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Found this on the net thought everybody would enjoy this.
jw
From: Dave Horlick <[email protected]>
Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.starwars
Subject: Young Indy episode guide: IN THIS POST! YEAH!
Date: 23 Sep 1993 21:48:13 GMT
Organization: Cornell University
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Distribution: world
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
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X-XXDate: Thu, 23 Sep 93 22:51:08 GMT
Everybody seems to want a copy so here it is. It's also
available along with a bunch of other episode guides at
ftp.uu.net in usenet/rec.arts.tv
=======================================================
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles Episode Guide
Episode guide revision date: September 8, 1993
Table of Contents
First Season 1992 6 episodes
Second Season 1992-93 22 episodes
Unaired ??? 4 episodes
Appendix A Indiana Jones Timeline
Appendix B Title Listings
Appendix C Historical People Listing
Appendix D Additional Credits
Appendix E Cast and Crew Notes
Appendix F Young Indy Information Sources
Appendix G Miscellaneous Information
Guide Notes
The episode order and seasons are based on how the series runs in the U.S.
The series is shown differently in other countries. In the episode portion
of the guide the credits at the beginning of the show are listed, or in
the case of the first episode just the credits listed for later episodes
are given. A few of the credits at the end of the show are in an appendix.
The cast and production credits are presented in the order in which the
names appear on the screen except for a couple common credits listed at
the beginning. Character names or partial names that don't appear in the
on-screen credits are enclosed in brackets.
Send comments/corrections to: Loren Heisey ([email protected])
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
First production: 16 episodes, 5 with younger Indy, 10 with older Indy,
1 with both, 17 TV hours
Second production: 12 episodes, 1 with younger Indy, 11 with older Indy,
15 TV hours
The productions refer to when the episodes were filmed. The first
production filmed 1991-1992, and the second production filmed 1992-1993.
Credits common to all episodes:
Producer Rick McCallum
Created by George Lucas
First season
1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" 3/4/92 [2 hours]
The chronicles of Indy's youthful adventures begin with "Old Indy"
relating to two jaded youths his departure from Princeton as a boy
in 1908 to accompany his father's lecture tour around the world.
Among the first stops is Egypt, where an expedition with T.E.
Lawrence ends in a murder and a theft of an artifact that teenage
Indy has a chance to resolve in 1916 when he rides with Mexican
revolutionary Pancho Villa.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Indy age 16]
Corey Carrier [Indy age 8]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
Guest Starring:
Mike Moroff [Pancho Villa]
Francesco Quinn [Francois]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hales
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Egypt Segment Directed by Jim O'Brien
Directed by Carl Schultz
Notes
The horse Sean rode was Hurricane which was the black horse
Harrison Ford rode in the Indiana Jones movies. Mike Moroff's
Grandfather actually rode with Villa's gang.
2. "London, May 1916" 3/11/92
Vanessa Redgrave appears in a recollection of war and romance:
Indy arrives in London with pal Remy to enlist in the Belgian Army,
but before shipping out, he's swept away by a British suffragette.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Elizabeth Hurley [British suffragette]
Guest Starring:
Vanessa Redgrave [Vicky's mother]
Jane Wyatt
Kika Markham as Sylvia Pankhurst
Music by Joel McNeely
Written by Rosemary Anne Sisson
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Carl Schultz
3. "British East Africa, September 1909" 3/18/92
Indy and his parents are along for the rough ride when they join
Teddy Roosevelt's 1909 safari in Africa, where Indy's determined
to find a rare antelope Teddy Roosevelt wants for the Smithsonian.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Isaac Senteu Supeyo [Meto]
Guest Starring:
James Gammon [Teddy Roosevelt]
Paul Freeman as Selous
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Matthew Jacobs
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Carl Schultz
Notes
Disclaimer at beginning and end of episode: "No animals were
harmed or killed for the purposes of the production." Location
filming was done in Kenya.
4. "Verdun, September 1916" 3/25/92
Indy is a runner for the Belgian Army - and sometimes runs for his
life - on the front line in France at the bloody battle of Verdun.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Bernard Fresson
Jean Rougerie [Henri Philippe Petain]
Igor De Savitch [Robert Nivelle]
Cris Campion
Music by Joel McNeely
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hensleigh
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Rene Manzor
5. "German East Africa, December 1916" 4/1/92 [part 1]
Indy is second-in-command of a platoon on a trek for a weapon ship-
ment. Along the way they discover a village wiped out by malaria,
with the only survivor a 3-year-old boy.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Bryan Pringle [Sloat]
Michel Duchaussoy [Maj. Boucher]
Isaach De Bankole
and Friedrich Von Thun as Albert Schweitzer
Music by Joel McNeely
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Frank Darabont
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Simon Wincer
Notes
This was initially supposed to be a single episode but got
expanded into a two-parter.
