Wookieepedia

READ MORE

Wookieepedia
Advertisement
Wookieepedia

"Home Is Where the Shrieks Are" is the third episode of the second season of Ewoks. Written by Bob Carrau and directed by Dale Schott, the episode originally aired on ABC on September 20, 1986.

Plot summary[]

Moving out[]

Upset that he was performing household chores for his mother instead of training with the Ewok warriors, Wicket decided to move out of the Warrick family hut. As he left the village, Teebo caught up with him, and when he realized that he felt the same as Wicket, Teebo decided to leave home as well.

The duo moved into an old tree fort in the forest and decided to fix the place up. But tension grew between the two as they realized that their current workload was worse than it was at their respective homes. Since the boys would not be attending the village Harvest Festival that night, Latara and Kneesaa brought them some stew for dinner. However, Wicket and Latara got into a culinary quibble which ended with Wicket covered in stew.

The haunting[]

As their first night out approached, Wicket cleaned up the fort while Teebo went out to look for food. Teebo returned, well fed, with his new friends—a trio of Kagles. The Kagles, however, chose not to stay once they learned the Ewoks had moved in without getting permission from the current landowners, the Shrieks. Although Teebo became afraid, Wicket decided that they would remain at their new fort rather than return the village.

Meeting Larry[]

That night, the Shrieks haunted the Ewoks. The unafraid Wicket dragged Teebo along as he traced the cackling voices all the way to the inside of the tree the fort was built in. Wicket outsmarted the Shrieks, and soon realized there was only one Shriek—Larry, a lonely three-eyed being who had also run away from home long ago. However, when Larry had eventually returned home, he found that his people had all moved away. Wicket then had an epiphany and returned to the village immediately, bringing both Teebo and Larry along with him, and they were all able to enjoy the rest of the Harvest Festival.

Credits[]

By type
Cast Uncredited cast Crew Uncredited crew Special thanks

Cast

Crew

  • Written by — Bob Carrau[2]
  • Executive Producers — Cliff Ruby & Elana Lesser[2]
  • Producers — Michael Hirsh, Patrick Loubert, Clive A. Smith[2]
  • Supervising Producer — Lenora Hume[2]
  • Director — Dale Schott[2]
  • Production Designer — Kirk Henderson[2]
  • Story Editor — Paul Dini[2]
  • Voice Directors — Cliff Ruby, Elana Lesser[2]
  • Casting — Judy Nelson[2]
  • Line Producer — Peter Hudecki[2]
  • Assistant Line Producer — Heather Walker[2]
  • Unit Manager — Richard Pimm[2]
  • Associate Producers — Paul Dini, Michael Dubil[2]
  • Production Co-ordinator — Judy Nelson[2]
  • Production Supervisor — Dale Cox[2]
  • Storyboard Director — Raymond Jafelice[2]
  • Layout Director — Arna Selznick[2]
  • Posing Director — Charlie Bonifacio[2]
  • Animation Director — Scott Glynn[2]
  • Art Director — Julie Eberley[2]
  • Storyboard Artists — Sam Agro, Jim Craig, Sam Dixon, Raymond Jafelice, Laura Shepherd, Tom Nesbitt, Frank Nissen[2]
  • Designers — Charles Bastien, Cynthia Ward, Patty Beausoleil, Ross Campbell[2]
  • Background Artist — Clive Powsey[2]
  • Main Title Design — John Hays[2]
  • Computer Animation — Illusion Studios[2]
  • Graphics — Kim Cleary[2]
  • Colour Designs — Mary Eklund, Alan Knappett, Lisa Ratke, Weronika Kaplanska, Lesley Headrick, Tom King, Suzanne Clark[2]
  • Layout — John Van Bruggen, Jeff Dickson, Anthony Van Bruggen, Rick Allen, Marie Carter, Rick Corrigan III, Michel Dazé, Diane Hare, Frank Lintzen, Jim Nakashima, Tim O'Halloran, Bob Smith, Ricardo Spinacé, Robert Rivard, Howard Lonn, Anthony Iacobelli, Scott Bennett, Geroge Elliot, Doug Bennett, Glenn Chadwick, Brian Foster, John Guertin, Faye Hamilton, Karen Kewell, Royce Langford, Rob Sadler[2]
  • Posers — Charlie Bonifacio, Wendy Perdue, Gerry Fournier, Scott Glynn, Cynthia Ward, Jan Burton, Steve Whitehouse, Shawn Seles, Michelle Houston, Lil André, Shane Doyle, Tony Egizii, Mike Girard, Lynn Yamazaki, Greg Court, Dave Simmons, Woong Cheon Jang, Robert Koo, Pat Knight, Maureen Shelleau, John Pagan, Steve Fitch[2]
  • Special Effects — Core Animated Effects Ltd.[2]
  • Production Manager — Karyn Booth-Chadwick[2]
  • Design Co-ordinator — Cathy Parkes[2]
  • Storyboard Co-ordinator — Jan Steel Moffatt[2]
  • Layout Co-ordinator — Alexis Wallrich, Lisa Ratke[2]
  • Posing Co-ordinator — Willy Ashworth[2]
  • Xerography — Paul Hogarth[2]
  • Production Assistants — Steve Chadwick, Brenda Kelly, Lisa Ratke, Krishna Kadambari, Bill Zeats, Don Cretién, Nancy Shenton, Sunni Kerwin, Recinda Jeannine, Joy Folla[2]
  • Pre-Production Editors — Rob Kirkpatrick, Mac Holyoke, Phil Stilman, Glenn Barna, Ian Jeans, Steve Fraser, Keith Traver, Eric Hurlbut, Stephanie Crawford, Mike Reid[2]
  • Music by — Patrick Gleeson[2]
  • Animation Production — Wang Film Production Company Limited[2]
  • Post-Production Services Provided by — Sprockets Systems[2]
  • Supervising Editor — Teresa Eckton[2]
  • Music Editor — Robin Lee[2]
  • Sound Editors — Jeff Watts, Mary Helen Leasman[2]
  • Assistant Sound Editors — Tim Eaton, Greg Smith[2]
  • Re-Recording Mixer — Tom Johnson[2]
  • Recording at — Russian Hill Recording[2]
  • Colour Prints by — Monaco Labs[2]
  • Lucasfilm Ltd.[2]
  • In Association with — Nelvana Limited[2]


Appearances[]

By type
Characters Organisms Droid models Events Locations
Organizations and titles Sentient species Vehicles and vessels Weapons and technology Miscellanea

Characters

Wicket kneesaa

Wicket and Princess Kneesaa.

Organisms

Events

Locations

Organizations and titles

Sentient species

Miscellanea

Sources[]

Wiki-shrinkable
Explore all of Wookieepedia's images for this article subject.

Notes and references[]

  1. SWInsider "A Star Wars CELibration" — Star Wars Insider 27
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 2.28 2.29 2.30 2.31 2.32 2.33 2.34 2.35 2.36 2.37 2.38 2.39 2.40 2.41 2.42 2.43 2.44 2.45 2.46 2.47 2.48 2.49 2.50 2.51 2.52 Ewoks logo Ewoks — "Home Is Where the Shrieks Are"
  3. SWInsider "Star Wars Publications Timeline" — Star Wars Insider 23 dates the events of the Ewoks animated series, which include the events of "Home is Where the Shrieks Are," to three years after the events of Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, which corresponds to 3 ABY, according to The New Essential Chronology.
In other languages
Advertisement