Pepper Ann is an American animated television series created by Sue Rose and aired on Disney’s One Saturday Morning on ABC.[3] It first premiered on September 13, 1997, and ended on November 30, 2001.[2] It was the first Disney animated television series to be created by a woman.
Tom Warburton, who later created Cartoon Network‘s Codename: Kids Next Door, served as the lead character designer for the series.
Overview
Pepper Ann centers on the trials and tribulations that occur during the titular character’s adolescence and charts her ups and downs at Hazelnut Middle School. The character originated in a comic strip published in YM magazine.[4]
The opening titles has Pepper Ann, when she sinks under her desk after getting a detention slip from her teacher Roland Carter for being late to class again, finding a different item each episode such as a $5 bill, kiwi lipbalm, or a driedel.
Episodes
| Season | Segments | Episodes | Originally released | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First released | Last released | Network | ||||
| 1 | 23 | 13 | September 13, 1997 | January 24, 1998 | ABC (Disney’s One Saturday Morning) | |
| 2 | 25 | 13 | September 12, 1998 | January 16, 1999 | ||
| 3 | 42 | 26 | September 11, 1999 | February 27, 2000 | ABC UPN (Disney’s One Too) | |
| 4 | 23 | 13 | September 9, 2000 | November 30, 2001 | ABC UPN Disney Channel | |
Characters
Main
- Pepper Ann Pearson[c] (voiced by Kathleen Wilhoite) is the titular protagonist of the series, who is a bespectacled, quirky 12-year-old girl whose emotions come out in fantasies. Her conscience, Alter-Ego, often drives her insecurities through misguided advice. Her mother’s side of the family is of Jewish faith, while her father’s side is of Christian faith.[Ep 3]
- Nicky Anais Little (voiced by Clea Lewis) is Pepper Ann’s female best friend, a very intelligent and sensible, yet soft-spoken overachiever, who often serves as a confidant for Pepper Ann. She can be prone to sudden outbursts and struggles to keep her composure when she feels she is overlooked. Being health conscious, Nicky keeps to a pescetarian diet, to which she occasionally breaks.[Ep 4] She often struggles with her perfectionism, and has a phobia of swans.[Ep 5]
- Milo Kamalani (voiced by Danny Cooksey) is Pepper Ann’s male best friend, a laid-back and mellow artist who prides himself in his artistic “talent”. While a bit of a delinquent, Milo is driven by passion, which can sometimes ostracize him from his peers.[Ep 6] In early seasons, he is often her partner in crime with her schemes.
- Lydia Pearson (voiced by April Winchell) is the mother of Pepper Ann and Moose and the ex-wife of Chuck.[Ep 7] She is a salesclerk working with the fashion store “It’s You!” at Hazelnut Mall.[Ep 8]
- Margaret Rose “Moose” Pearson (voiced by Pamela Adlon) is Pepper Ann’s younger 7-year-old sister with an androgynous appearance,[Ep 9] whose favorite pastime is skateboarding.[Ep 10]
- Craig Bean (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is a “cool” 8th grader whom the 7th graders admire. He serves as Pepper Ann’s main love interest, as they both have mutual crushes on each other.[Ep 11]
Recurring
- Dieter Liederhosen (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is a German student in Pepper Ann’s class with an articulate appreciation for food.
- Trinket St. Blair (voiced by Jenna von Oÿ) is a spoiled, rich, popular girl who often serves as a foil to Pepper Ann.