6. "Congo, January 1917" 4/8/92 [part 2]
Indy continues his quest for weapons into the Congo, where he's
overtaken by disease but is saved by the healing hand of Albert
Schweitzer.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Bryan Pringle [Sloat]
Emile Abossolo M'Bo
Isolde Barth [Helene Schweitzer]
Yann Colette
and Friedrich Von Thun as Albert Schweitzer
Music by Joel McNeely
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Frank Darabont
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Simon Wincer
=======================================================================
====
Second season
7. "Austria, March 1917" 9/21/92
Indy goes undercover as a spy in WWI Austria where he escorts a
pair of royal Bourbon-Parma brothers on a secret mission that could
halt hostilities.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Benedict Taylor [Prince Sixtus]
Matthew Wait [Xavier]
Christopher Lee [Count Ottokar Graf Czernin]
Patrick Ryecart [Emperor Karl]
Jennifer Ehle [Empress Zita]
and Joss Ackland as The Prussian
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Frank Darabont
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Vic Armstrong
8. "Somme, Early August 1916" 9/28/92 [part 1]
Indy is under the command of a heroic French lieutenant and in the
trenches with a contemptible compatroit.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Jason Flemyng [Emile]
Richard Ridings [Andre]
Simon Hepworth [Tutu]
Jonathan Phillips [Jacques]
Music by Frederic Talgorn
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hensleigh
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Simon Wincer
9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916" 10/5/92 [part 2]
As a POW, Indy has but one mission in mind - escape - an ambition
he shares with fellow prisoner Charles de Gaulle.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Jason Flemyng [Emile]
Yves Beneyton [Benet]
and Herve Pauchon as Charles De Gaulle
Music by Frederic Talgorn
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hensleigh
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Simon Wincer
10. "Barcelona, May 1917" 10/12/92
Indy's in cahoots with a bunch of bumbling Allied spies plotting to
turn neutral Spain against Germany.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Amanda Ooms [Nadia]
Timothy Spall [Cunningham]
Kenneth Cranham
Guest Starring:
Harry Enfield
Terry Jones
William Hootkins
Liz Smith
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Gavin Scott
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Terry Jones
11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues" 3/13/93 [2
hours]
Snowbound in a Wyoming cabin, 50-year-old Indy recalls his wild
adventures in 1920 Chicago, where jazz legend Sidney Bechet gives
young Indy some tips on improvisation - a skill he uses when
investigating an underworld murder with young reporter "Ernie"
Hemingway.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and Harrison Ford [Indiana Jones]
Guest Starring:
Jeffrey Wright [Sidney Bechet]
Jay Underwood [Ernest Hemingway]
Keith David [King Oliver]
Frank Vincent
Frederick Weller [Eliot Ness]
Maria Howell
Nicholas Turturro Al Capone
Saginaw Grant
Jane Krakowski [second wife of Colosimo]
David Arnott
Victor Slezak
and Ray Serra as [Jim] Colosimo
Music Composed & Adapted by Joel McNeely
Written by Jule Selbo
Directed by Carl Schultz
Notes
In the U.S. the intro involved Indy and his Indian friend, Great
Cloud, being chased through snowy Wyoming while on a mission to
retrieve a sacred Indian pipe. After the pickup the two are in
crashes into a snow bank they flee on foot and hole up in a cabin
waiting for a blizzard to pass. Indy finds a sax and tells a
story.
In the U.K. the episode was shown in two parts, both intros
involving Old Indy. In the first Old Indy's teenage grandson,
Spike, is playing very loud music with some of his friends in
his room. Indy goes up and after interrupting their playing tells
a story. In the second some neighbors complain to Old Indy about
loud music coming from the garage. Indy and the neighbors
interrupt Spike and his friends playing and Indy again tells a
story.
12. "Princeton, February 1916" 3/20/93
The plans for an electric-car battery are stolen from Thomas Edison's
laboratories, which sparks Indy and his girlfriend to conduct an
investigation that takes some shocking twists.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Robyn Lively [Nancy Stratemeyer]
Mark L. Taylor [Prof. Thompson]
Clark Gregg [Dickinson]
and James Handy as Frank Brady
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Matthew Jacobs
Directed by Joe Johnston
13. "Petrograd, July 1917" 3/27/93
Indy's duty as an Allied spy collides with the comradeship with a
group of young Bolsheviks as he tries to prevent a Red tide from
washing over St. Petersburg.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Julia Stemberger [Rosa]
Jean Pierre Cassel
Beata Pozniak [Irena]
Ravil Isyanov [Sergei]
Gary Olsen
and Roger Sloman as [Vladimir Ilyich] Lenin
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Gavin Scott
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Simon Wincer
14. "Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920" 4/3/93 [2 hours]
New York is the setting for romance when Indy gets involved with a
Broadway-bound singer, a bohemian poet and a socialite all at once,
while he works on a musical revue composed by George Gershwin.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Alexandra Powers [Gloria]
Anne Heche [Kate]
Jennifer Stevens [Peggy]
Christopher John Fields [George White]
Tom Beckett [George Gershwin]
Michelle Nicastro
Bill Mckinney
Robert Trebor
Peter Appel
Annabelle Gurwitch
Mark Holton
Terumi Matthews
Dylan Price
Joshua Rifkind
Peter Spears
Brenda Strong
Guri Weinberg
Music Composed & Adapted by Joel McNeely
Written by Jonathan Hales
Directed by Syd MaCartney
15. "Vienna, November 1908" 4/10/93
The Hapsburg court is a gilded cage for a young princess who
enchants young Indy, but he's told to repress his feelings for her
by almost everyone ... except Freud, Jung and Adler.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Lennart Hjulstrom [Franz Ferdinand]
