These are the further misadventures of the pertinacious professor and his perky partner who pucker around the planet and through time and space, in a vain attempt to "cure the world of all its ills."
This second set of imaginative, sound-effect-rich audio cartoons, produced, directed, and voiced by veteran, award-winning radio theater artist Joe Bevilacqua, with announcing by David Garland (WNYC, WQXR) and a special guest appearance by Margaret Juntwait (the Metropolitan Opera), includes
"You're a God, Apollo Jacques! or Boys Don't Have Feats" – the seventeenth and final episode in the NPR/Sirius XM Satellite series"Willoughby and the Professor Meet Willaby and the Professor" – improvisations heard on Joe Bev's Cartoon Carnival radio show"The Squidge Attack" – a short story, part of Pedro's Fables"The Incompetent Genie" – a short story, part of Pedro's Fables"Willoughby and the Professor Meet the Godfather" – an early prototype improvisation"Willoughby and the Professor Go to Hollywood" – an early prototype improvisation"Science-O-Rama" – the soundtracks to the first seven Popular Science magazine videos, animated by Lorie Kellogg"Dimension X Revisited, or Willoughby Goes and Gets It" – a new radio theater based on the short story appearing in the book It's That Time Again: The New Stories of Old Time RadioThe complete music score for the series composed by David Garland and Joe BevilacquaJoe Bevilacqua, a.k.a. Joe Bev, began making up stories into a tape recorder when he was twelve in 1971. Forty-four years and hundreds of hours of radio broadcasting later, and he’s still creating unusual audio that defies categorization. Whether it is creating a half-hour radio play for XM Satellite Radio, documentaries, features or personal essays for National Public Radio, or performing on stage before a live audience, he has made a career out of imaginative storytelling in the best aural traditions of the past.
Pedro Pablo Sacrist á n was born in Madrid and graduated with an MBA from a prestigious business school. His passion for education and writing led him to create Bedtime Stories, short stories that help teach kids values.