- Cissy Rooney (voiced by Kath Soucie) is Trinket’s best friend. She is considered the most popular girl in 7th grade,[Ep 12] and bears a clueless demeanor.[Ep 13]
- Tessa and Vanessa James (both voiced by Cree Summer) are black twin sisters who run the school’s paper “Hazelnuts N Bolts”.[Ep 13] Tessa is more outgiong while Vanessa is more reserved; the pair have a tendency of finishing each other’s sentences.[Ep 14]
- Janie Lilly Diggity (voiced by Susan Tolsky) is the aunt of Pepper Ann and Moose, being Lydia’s younger sister. A former member of the Peace Corps, she spends her time as an activist.[Ep 6]
- Jo Jo Diggity (voiced by Tino Insana) is Pepper Ann and Moose’s uncle and Janie’s husband, who works as a cop.[Ep 15]
- Nedward “Ned” Diggity (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is the socially inept son of Janie and Jo Jo, Lydia’s nephew, and Moose and Pepper Ann’s cousin, whom P.A. is embarrased of. Ned has an affinity for cheese.[Ep 16]
- Lillian Lilly (voiced by April Winchell) is the mother of Lydia and Janie, and Pepper Ann’s grandmother. In her youth, she used to be a performer and actress.[Ep 17]
- Leo Lilly (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is Lillian’s husband and Pepper Ann’s grandfather.[Ep 7]
- Peter “Pink-Eye Pete” Ogilvy (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is a nerdy kid who suffers from pink eye.[Ep 18]
- Alice Kane (voiced by Lauren Tom) is Pepper Ann’s pompous (sometimes egomaniacal) academic rival. She presents a superficially mature attitude in spite of being just as competitive as Pepper Ann.[Ep 19]
- Gwen Mezzrow (voiced by Kimmy Robertson) is a bubbly girl who constantly alternates between pining for Milo and being entirely uninterested in him in favor of Dieter, who is indifferent to her affection.[Ep 20]
- Stuart Walldinger (voiced by Luke Perry in Season 2 and Cam Clarke from Season 3 onwards) is Nicky’s bookish boyfriend, whose main hobby is RC car-racing. He holds a reserved attitude but has a tendency to act out and bottle his emotions.[Ep 21]
- Constance Goldman (voiced by Candi Milo) is a shy, awkward girl who looks up to Pepper Ann.[Ep 22]
- Shelf McClain (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is a large, academically stunted Scottish student in Pepper Ann’s class who bullies other students and steals their lunch money.[Ep 23]
- Chuck Pearson (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) is the estranged ex-husband of Lydia and father of Pepper Ann and Moose. He works as a blimp pilot and speaks with a Mid-Atlantic accent.[Ep 7]
- Sherrie Spleen (voiced by April Winchell) is the TV anchorwoman for Channel 96 in Hazelnut.[Ep 24]
- Supermodel Mindy (voiced by Kath Soucie) is an airheaded celebrity and host of several popular Hazelnut television shows.[Ep 4]
- Mick Snot, real name Harry Schnitzer (voiced by Jess Harnell & Rob Paulsen) is the frontman of the band Flaming Snot. He went to the same Community College as Lydia prior to forming his band; Harry’s fame has caused a strain between their friendship.[Ep 25]
- Mitch (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is the owner of “It’s You!”, the clothing store in which Lydia works at. Mitch has a tendency to be high strung and often takes Lydia for granted.[Ep 8]
- Milicent the Militant (voiced by April Winchell) is an officious army woman who is very no-nonsense and narrow-minded when it comes to Pepper Ann.[Ep 26]
- Emmit Swink (voiced by Max Casella & Jeff Bennett) is the owner of BrainDead arcade and a waiter at Greezy N’ Cheezy, a pizzeria often visited by Pepper Ann and her friends.[Ep 27][Ep 21]
- Margot Lesandre (voiced by Kathy Najimy) is a snooty langerie saleswoman who is rivals with Lydia and Janie.