Ernst Hugo Jardegard [Carl Jung]
Bjorn Granat
Amalie Alstrup [Princess Sophie]
Max von Sydow as [Sigmund] Freud
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Matthew Jacobs
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Bille August
16. "Northern Italy, June 1918" 4/17/93
On the Italian front in World War I, smitten Indy asks Red Cross
ambulance driver Ernest Hemingway's advice on how to woo a beautiful
young Italian woman.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Jay Underwood [Ernest Hemingway]
Veronika Logan [Giulietta]
Pernilla August as Mamma
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hales
Directed by Bille August
17. "Young Indiana Jones and the Phantom Train of Doom" 6/5/93 [2
hours]
Indy gets tricked into joining a team of experts to try to take out
a massive German cannon mounted on a train in German East Africa
during WWI.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
Guest Starring:
Lynsey Baxter
Tom Bell
Ronald Fraser
Paul Freeman [Frederick Selous]
Freddie Jones
Norman Rodway
Music Composed by Joel McNeely
Written by Frank Darabont
Directed by Peter Macdonald
18. "Ireland, April 1916" 6/12/93
Broke and stranded in Dublin on the eve of the Easter Rebellion,
Indy gets a job at a pub, where he meets some of Ireland's
revolutionaries, including playwright Sean O'Casey.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
John Lynch
Shane Connaughton [W.B. Yeats]
Darrah Kelly [Sean Lemass]
Susannah Doyle
Nell Murphy [Nuala]
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hales
Directed by Gillies Mackinnon
19. "Paris, September 1908" 6/19/93
Young Indy has an artful adventure with young Norman Rockwell in
Paris, where the two meet Pablo Picasso and Edgar Degas.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Danny Webb [Pablo Picasso]
Jean Pierre Aumont [Edgar Degas]
and Lukas Haas as Norman Rockwell
Music by Joel McNeely
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Reg Gadney
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Rene Manzor
20. "Peking, March 1910" 6/26/93
Young Indy becomes seriously ill on a journey with his mother and
tutor in rural China, where they're sheltered by a Chinese farming
family, far from the nearest Western doctor.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
Ping Wu [Li]
Nigel Fan [Ah Pin]
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Rosemary Anne Sisson
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Gavin Millar
21. "Benares, January 1910" 7/03/93
Young Indy has a spirited encounter in India with Krishnamurti,
a youth who's been declared New World Teacher by a group espousing
the religion of theosophy.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Guest Starring:
John Wood [Charles Leadbeater]
Dorothy Tutin [Annie Besant]
and Hemanth Rao as [Jiddu] Krishnamurti
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Jonathan Hensleigh
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Deepa Mehta
22. "Paris, October 1916" 7/10/93
Paris brings out the passion in amorous Indy, who has a fling with
the most infamous and exotic figure of the day - Mata Hari.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Ronny Coutteure [Remy]
and George Hall as Old Indy
Domiziana Giordano as Mata Hari
Guest Starring:
Kenneth Haigh [War Minister]
Ian McDiarmid [Prof. Levi]
Jacqueline Pearce [Annabelle]
Sheila Burrell
Maria Charles
Music by Joel McNeely
Theme by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Carrie Fisher
Based on a Story by George Lucas
Directed by Nicholas Roeg
23. "Istanbul, September 1918" 7/17/93
While on a dangerous WWI spy mission, Indy keeps his real identity
a secret from the young woman he intends to marry.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Guest Starring:
Katherine Butler [Molly]
Peter Firth as Stefan
and Ahmet Levendoglu as Mustafa Kemal
Music by Laurence Rosenthal
Written by Rosemary Ann Sisson
Directed by Mike Newell
24. "Paris, May 1919" 7/24/93
Indy sees the Realpolitik seeds of many 20th-century conflicts sown
at the 1919 WWI Paris peace conference, where he encounters a young
Vietnamese patriot later known as Ho Chi Minh.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Guest Starring:
Cyril Cusack [George Clemenceau]
Anna Massey [Gertrude Bell]
Michael Maloney [Arnold Toynbee]
Dougie Henshall
Alec Mapa [Nguyen]
Michael Kitchen [Lloyd George]
Josef Sommer [Woodrow Wilson]
Jeroen Krabbe as Brockdorff
Music by Joel McNeely
Written by Jonathan Hales
Directed by David Hare
=======================================================================
====
Unaired (in the U.S.) episodes
25x. "Florence, August 1908"
While touring Florence, Italy, Indy meets opera composer Giacomo
Puccini, who has romantic designs on Indy's mother.
Starring:
Corey Carrier [Young Indy]
Margaret Tyzack [tutor Helen Seymour]
Ruth De Sosa [Indy's mother]
Lloyd Owen [Indy's father]
Written by Jule Selbo
Directed by Mike Newell
26x. "Prague, August 1917"
Indy tries to get a phone installed in his apartment, but runs into
a bureaucratic nightmare. Only Franz Kafka is willing to help him.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Written by Gavin Scott
27x. "Beersheba, October 1917"
On an undercover mission to the town of Beersheba, Indy must defuse
Turkish explosives in preparation for the arrival of a regiment of
the Australian Light Horsemen.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Written by Frank Darabont
Notes
This episode might have been renamed to Palestine.
28x. "Transylvania, January 1918"
Indy goes behind enemy lines to investigate the sudden disappearance
of all the prisoners at an Austrian POW camp.
Starring:
Sean Patrick Flanery [Young Indy]
Written by Jonathan Hensleigh
=======================================================================
====
Appendix A - Indiana Jones Timeline
Since the episodes are not aired in much relationship to when they are
to have occurred here is a chronological listing of the episodes and a
few events mentioned in the episodes. Also listed is where the Indiana
Jones movies and books fit in.
