

He often drives his neighbor Pete up the proverbial wall. Goofy's biggest weaknesses are his short attention span, scatterbrain, and clumsiness. In the pilot episode, he and his son move next door to the Petes from their trailer home in another city. Goofy" Goof (voiced by Bill Farmer) is the single father of Max Goof. This line was from the Three Stooges short, Men in Black.Ĭharacters Main cast Goof Family In "Axed by Addition," Max uses the "Doctor Howard, Doctor Fine, Doctor Howard" line to distract the doctors from performing surgery on PJ. Michael Spooner, who designed many of the background layouts for the series. The town of Spoonerville is named after layout artist J. Likewise, his daughter Pistol is a play on another such name, "Pistol Pete." Pete's wife Peg is a play on "Peg Leg Pete," one of Pete's names in the Disney shorts.

The Goof Troop premise was also incorporated into 1999's Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas and its 2004 sequel, Mickey's Twice Upon a Christmas, the former depicting Max at a much younger age preceding Goof Troop, while the latter continues Max's age progression to a young adult age. Dana Hill, who voiced Max in the series, commercials, promos, miscellaneous and other Disney projects, died on July 15, 1996, at the age of 32, after suffering a massive stroke related to her diabetes. The two films featured Bill Farmer, Rob Paulsen and Jim Cummings reprising their character roles from Goof Troop in these two films, with Jason Marsden providing the voice of an older Max.
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The film was followed by a direct-to-video sequel, An Extremely Goofy Movie (2000) and served as the finale to Goof Troop. Goof Troop was adapted into the feature film A Goofy Movie (1995), which received mixed reviews but was a box office success. The program made a return from September 2006 until August 2008, and the Christmas special aired on Christmas in the United States. Reruns were shown on Toon Disney until January 2005.
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Reruns of the series later aired on The Disney Channel (starting on September 3, 1996), and later on sister cable channel Toon Disney. The series aired on The Disney Afternoon block of syndicated animated series during the 1992/1993 broadcast season concurrent with the Disney Afternoon shows, another 13 episodes aired on Saturday mornings on ABC in 1992.
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Like its predecessors DuckTales, Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers, TaleSpin and Darkwing Duck and its successor Bonkers, Goof Troop was previewed in syndication (on September 5, 1992) with a pilot television film, which later aired as a multi-part serial during the regular run. Goof Troop was originally previewed on The Disney Channel from April 20, 1992, into July 12 of that year. A large portion of the show's humor comes from Max's relatively normal personality sharply contrasting with his father.īroadcast history and feature films become best friends and do practically everything together. As it happens, Goofy and Max end up moving in next door to Goofy's high school friend: Pete, a used car salesman and owner of Honest Pete's Used Cars Pete's wife Peg, a real estate agent and their two children, son P.J. Goofy, a single father, moves back to his hometown of Spoonerville with his son, Max. It was the creation of Michael Peraza Jr., and pitched to Disney management as a last minute idea to fit the title. Goof Troop bears similarity to several early-1950s Goofy cartoon shorts which depicted Goofy as a father to a mischievous red-haired son. 8.1.1 Australia and New Zealand releases.Walt Disney Pictures released two films that served as follow ups to the television series: the theatrical A Goofy Movie, released on April 7, 1995, as well as the direct-to-video sequel An Extremely Goofy Movie, released on February 29, 2000, as the series finale. A Christmas special was also produced, which aired in syndication in late 1992. Created by Robert Taylor and Michael Peraza Jr., the main series of 65 episodes aired in first-run syndication from 1992 to 1993 on The Disney Afternoon programming block, while an additional thirteen episodes aired on Saturday Mornings on ABC. The series focuses on the relationship between single father Goofy and his son, Max, as well as their neighbors Pete and his family.


Goof Troop is an American animated sitcom television series produced by Walt Disney Television Animation.