- “Shouty Kid” Sean Lesandre (voiced by Pamela Adlon) is the son of Margot, and Moose’s crush. He is most recognizable for his booming voice.[Ep 28]
- Crash (voiced by Adam Wylie) is Moose’s neurotic best friend, whose name Pepper Ann never remembers.[Ep 29]
- Crying Girl (typically voiced by Cree Summer & Kath Soucie) is an unfortunate girl who often breaks down in tears at the slightest mishap, most often Pepper Ann’s misadventures.[Ep 30]
- Sketch (voiced by Karen Duffy) is an 8th grader whom Pepper Ann admires for her “coolness”. She values loyalty but is shown to be somewhat aloof.[Ep 23]
Minor
- Steve the Cat is the Pearson family’s cat, brought in by Lydia to help Pepper Ann deal with the birth of Moose. Following the departure of Supermodel Mindy, he was made the temporary mascot of the Channel 96 Lotto show, succeeded by Dieter after he returned to the Pearson family.[Ep 15]
- Mrs. and Mr. Little (voiced by Kath Soucie & Jim Cummings respectively) are the parents of Becky and Nicky. While supportive, they are often ignorant of their daughters’ best interests. Mrs. Little often picks Nicky up from school and is a defense attorney,[Ep 8] while Mr. Little is a stockbroker.[Ep 1]
- Kona Kamalani (voiced by Nicole Sullivan) is the mother of Milo Kamalani. She runs a catering business, having moved to Hazelnut with Milo following her divorce.[Ep 31]
- Dirk (voiced by Jim Cummings) is Milo’s stepfather and Kona’s husband. Dirk is overeager to connect with his stepson.[Ep 23]
- Lamar Abu-Dabe (voiced by Kenny Blank) is a 7th grader and a classmate of Pepper Ann’s whom Constance has a crush on.[Ep 21]
- Brenda (voiced by Tara Strong) is Pepper Ann’s former best friend. She is bubbly and overbearing to the point that Pepper Ann finds her insufferable.[Ep 27]
- Mama Tried Guy (voiced by Jim Cummings) is a temperamental student nicknames after his large heart tattoo on his arm.[Ep 23]
- Hush (voiced by Pamela Adlon) is a mute 8th grader who is friends with Sketch. She has a begrudging respect for Pepper Ann.[Ep 23]
- Tank & Poison (voiced by Brittany Murphy & Meredith Scott Lynn) are carefree, nonchalant 8th graders who are friends with Sketch.[Ep 23]
- Noah (voiced by Jeff Bennett), nicknamed “Hacky Sack Boy” is a dim 7th grader who comes around to Milo after dismissing his sensitivity.[Ep 23]
- Amber O’Malley (voiced by Jodi Benson) is a temporary transfer student from HMS, known as the Locker Bandit for stealing items from student’s lockers.[Ep 12]
- Wayne Macabre (voiced by Wallace Langham) is an 8th grade critic whose opinionated and misogynistic comments put him at odds with Pepper Ann.[Ep 24]
- Joaquim Sanchez (voiced by Jason Marsden in Season 2 and Mario Lopez in Season 4) is a student who attends the private school “Our Lady of Walnut”. He once mistook Pepper Ann for Didi O’Shaughnessy, who was an exact match of Pepper Ann;[Ep 22] he would later invite Pepper Ann to a spring dance, alongside Bud and Craig.[Ep 32]
- Mean Girl (voiced by Kath Soucie) is a social climbing punk who often brings trouble to Pepper Ann.[Ep 33]
- Effie Shrugg (voiced by Hedy Burress) is an intellectual 8-year-old girl who uses her brawn and large size to intimidate others.[Ep 2]
- Bud (voiced by Jason Marsden) is a member of the HMS football team who once had a crush on Pepper Ann, after her stint as the only girl on the team.[Ep 10][Ep 32]
- Becky Little (voiced by Glenne Headly) is the older sister of Nicky Little. Like her sister, Becky is academically strong and shares a fear of swans.[Ep 5]
- Alf (voiced by Will Ferrell) is the leader of the HMS chess club.[Ep 34]
- Mrs. Liederhosen (voiced by April Winchell) is the mother of Dieter. She moved to Hazelnut in an exchange program as a surgeon and helped deliver Moose during her birth.[Ep 35]
- Larry (voiced by Alex Rocco) is an out of touch executive responsible for running Channel 96. He is aided by his assistant Davis (voiced by Rob Paulsen).[Ep 15]
- Cameron Landisburg (voiced by John O’Hurley) is a film director who challenged Pepper Ann to create her own film after she gave his a poor review in the school paper.[Ep 20]
- Estelle Sommers (voiced by Edie McClurg) is a representative of several Women-led charity groups and organizations, and is a friend of Janie’s.[Ep 9]
- Bernie Guberstein (voiced by Travis Tritt and Jeff Bennett) is a country dancer whom Lydia briefly dated. He went by the stage name “Tex Yokel” and led dance classes, despite coming from Brooklyn.[Ep 33]
- Mama Destructo (voiced by Kathy Kinney) is a popular wrestler. She once subbed for Ms. Stark but proved to be a poor math teacher, opening a wrestling camp instead.[Ep 36] She later becomes a security guard for the President.[Ep 37]
- Fuzzy (voiced by Sue Rose) is a fictional cartoon hairball popular within Hazelnut who stars in a series of comics, television shows, stage plays and theme parks.