Year Date Ref. Location Comments
---- ---- ---- -------- --------
1899 July 1 C 1 Princeton, NJ Indy born
1908 May C 1 Cairo artifact stolen
1908 August C 25x Florence opera
1908 September C 19 Paris artists
1908 November C 15 Vienna first love Sophie
1909 September C 3 British East Africa African safari
1910 January C 21 Benares religions
1910 March C 20 Peking sickness
1912 M 3 Utah Cross of Coronado
1913 C 2 - Mother died
1916 February C 12 Princeton stolen battery
1916 March C 1 New Mexico/Mexico hunts artifact
1916 April C 18 Ireland Easter Rebellion
1916 May C 2 London joins Belgian Army
1916 Early-Aug. C 8 Somme taken prisoner by Germans
1916 Mid-August C 9 Germany escape from German prison
camp
1916 September C 4 Verdun on Belgian Army front line
1916 October C 22 Paris in love with Mata Hari
1916 November C 17 German East Africa German cannon
1916 December C 5 German East Africa quest for weapons
1917 January C 6 Congo continued quest for weapons
1917 March C 7 Austria escort 2 Frenchmen
1917 May C 10 Barcelona undercover in ballet
1917 July C 13 Petrograd premature revolution
1917 August C 26x Prague phone installation
1917 October C 27x Beersheba belly dancer
1918 January C 28x Transylvania disappearing prisoners
1918 June C 16 Northern Italy ambulance
1918 September C 23 Istanbul in love with school teacher
1919 May C 24 Paris translator
1920 April C 11 Chicago Jazz
1920 May C 11 Chicago gangsters
1920 June C 14 New York three loves
1922 October B 1 Delphi, Greece Oracle of Delphi's tomb
1924 B 5 France meets Mara
1925 Summer B 2 England/Scotland Omphalos ancient relic stolen
1926 M 1 Chicago falling out with Ravenwoods
1926 March 7 B 3 Guatemala adventurer P.H. Fawcett
1926 March B 3 Amazon
1927 Summer B 4 Chicago/Turkey Noah's Ark
1928 B 6 S.W. America Alicorn, unicorn's horn
1929 Spring B 6 Easter Island
1929 June B 6 Isle of Chiloe
1935 M 2 China/India
1936 M 1 Peru, Cairo Ark of the Covenant
1938 M 3 Austria Holy Grail
1950 Winter C 11 Wyoming Sacred Indian pipe
References:
C - Chronicles
See appendix B for list
M - Movies
# Title Released
- ----- --------
1. Raiders of the Lost Ark 1981
2. Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom 1984
3. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade 1989
B - Novels by Rob MacGregor, published by Bantam/Falcon Books
# Title Published
- ----- ---------
1. Indiana Jones and the Peril at Delphi February, 1991
2. Indiana Jones and the Dance of the Giants June, 1991
3. Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils December, 1991
4. Indiana Jones and the Genesis Deluge February, 1992
5. Indiana Jones and the Unicorn's Legacy September, 1992
6. Indiana Jones and the Interior World December, 1992
=======================================================================
====
Appendix B - Title Listings
Chronological episode listings
------------------------------
The number in the first column indicates the first or second episode
production.
1 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 1]
2 25x. "Florence, August 1908"
1 19. "Paris, September 1908"
1 15. "Vienna, November 1908"
1 3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
1 21. "Benares, January 1910"
1 20. "Peking, March 1910"
2 12. "Princeton, February 1916"
1 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 2]
2 18. "Ireland, April 1916"
1 2. "London, May 1916"
1 8. "Somme, Early August 1916" [part 1]
1 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916" [part 2]
1 4. "Verdun, September 1916"
1 22. "Paris, October 1916"
2 17. "Young Indiana Jones and the Phantom Train of Doom"
1 5. "German East Africa, December 1916" [part 1]
1 6. "Congo, January 1917" [part 2]
1 7. "Austria, March 1917"
1 10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
1 13. "Petrograd, July 1917"
2 26x. "Prague, August 1917"
2 27x. "Beersheba, October 1917"
2 28x. "Transylvania, January 1918"
2 16. "Northern Italy, June 1918"
2 23. "Istanbul, September 1918"
2 24. "Paris, May 1919"
2 11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues"
2 14. "Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920"
Air date episode listings
-------------------------
Date format is: year/month/day
The U.S episodes have their ratings listed.
Rating format is (rank/total rankings)
Repeat airings are indicated with a R.
Air dates in the U.S.
92/03/04 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" (10/ ?)
92/03/07 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" R (73/ ?)
92/03/11 2. "London, May 1916" (29/ ?)
92/03/18 3. "British East Africa, September 1909" (37/ ?)
92/03/25 4. "Verdun, September 1916" (49/ ?)
92/04/01 5. "German East Africa, December 1916" (44/ ?)
92/04/08 6. "Congo, January 1917" (51/ ?)
92/08/17 2. "London, May 1916" R (83/ ?)
92/08/31 5. "German East Africa, December 1916" R (74/ ?)
92/09/07 6. "Congo, January 1917" R (83/ ?)
92/09/21 7. "Austria, March 1917" (76/ ?)
92/09/28 8. "Somme, Early August 1916" (75/ ?)
92/10/05 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916" (69/ ?)
92/10/12 10. "Barcelona, May 1917" (76/ ?)
