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Voyagers!

Voyagers!
Hexum Peluce.jpg
Promotional photo of Jeffrey and Phineas
Genre Science fiction
Created by James D. Parriott
Written by Jill Donner
Robert Janes
James D. Parriott
Harry Longstreet
Renee Longstreet
Directed by Peter Crane
Alan J. Levi
Bernard McEveety
Ron Satlof
Paul Stanley
Virgil W. Vogel
Starring Jon-Erik Hexum
Meeno Peluce
Theme music composer Jerrold Immel
Opening theme Jerrold Immel
Composer(s) Jerrold Immel (Theme, 1.1, 1.5)
Elliot Kaplan (1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.8, 1.9, 1.11, 1.13, 1.15, 1.19)
Peter Myers (1.6, 1.7)
Joel Rosenbaum (1.10, 1.12, 1.14, 1.16, 1.18)
J. A. C. Redford (1.20)
No composer credited (1.17)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 20
Production
Executive producer(s) James D. Parriott
Producer(s) Robert Bennett Steinhauer
Jill Donner
Harry Longstreet
Renee Longstreet
Cinematography Eddie Rio Rotunno
Editor(s) George Ohanian
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) James D. Parriott Productions
Scholastic Productions
Distributor Universal Television
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
Release
Original network NBC
Audio format Monaural
Original release October 3, 1982 (1982-10-03) – July 10, 1983 (1983-07-10)

Voyagers! is an American science fiction television series about time travel that aired on NBC during the 1982–1983 season. The series stars Jon-Erik Hexum and Meeno Peluce.

We travel through time to help history along...give it a push where it's needed. When the Omni's red, it means history's wrong. Our job is to get everything back on track. Green light, kid! We did it!

Phineas Bogg (Jon-Erik Hexum) was one of a society of time travelers called Voyagers who, with the help of a young boy named Jeffrey Jones (played by Meeno Peluce) from 1982, used a hand-held device called an Omni (which looked much like a large pocket watch) to travel in time and ensured that history unfolded as we know it.

Bogg and Jeffrey first met when Bogg's Omni malfunctioned and took him to 1982 (the device was not supposed to reach any farther than 1970), landing him in the skyscraper apartment of Jeffrey's aunt and uncle, who were caring for him after his parents' deaths. Bogg's Guidebook, which contained a detailed description of how history was supposed to unfold, was grabbed by Jeffrey's dog Ralph, and in the struggle to retrieve it Jeffrey accidentally fell out his bedroom window and Bogg jumped out to rescue him by activating the Omni. With his Guidebook stuck in 1982, Bogg (who, being more interested in girls than in history, apparently never paid much attention in his Voyager training/history classes) had to rely on Jeffrey, whose father had been a history professor, to help him. Jeffrey's knowledge proved invaluable; for example, in the first episode Jeffrey ensured that baby Moses's basket traveled down the Nile where it was met by the Pharaoh's daughter.

Phineas was timeless in his machismo, and managed to fall for a beautiful woman in almost every episode. Whenever Jeffrey's wisdom was paired up against Bogg's stubbornness, Jeffrey usually won out, to which Bogg would always mutter, "Smart kids give me a pain!" However, they developed a strong relationship and became a formidable team. In the course of their adventures together, they sometimes encountered other Voyagers whose missions happened to overlap with theirs.


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Wikipedia

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