- Klaus (voiced by Russi Taylor) is a German cartoon monkey which Dieter is a fan of.[Ep 30]
- Tundra Woman (voiced by Nicole Sullivan) is a fictional heroine whom Moose admires for her selflessness and courage.[Ep 7]
- Mark Hamill is a celebrity who often visits Hazelnut. He was elected class president of HMS[Ep 19] and would later appear as a guest (after being elected President of the United States) for a HMS reunion.[Ep 37]
- Evel Knievel is a daredevil whom Moose campaigned for to receive his own statue in Hazelnut’s Lupkin Park; Patrick Swayze received one instead.[Ep 10]
- Alex Trebek was the host of Jeopardy! and was once recruited by Pepper Ann for a heist.[Ep 36] He would eventually marry Lydia Pearson and become the stepfather of Moose and Pepper Ann.[Ep 37]
Hazelnut Middle School
- Principal Herbert Hickey (voiced by Don Adams) is the school’s tough disciplinarian with zero tolerance for Pepper Ann’s shenanigans. His distinctive feature is a wart on his face with a hair growing out of it. This was Adams’s final role before his death in 2005.[Ep 18]
- Ms. Vera Schwartz (voiced by Paddi Edwards) is the school’s secretary. She is widowed and lives by herself with a bundle of cats.[Ep 31]
- Mr. Roland Carter (voiced by Jim Cummings) is a science teacher who is passionate about what he teaches. He is known for giving Pepper Ann detention slips but does believe that she can be a good student when she successfully does her assignments.[Ep 28]
- Ms. Abriola Stark (voiced by April Winchell) is the math teacher who is also in charge of the drama club.[Ep 26]
- Ms. Bronte Bladdar (voiced by Bebe Neuwirth) is a stoic English teacher (who often substitutes for art teacher Ms. Ford) who speaks in deadpan-monotone mannerisms.[Ep 6]
- Mr. Sherm Finky (voiced by Don Lake) is the social studies teacher. He presents a hip (if not out-of-touch) demeanor, but is no-nonsense when it comes to shirking projects.[Ep 12]
- Ms. Carlotta Sneed (voiced by Julia Sweeney) is the economics teacher whose main hobby is knitting.[Ep 26]
- Mr. Owen Clapper (voiced by James Avery) is the music teacher. He tends to clash with Ms. Stark concerning school plays.[Ep 1]
- Senorita Vivas (voiced by Maria Canals-Barrera) is the Spanish elective teacher during Pepper Ann’s spring semester.[Ep 38]
- Mr. Reason (voiced by Kurtwood Smith) is the stern woodshop teacher. His tough love approach often rubs his students the wrong way.[Ep 32]
- Coach Doogan (voiced by Kathy Najimy) is the physical education teacher, and the head of the school’s soccer team.[Ep 13]
- Coach Bronson (voiced by Tom Wilson) is the football coach.[Ep 10]
- Nurse Oomla (voiced by Ellen Cleghorne) is the Jamaican-accented school nurse.[Ep 20]
- Moira the Lunch Lady (voiced by Sue Rose) is a maladjusted lunchlady with low standards for sanitation.[Ep 21]
- Ernie the Janitor (voiced by Jeff Bennett) is the absent-minded, albeit sociable janitor of HMS.[Ep 5]
Broadcast and home media
Pepper Ann was aired as part of the Disney’s One Saturday Morning block on ABC from 1997 to 2001. Select new episodes of the show were also shown (alongside reruns) on Disney’s One Too on UPN during the 2000–01 season.