93/03/13 11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues" (51/93)
93/03/20 12. "Princeton, February 1916" (83/96)
93/03/27 13. "Petrograd, July 1917" (88/92)
93/04/03 14. "Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920" (86/95)
93/04/10 15. "Vienna, November 1908" (90/95)
93/04/17 16. "Northern Italy, June 1918"
(96/101)
93/06/05 17. "Young Indiana Jones and the Phantom Train of Doom" (74/87)
93/06/12 18. "Ireland, April 1916" (89/92)
93/06/19 19. "Paris, September 1908" (90/95)
93/06/26 20. "Peking, March 1910" (87/93)
93/07/03 21. "Benares, January 1910" (81/96)
93/07/10 22. "Paris, October 1916" (97/97)
93/07/17 23. "Istanbul, September 1918" (93/93)
93/07/24 24. "Paris, May 1919" (91/94)
Air dates in Finland
93/01/05 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal"
93/01/12 2. "London, May 1916"
93/01/19 3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
93/01/26 4. "Verdun, September 1916"
93/02/02 5. "German East Africa, December 1916"
93/02/09 6. "Congo, January 1917"
93/02/16 20. "Peking, March 1910"
93/02/23 13. "Petrograd, July 1917"
93/03/02 19. "Paris, September 1908"
93/03/09 10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
93/03/16 15. "Vienna, November 1908"
93/03/23 22. "Paris, October 1916"
93/03/30 21. "Benares, January 1910"
93/04/06 7. "Austria, March 1917"
93/04/13 8. "Somme, Early August 1916"
93/04/20 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916"
Air dates in Germany
92/11/27 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal"
92/11/29 2. "London, May 1916"
92/12/06 3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
92/12/20 4. "Verdun, September 1916"
92/12/25 5. "German East Africa, December 1916"
92/12/26 6. "Congo, January 1917"
92/12/27 7. "Austria, March 1917"
93/01/03 8. "Somme, Early August 1916"
93/01/10 22. "Paris, October 1916"
93/01/17 10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
93/01/24 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916"
93/01/31 15. "Vienna, November 1908"
93/02/07 13. "Petrograd, July 1917"
93/02/14 20. "Peking, March 1910"
93/02/21 19. "Paris, September 1908"
93/02/28 21. "Benares, January 1910"
Air dates in the U.K.
93/05/02 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 1]
93/05/09 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 2]
93/05/16 4. "Verdun, September 1916"
93/05/23 5. "German East Africa, December 1916"
93/05/30 6. "Congo, January 1917"
93/06/06 3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
93/06/13 8. "Somme, Early August 1916"
93/06/20 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916"
93/06/27 10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
93/07/04 7. "Austria, March 1917"
93/07/11 13. "Petrograd, July 1917"
93/07/18 11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues" [part 1]
93/08/01 11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues" [part 2]
93/08/08 12. "Princeton, February 1916"
Air dates in New Zealand
93/05/31 1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal"
93/06/07 8. "Somme, Early August 1916"
93/06/14 9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916"
93/06/21 3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
93/06/28 22. "Paris, October 1916"
93/07/05 19. "Paris, September 1908"
93/07/12 5. "German East Africa, December 1916"
93/07/19 6. "Congo, January 1917"
93/07/26 21. "Benares, January 1910"
93/08/02 10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
93/08/09 20. "Peking, March 1910"
93/08/16 4. "Verdun, September 1916"
=======================================================================
====
Appendix C - Historical People Listing
In most cases this is just a very small sampling of their accomplishments.
Those that want to know more should look them up.
1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 1]
T.E. Lawrence - scholar, archaeologist, diplomat, and military hero
Howard Carter - British archaeologist who discovered King Tut's tomb
25x. "Florence, August 1908"
Giacomo Puccini - Italian opera composer
19. "Paris, September 1908"
Norman Rockwell - American illustrator best known for magazine
covers
Pablo Picasso - Spanish-born artist who was one of founders of Cubism
George Braque - French painter who was also one of founders of Cubism
Edgar Degas - French painter who was one of founders of Impressionism
Henri Rousseau - French painter who explored "primitive" or folk art
15. "Vienna, November 1908"
Sigmund Freud - Austrian who founded the Psychoanalytic movement
Carl Jung - Swiss psychiatrist co-founder of analytical psychology
Alfred Adler - Austrian psychiatrist
Archduke Franz Ferdinand - Habsburg heir to Austro-Hungarian throne
Princess Sophie - daughter of heir to throne
3. "British East Africa, September 1909"
Theodore Roosevelt - 26th President of the United States
21. "Benares, January 1910"
Jiddu Krishnamurti - Theosophy Society messiah until renounced title
Annie Besant - English-born Theosophist leader
20. "Peking, March 1910"
Yen Fu - one of pioneers in China's endeavor to understand the West
12. "Princeton, February 1916"
Edward Stratemeyer - author of books such as *The Hardy Boys*
Thomas Edison - inventor who holds 1093 patents
1. "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" [part 2]
Francisco "Pancho" Villa - Mexican revolutionary leader and guerilla
John J. Pershing - U.S. Army General of Spanish American War era
George S. Patton - U.S. Army General of WWII era
18. "Ireland, April 1916"
W.B. Yeats - Dublin-born poet
Sean O'Casey - Irish playwright
Sean Lemass - Dublin-born political leader
2. "London, May 1916"
Winston Churchill - British Prime Minister
Sylvia Pankhurst - leader in suffrage movement in England
8. "Somme, Early August 1916" [part 1]
Siegfried Sassoon - British poet and novelist
Robert Graves - English poet, novelist and critic
9. "Germany, Mid-August 1916" [part 2]
Charles DeGaulle - French General, Statesman and President of France
