America, Brazil, the Middle East and Spain.
The series also aired in India on Cartoon Network.
Home media
United States
In February 2001, DIC announced the formation of their home video subsidiary DIC Home Entertainment, and that Sabrina: The Animated Series would be one of the shows from their catalogue released through the division.| VHS/DVD name | Episodes | Distributor | Release date | Extras |
| Sabrina's World | You Said a Mouse-Ful A Tail of Two Kitties Key to my Heart What Becomes of the Broken Hearted? | Lions Gate Home Entertainment Trimark Home Video | August 28, 2001 | Trailers Trivia Game |
| Sabrina in Love | Key to my Heart What Becomes of the Broken Hearted? | Lions Gate Home Entertainment Trimark Home Video | August 28, 2001 | Trailers |
| Salem's World | You Said a Mouse-Ful A Tail of Two Kitties | Lions Gate Home Entertainment Trimark Home Video | August 28, 2001 | Trailers |
| Witch in Training | Shrink to Fit Strange New World The Importance of Being Norma | Sterling Entertainment NCircle Entertainment | May 25, 2004 March 6, 2007 | Trailers Bonus episode Anywhere but Here |
| Bat Attack! | Nothin' Says Lovin' Like Somethin' From a Coven Witchery Science Theatre The Bat Pack | Sterling Entertainment NCircle Entertainment | August 31, 2004 August 21, 2007 | Trailers Bonus episode Field of Screams |
| A Witchmas Carol | Witchmas Carole Board and Sorcery Has Anybody Seen my Quigley? | Sterling Entertainment NCircle Entertainment | August 31, 2004 October 23, 2007 | Trailers Bonus episode The Grandparent Trap |
| The Very Best of Sabrina: The Animated Series | Disc 1 Witch Switch Nothin' Says Lovin' Like Somethin' From a Coven Wag the Witch Most Dangerous Witch Stage Fright Witchy Grrrls Documagicary Disc 2 This Is Your Nine Lives Stone Broke When In Rome Molar Molar Xabrina, Warrior Witch La Femme Sabrina Wiccan of the Sea | Shout! Factory | October 17, 2006 | Trailers |
| Sabrina: The Animated Series – A Touch of Magic! | Shrink to Fit Boy Meets Bike When in Rome You Said a Mouse-Ful Boogie Shoes Stone Broke Anywhere But Here Nothin' Says Lovin' Like Somethin' From a Coven I Got Glue Babe Wag the Witch | Mill Creek Entertainment | February 15, 2011 | Trailers A Midsummer's Nightmare from Sabrina's Secret Life |
| Sabrina: The Animated Series – Volume 1 | Disc 1 Shrink to Fit Boy Meets Bike The Importance of Being Norma You Said a Mouse-Ful Boogie Shoes Witch Switch Anywhere But Here Nothin' Says Lovin' Like Somethin' From a Coven I Got Glue Babe Wag the Witch Disc 2 Most Dangerous Witch Picture Perfect Has Anybody Seen My Quigley? Extreme Harvey Stage Fright The Senses-Shattering Adventures of Captain Harvtastic Once Upon a Whine Field Trippin Witchy Grrrls My Stepmother the Babe Documagicary Disc 3 The Grandparent Trap Upside Down Town Paranormal Pi This Is Your Nine Lives No Time To Be A Hero Absence Of Malissa Tail of Two Kitties The Hex Files Planet of the Dogs Witchitis Harvzilla | Mill Creek Entertainment | February 15, 2011 | Trailers A Midsummer's Nightmare from Sabrina's Secret Life |
International
In the Philippines, Viva Video and Cookie Jar Entertainment released a few DVD sets in the countries.In the United Kingdom, budget distributor Prism Leisure and Fremantle Home Entertainment released "Sabrina in Love" and "Salem's World" on DVD which had the same 2 episodes as the US VHS releases respectively, but including an additional episode. An exclusive UK DVD titled "Witchy Girls" was also released in the same year, also containing 3 episodes.
Reception
Common Sense Media gave the series a three out of five stars and said, "Parents need to know that this tween cartoon -- a spin-off of the live-action sitcom Sabrina, the Teenage Witch -- features similar lighthearted witch humor. Storylines focus on the trials and tribulations of being a tween: friendships, school assignments, and dealing with increasing responsibility. Many of the characters set positive examples of what it means to be a good friend."Merchandise
Viacom Consumer Products and DIC Entertainment co-released merchandise based on the series.An 11-inch Sabrina fashion doll was released by the company Bambola. Several other small plastic toys, including a few figurines and a Polly Pocket-esque Sabrina doll were sold in stores while the series was in production.
Video games
In August 2000, through Viacom Consumer Products and their video game division Simon & Schuster Interactive, it was announced that Knowledge Adventure had secured the rights to publish video games based on the series.The first title, Sabrina The Animated Series: Magical Adventure, was released for the Microsoft Windows and Macintosh computer systems in October 2000. The game is a minigame collection which centers on Sabrina going on a quest into the Greendale Mall to retrieve her missing "dream come true" amulet, which Gem Stone is using to turn people into sheep.
The second title, Sabrina: The Animated Series - Zapped! was announced in August 2000 and released on November 22 for the Game Boy Color. Developed by WayForward Technologies, the game is a 2D platformer where Sabrina and Salem help reverse an animal-transformation spell that the former accidentally created.
On September 4, 2001, another Game Boy Color title - Sabrina: The Animated Series - Spooked, was announced. It was released on November 6, 2001. Developed by WayForward Technologies, like its predecessor, the game centers on Sabrina and Sabrina saving Hilda and Zelda after the Spookie Jar goes out of control, stealing the magic from witches and warlocks.
In July 2025, it was announced that Zapped! would be re-released by ModRetro, a video game company owned by Palmer Luckey which manufactures Game Boy Color-clone consoles. The re-release garnered controversy due to Luckey's political views, with WayForward initially stating that Archie Comics was responsible for the deal with Palmer, and that they wouldn’t be receiving any royalties for each unit sold. However, the company soon deleted their claims, which led to the belief that WayForward was the one who signed the deal. The game's reissue was released onto ModRetro's website later that month.
Spin-offs
Cancelled Salem spin-off
In November 2000, following their separation and re-independence from Disney, DIC Entertainment announced they would produce a spin-off based on Salem the Cat, simply titled Salem. The series was planned to have 52 half-hour episodes, each budgeted at $275,000 to $325,000, and would air in the Fall of 2001, with DIC holding all worldwide distribution rights. The series never saw the light the day after its initial announcement, meaning it likely never got off the drawing board.The series would have focused on Salem's attempts to become a warlock again by proceeding to do enough good deeds, but lets his attitude and wit get the better of him.
Sabrina: Friends Forever
A TV movie, titled Sabrina: Friends Forever aired on Nickelodeon in the United States on October 13, 2002, as part of the Nickelodeon Sunday Movie Toons series of television movies. The movie was later pre-sold internationally to various Disney Channel networks, among others.The movie centers on Sabrina going to Witch Academy to become full witch, but is unsure if she will be accepted due to being half-witch, until she meets Nicole, a girl who is also half-witch like she is.
Sabrina's Secret Life
A sequel series, titled Sabrina's Secret Life was co-produced with DIC's French subsidiary Les Studios Tex and broadcaster TF1, and premiered on DIC's syndicated television block DIC Kids Network in November 2003 before being pre-sold internationally.The series centers on a 14-year-old Sabrina attending High School and also attending special witch classes with rival Cassandra, who unlike Sabrina, is a full-witch.