Starting on September 3, 2001, the series began syndication through Disney Channel, and also joined Toon Disney alongside Disney’s Doug on an hour-long primetime block called The Magical World of Toons.[5] Previously unaired episodes that had never aired on ABC or UPN made their premiere throughout early September on Toon Disney,[citation needed] and November 15–30 on Disney Channel.[2]
The series remained in syndication on Disney Channel until September 8, 2002.[6] While Pepper Ann would leave regular syndication on Toon Disney in 2004, the show received a few marathons throughout 2007 and 2008, with the final one being played on July 20, 2008, the last time the show was broadcast on US television.
All 65 episodes of the series were included on Disney+ on September 8, 2021 in the United States,[7] with the episodes from season 4 listed under season 3 on the platform (due to them being produced concurrently),[8] along with the episodes initially being listed in their package order.[d][9]
Internationally, the show aired on GMTV in the UK and RTÉ in Ireland.
Broadcast discrepancies
In 2003, following the show’s original run, several TV sites would misorder the series based off its broadcast order, with certain episodes being mistitled or paired in reverse, and the show’s third season (which was aired between ABC and UPN) split into two separate seasons. Due to the lack of sources available at the time, several sites erroneously cite several episodes from the fourth season (often cited as the fifth season) being broadcast from November 13-18, 2000.[10][11] This has been debunked by contradictory airdates from TV guides and newspaper listings of the time citing earlier episodes airing in place of the presumed premieres.[12][13]
Scrapped film
In 1999, an animated film based on the series was in development at Walt Disney Television Animation and Walt Disney Pictures under the name Pepper Ann’s Rio Adventure. The movie would have followed Pepper Ann’s soccer team being invited to Rio de Janeiro as part of an event where they try to stop a land developer from deforesting the Amazon rainforest. The movie was scrapped for unknown reasons, however concept art of the film by animation director Richard Bowman was posted onto eBay in recent years, the most recent piece being posted in July 2024.[14] It is unknown whether or not the film was intended to be theatrical or made for television.
Notes
- ^ Animation outsourced to Sunwoo Entertainment and The Hana Animation Company (three segments),[Ep 1][Ep 2] International distribution handled by Buena Vista International, Inc.
- ^ The series technically ended its run earlier on Toon Disney in September, although the premiere dates for said channel are undocumented.
- ^ Promotional material (such as Disney Online) sometimes cites “Pepper” as a nickname with “Jennifer Ann” being her birth name, albeit this was contradicted by early press materials.
- ^ As of late 2024, the episodes listed under Season 3 were reordered from the initial order present from when the show was first added.
References
Episodes
- ^ a b c “Def Comedy Mom / Career Daze”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 30. 1999. ABC / UPN.
- ^ a b “The Beans of Wrath / Effie Shruged”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 32. 1999. UPN / ABC.
- ^ “A Kosher Christmas”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 48. December 18, 1999. ABC.
- ^ a b “The Untitled Milo Kamalani Project / Guess Who’s Coming to the Theater”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 49. February 23, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b c “The Amazing Becky Little”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 47. February 22, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b c “The Environ-Mentals”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 9. November 8, 1997. ABC.
- ^ a b c d “Dances With Ignorance / Girl Power”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 36. September 18, 1999. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Single Unemployed Mother”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 50A. January 22, 2000. ABC.
- ^ a b “G.I. Janie / Miss Moose”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 28. February 7, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b c d “Beyond Good and Evel / One of the Guys”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 41. September 25, 1999. ABC.
- ^ “The First Date Club”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 42A. November 13, 1999. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Cocoon Gables / Green-Eyed Monster”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 15. September 19, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Soccer Season / Crush + Burn”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 10. November 15, 1997. ABC.