4. "Verdun, September 1916"
Henri Philippe Petain - French Army officer and head of state
Robert Nivelle - French General who was chief assistant to Pertain
Charles Mangin - French General also a commander at Verdun
Joseph Jacques Joffre - Commander-in-Chief of the French Army
22. "Paris, October 1916"
Mata Hari - Holland-born who became an exotic dancer throughout
Europe
17. "Young Indiana Jones and the Phantom Train of Doom"
Fredrick Selous - English-born hunter and explorer
Jan Christian Smuts - South African soldier and statesman
Paul Von Lettow-Vorbeck - German-born Prussian military leader
Richard Meinertzhagen - involved with British intelligence operations
5. "German East Africa, December 1916" [part 1]
Barthelemy Boganda - African statesman
6. "Congo, January 1917" [part 2]
Albert Schweitzer - did medical missionary work
7. "Austria, March 1917"
Emperor Karl I - last Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary
Ottokar Graf Czernin - Foreign Minister in Austro-Hungarian Empire
Empress Zita - last Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary
Prince Sixtus - son of Robert, the last Duke of Parma
10. "Barcelona, May 1917"
Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev - Russian ballet impresario and art critic
Pablo Picasso - Spanish-born artist who was one of founders of Cubism
13. "Petrograd, July 1917"
Vladimir Ilyich Lenin - founder of Bolshevism and Soviet leader
26x. "Prague, August 1917"
Franz Kafka - Czech-born who was influential writer of 20th century
27x. "Beersheba, October 1917"
T.E. Lawrence - scholar, archaeologist, diplomat, and military hero
Richard Meinertzhagen - had a British military career
Harry George Chauvel - Australian commander
M.W.J. Bourchier - Australian commander
William Grant - Australian commander
28x. "Transylvania, January 1918"
Prince Vlad IV the Impaler - Transylvanian-born ruthless leader
16. "Northern Italy, June 1918"
Ernest Hemingway - American novelist and short story writer
Emanuel Victor Voska - Bohemian native who worked in U.S.
intelligence
23. "Istanbul, September 1918"
Kemal Ataturk - born in Greece and became founder of modern Turkey
Halide Edib - she was a nationalist and novelist in Turkey
24. "Paris, May 1919"
Woodrow Wilson - 28th President of the United States
David Lloyd George - British statesman
George Clemenceau - political figure and twice Premier of France
T.E. Lawrence - scholar, archaeologist, diplomat, and military hero
Feisal of Arabia - later became King Feisal I of Iraq
Gertrude Bell - British traveler of varied accomplishments
Arnold Toynbee - British scholar and diplomat
Ho Chi Minh - became Vietnamese leader
11. "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues"
Sidney Bechet - clarinetist and soprano saxophone player
King Oliver - played cornet and was at forefront of New Orleans jazz
Louis Armstrong - trumpeter and singer
Eliot Ness - law enforcement officer of "Untouchables" fame
Jim Colosimo - crime lord of Chicago
Johnny Torrio - one of chief crime lords
Al Capone - gangster who was king of the Chicago rackets
Ernest Hemingway - American novelist and short story writer
Ben Hecht - novelist, playwright and screenwriter
Charles MacArthur - newspaper-man, and wrote and produced plays
14. "Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920"
George Gershwin - pianist who composed popular tunes, musicals, etc.
George White - Broadway actor, dancer, and producer
Irving Berlin - songwriter and Tin Pan Alley composer
Dorothy Parker - wrote short stories, poems, and screenplays
Alexander Woollcott - journalist, critic, lecturer, actor, etc.
=======================================================================
====
Appendix D - Additional Credits
Credits common to all episodes
------------------------------
Executive Producer George Lucas
A few of the other credits
--------------------------
Director of Photographer
David Tattersall 1,2,4-14,17-19,22-24
Miguel Icasa Solana 3
Jorgen Persson 15,16
Oliver Stapleton 20
Giles Nuttgens 21
Editor
Edgar Burcksen 1,3,7,9,11,15,17-20
Louise Rubacky 2,5,6,10,12-14,21-24
Ben Burtt 4,8
Janus Billeskov Jansen 16
Production Designer
Gavin Bocquet 1-10,13,15-24
Jeff Ginn 11,12,14
Barbara Kretscmer 11,12,14
Lucy Richardson 21
Costume Designer
Charlotte Holdich 1-10,13,15-24
Peggy Farrell 11,12,14
Disclaimer starting with episode 3
----------------------------------
"This is a work of fiction. While Young Indiana Jones is portrayed as
taking part in historical events and meeting real figures in history,
many of the characters in the story as well as the situations and
scenes have been invented. In addition, where real historical figures
and events are described, in some cases the chronology and historical
facts have been altered for dramatic effect."
Miscellaneous Credits
---------------------
"The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles" is a trademark of LUCASFILM LTD.
Presented in Dolby Surround
Produced in association with Amblin Television, Lucasfilm Television,
Paramount.
=======================================================================
====
Appendix E - Cast and Crew Notes
Notes on actors
---------------
Corey Carrier
He turned 11 in 1991. His guest starring roles include *Spenser For
Hire* and *The Equalizer*. His movie roles include *The Witches of
Eastwick* (1987), *After Dark, My Sweet* (1990), *Crazy People*
(1990) [his part ended up on the cutting room floor], *Men Don't
Leave* (1990), *My Blue Heaven* (1990), and *Bump In the Night*
(TV 1991).
Sean Patrick Flanery
Born in Lake Charles, Louisiana. Raised in Houston, Texas. Went to
University of St Thomas in Houston where he took a drama class
because of a girl. The girl turned out to be a fake but he fell in
love with drama and did all kinds of college theater. He moved to
Los Angeles and waited tables. He got an agent and after 8 months of
looking got some television commercials and then some acting roles.
These include appearances in at least two of the multi-part movies
on the *Mickey Mouse Club*.
George Hall
A seasoned theater actor who has performed in seventeen Broadway
plays including *Lend an Ear*, *High Button Shoes*, *The Boy
Friend*, and *Bent*. On television he has been in the daytime soaps
*Another World*, *As the World Turns*, and *Loving*.
Ronny Coutteure
Born in Belgium but now lives in Paris. In France he is well known
for his work in theater, film, and television.
Notes on the producer
---------------------
Rick McCallum
His credits include the award-winning BBC series *The Singing
Detective* and such films as *Pennies From Heaven* (1981), *Dream
Child* (1985), *Castaway* (1987), *Track 29* (1988), and
*Strapless* (1989).
Notes on writers
----------------
Frank Darabont
Born in France but grew up in southern California. Some of his
credits include co-writer of *A Nightmare on Elm Street 3* (1987),
*The Blob* (1988), and *The Fly II* (1989). Wrote episodes of *Tales
from the Crypt*, *Two-Fisted Tales*, and the TV movie *Till Death Do
Us Part*. Directed *Buried Alive* (TV 1990).
Carrie Fisher
Actress probably best known for her role as Princess Leia in the Star
Wars movies. Also writer of *Postcards from the Edge*.
Jonathan Hales
British writer whose credits include *Death on the Nile* (1978),
and *The Mirror Crack'd* (1980).
Jonathan Hensleigh
He was a Wall Street lawyer for six years before pursuing a career
in writing.
Matthew Jacobs
Writer and director whose best-known credit is the feature film
*Paperhouse*. He directed the award-winning short film *Vardo*.
Gavin Scott
His credits include the feature film *Ring Of Fire*.
Jule Selbo
A screen, stage, television, and short story writer, her most
notable feature film is *Hard Promises*.
Rosemary Anne Sisson
A British novelist a few of whose screen credits include *Ride a Wild
Pony* (1976), *Candleshoe* (1977), *The Littlest Horse Thieves*
(1977), and *The Watcher in the Woods* (1980). Also wrote some of the
episodes of *The Duchess of Duke Street*, *Upstairs, Downstairs*,
*The Bretts* (*Masterpiece Theatre*), *Wind In the Willows*, BBC
Wimsey* (*Mystery!*), and *Manions of America*.
Notes on directors
------------------
Vic Armstrong (England)
He was stunt coordinator on *Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom*
(1984), *Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade* (1989), *Total Recall*
(1990), and *Terminator 2* (1992)
Bille August (Sweden)
Dutch by birth but now living in Sweden, his directing credits
include
*Pelle the Conqueror* (1988) and Ingmar Bergman's *Best Intentions*,
which won the Palme D'Or award at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival.
David Hare (England)
His directing credits include *Damage*, *Strapless* (1989), and
*Plenty*.
Joe Johnston (United States)
His directing credits include *Honey, I Shrunk the Kids* (1989), and
*The Rocketeer* (1991)
Terry Jones (England)
His directing credits include *Life of Brian* (1979), *Monty Python's
the Meaning of Life* (1983), *Personal Services* (1987), and *Erik
the Viking* (1989).
Gillies MacKinnon (England)
His film work includes *Playboys* and *The Grass Arena*.
Rene Manzor (France)
He grew up in Argentina. His credits include *Pere Noel* and
*The Passage* (1979).
Deepa Mehta (Canada)
Originally from India, her directing credits include *Sam and Me*.
Gavin Millar (England)
His directing credits include *Dreamchild* (1985).
Mike Newell (England)
Director of *Enchanted April*, *Dance With a Stranger* (1985), and
*Amazing Grace and Chuck* (1987), among other films.
Jim O'Brien
His directing credits include *Jewel In the Crown*.
Nicholas Roeg (England)
Born in 1928. Some of his credits include work on *The Masque of the
Red Death* (1964), *Performance* (1968), *Walkabout* (1971), *Don't
Look Now* (1973), *The Man Who Fell to Earth* (1976), *Bad Timing:
A Sensual Obsession* (1980), *Eureka* (1983), *Insignificance*
(1985), *Castaway* (1987), *Track 29* (1988), Aria (1988), and *The
Witches* (1990).
Carl Schultz (Australia)
Born in Hungry and lives in Australia. A few of his credits include
*Blue Fin* (1978), *Goodbye Paradise*, *Careful He Might Hear You*
(1983), *Bull's Eye Traveling North* (1986), and *The Seventh Sign*
(1988).
Simon Wincer (Australia)
An Australian immigrant. His works include *Snapshot* (1979),
*Harlequin* (1980), *Phar Lap* (1983), *D.A.R.Y.L.* (1985), *Light
Horsemen* (1987), *Quigley Down Under* (1990), *Harley Davidson and
the Marlboro Man* (1991), and *Lonesome Dove* (TV 1988).