- ^ “Vanessa Less Tessa”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 18A. October 10, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Hazelnut’s Finest / Cat Scan”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 16. September 26, 1998. ABC.
- ^ “License to Drive”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 14B. September 12, 1998. ABC.
- ^ “Cold Feet”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 24B. December 26, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b “Ziterella”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 1. September 13, 1997. ABC.
- ^ a b “Complimentary Colors”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 55. November 4, 2000. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Burn Hazelnut Burn / The Wash-Out”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 27. 1999. ABC / UPN.
- ^ a b c d “Remote Possibilities / Considering Constance”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 39. February 17, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b “Doppelganger Didi / Pepper Ann’s Day Off-Kilter”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 25. January 9, 1999. ABC.
- ^ a b c d e f g “Sketch 22 / Manly Milo”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 12. January 10, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b “Framed / Radio Freak Hazelnut”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 20. November 7, 1998. ABC.
- ^ “Snot Your Mother’s Music”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 7B. October 25, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b c “Romeo + Juliet / Food Barn”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 2. September 20, 1997. ABC.
- ^ a b “Old Best Friend / Crunch Pod”. Pepper Ann. Season 1. Episode 3. September 27, 1997. ABC.
- ^ a b “Strike it or Not / Moose in Love”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 60. 2000. ABC / Disney Channel.
- ^ “Mash into Me”. Pepper Ann. Season 2. Episode 19B. October 31, 1998. ABC.
- ^ a b “To Germany With Love”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 43. February 18, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b “The Velvet Room”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 33. February 10, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b c “The One with Mr. Reason / Sense and Senselesness”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 53. September 9, 2000. ABC.
- ^ a b “Live and Let Dye”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 38. February 16, 2000. UPN.
- ^ “Searching for Pepper Ann Pearson”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 56A. November 19, 2001. Disney Channel.
- ^ “The Way They Were”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 52. February 27, 2000. UPN.
- ^ a b “That’s My Mama Destructo / Unhappy Campers”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 62. November 27, 2001. Disney Channel.
- ^ a b c “The Finale”. Pepper Ann. Season 4. Episode 63. November 28, 2001. Disney Channel.
- ^ “The Spanish Imposition”. Pepper Ann. Season 3. Episode 31B. January 22, 2000. ABC.
Citations
- ^ Mallory, Michael (March 19, 2000). “Move Over, Old Men”. The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 3, 2022.
- ^ a b c “Hickory Daily Record Nov 25, 2001, Page 80”. www.newspapers.com. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
- ^ Perlmutter, David (2018). The Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 451. ISBN 978-1538103739.
- ^ Gerston, Jill (November 23, 1997). “SIGNOFF; A Spunky Heroine Navigates Adolescence”. The New York Times. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
- ^ DeMott, Rick (July 20, 2001). “Pepper Ann Joins Toon Disney’s Schedule”. Animation World Network. Retrieved February 17, 2025.
- ^ “Daily Citizen – Sep 07, 2002, Page 26”. www.newspapers.com. Retrieved March 20, 2025.
- ^ Johnson, Zach (August 17, 2021). “Everything New You Can Stream on Disney+ in September 2021”. D23. Retrieved August 17, 2021.
- ^ “Warburtonlabs: THE PEPPER ANN FINALE CHARACTER DESIGNS”. June 27, 2016.
- ^ Pepper Ann on Disney+
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20050112073417/http://www.tvtome.com:80/tvtome/servlet/EpisodeGuideServlet/showid-2424/Pepper_Ann/
- ^ https://epguides.com/PepperAnn/
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20010108063800/http://tv.excite.com/episode_guide/?code=EP235116&title=Pepper+Ann&station=UPN&date=20001115&time=083000
- ^ “Victoria Advocate – Nov 17, 2000, Page 72”. www.newspapers.com. Retrieved June 3, 2026.
- ^ “Various concept pieces for Pepper Ann’s Rio Adventure, as posted by director Richard Bowman”.
External links
- Pepper Ann at IMDb