=======================================================================
====
Appendix F - Young Indy Information Sources
Magazine articles
-----------------
American Cinematographer, issue unknown
Lucasfilm fanclub magazine, issues unknown
Cinefantastique, Volume 22, Number 6, June 1992
contents listing: The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles
article title: Raider of Television's Riches, Young Indiana Jones
by Mark Dawidziak, pages 30-31
Starlog, Number 183, October 1992
contents listing: Youngest Indiana Jones
article title: Young Indy & the First Crusades
by Ian Spelling, pages 33-36
Starlog, Number 185, December 1992
contents listing: The Oldest Indiana Jones
article title: The Old Indiana Jones Chronicles
by Lynne Stephens, pages 45-48+
Cinefex, Number 54, May 1993
article title: Video Beat: Chronicling Young Indy
by Chris Manson, pages 77-78
Starlog, Number 191, June 1993
contents listing: George Lucas Speaks!
article title: Life With Indy
by Ian Spelling, pages 46-49
Books
-----
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, On the Set and Behind the Scenes
by Dan Madsen, 90 pages
Bantam Books, April 1992, ISBN 0-553-37006-5
George Lucas - The Creative Impulse
by Charles Champlin, pages 162-167
1992, ISBN 0-8109-3563-3
Other
-----
Lucasfilm Ltd. information
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles *Series Study Guide*, *Creative
Backgrounder*, and *Premiere Season Historical Backgrounder*.
CDs
---
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, Volume 1
1. Main Title (Album Version by Laurence Rosenthal)
I. Verdun, 1916 (Laurence Rosenthal)
II. Peking, 1910 (Joel McNeely)
III. Paris, 1916 (Joel McNeely)
IV. Barcelona, 1917 (Laurence Rosenthal)
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, Volume 2
1. Main Title (Alternate Version by Laurence Rosenthal)
I. Vienna, 1908 (Laurence Rosenthal)
II. German East Africa, 1916/The Congo, 1917 (Joel McNeely)
III. London, 1916 (Joel McNeely)
IV. British East Africa, 1909 (Laurence Rosenthal)
Varese Sarabande, 1992, VSD-5391
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, Volume 3
I. Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920 (Joel McNeely)
II. Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues (Joel McNeely)
III. Princeton, 1916 (Laurence Rosenthal)
Varese Sarabande, 1993, VSD-5401
=======================================================================
====
Appendix G - Miscellaneous Information
Program notes
-------------
The segments with Old Indy are called bookends. Filming a pair of
them
typically takes a day. Most are shot at Carolco Studios in
Wilmington,
North Carolina and on location in Wilmington. A majority of them are
directed by Carl Schultz.
Each episode costs about $1.5 million and the filming with Young Indy
takes around 3 weeks. The first production filming alternated between
Sean and Corey episodes.
Filming locations
-----------------
first production second production
---------------- -----------------
London, England Dublin, Ireland
St. Petersburg, Russia Liverpool, England
Almeria, Spain London, England
Prague, Czechoslovakia Cortina, Italy
Barcelona, Spain Feltre, Italy
Lamu, Kenya Florence, Italy
Tana River, Kenya Pisa, Italy
Nairobi, Kenya Taita Hills, Africa
Paris, France Mombasa, Africa
Benares, India Nairobi, Africa
Beijing, China Malindi, Kenya
Shanghai, China Istanbul, Turkey
Vienna, Austria Prague, Czechoslovakia
Cairo, Egypt
Some info about Indiana Jones from the movies and elsewhere
-----------------------------------------------------------
His date of birth comes from the day and month of Harrison Ford's
birthday. His full name is Henry "Indiana" Jones Jr.
He studied under Abner Ravenwood at the University of Chicago.
He had a romance with his daughter Marian Ravenwood and a falling
out with Abner around 1926 at the age of 26 or 27.
He is a "professor of Archeology, expert on the occult,
and...obtainer
of rare antiquities."
He and his father Dr. Henry Jones Sr. teach at the same university.
Emmy nominations
----------------
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Art Direction for a series:
"Vienna, November 1908"
Gavin Bocquet, production designer; Keith Pain, art director; Maggie
Gray, set decorator.
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Cinematography for a series:
"Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues"
David Tattersall, director of photography
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Costume Design for a series:
"Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920"
Peggy Farrell, costume designer
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Directing in a Drama series:
"Northern Italy, June 1918"
Bille August, director
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Composition for a series
(Dramatic Underscore)
"Young Indiana Jones and the Scandal of 1920"
Joel McNeely, composer
"Vienna, November 1908"
Laurence Rosenthal, composer
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Music Direction
"Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues"
Joel McNeely, music director
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Editing for a series
"Somme, Early August 1916"
Tom Bellfort, supervising sound editor; Larry Oatfield, sound editor;
Chris Scarabosio, sound editor; Michael Silvers, sound editor; David
Slusser, music editor; Tom Villano, music editor; Jamie
Gelb-Forrester,
music editor
Outstanding Individual Achievement in Sound Mixing for a Drama series
"Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues"
Carl Rudisill, production mixer; Gary Summers, re-recording mixer
All nominations include:
ABC - Lucasfilm Ltd. in association with Paramount Pictures
Television
=======================================================================
====
The synopses for the episodes that aired were adapted from TV Guide
listings.
For providing information and/or corrections thanks to Laurie Yadon, Lance
Oshiro, Timo Mannikko, Kent Keltner, Randall Miyashiro, Greg Bole, Andreas
Bewersdorff, Kathy Li, "Big" Ed, Quinn McCord, Rick Kitchen, Terry Gaetz,
Edwin Yau, George Fergus, Sally Smith, Mike Brown, Lisle Brown, and Kerrin
Jones.
Much thanks to Nick Sauer for his Indiana Jones timeline from where the
idea and some of the information for the timeline came from. Also to
Steven Grimm for typing in some of the info from Lucasfilm and for
making the guide available on ftp.hyperion.com.
This guide is for personal use only and may be distributed freely. No
charge may be made for this document beyond the costs of printing and
distribution.
--
Loren Heisey
Internet: [email protected]
UUCP : {decwrl|rutgers|ucbvax}!hplabs!hp-pcd!lorenh
|