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SabrinaTheTeenageWitch

Sabrina The Teenage Witch


16 years old
United States
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FORMAT:
Comedy, Sitcom


Nell Scovell

Melissa Joan Hart

Caroline Rhea

Beth Broderick

Nick Bakay

Jenna Leigh Green

Nate Richert

Lindsay Sloane

Michelle Beaudoin

Soleil Moon Frye

Elisa Donovan

United States

Kenneth R. Koch producer | James Hilton associate producer | Paula Hart executive producer | Carrie Honigblum co-executive producer/executive producer | Renee Phillips co-executive producer/executive producer | Ronald Martinez coordinating producer | Melissa Joan Hart producer | Sheldon Bull consulting producer/co-executive producer | Miriam Trogdon executive producer | Herb Adelman coordinating producer | Nick Bakay co-producer/producer | Frank Conniff co-producer/producer | Daniel Berendsen supervising producer/co-producer | Holly Hester executive producer/co-executive producer | Suzanne Gangursky co-producer/producer | Ruth Bennett consulting producer | Bruce Ferber executive producer | Jon Vandergriff co-executive producer/supervising producer | Laurie Gelman co-executive producer | Marley Sims consulting producer | Bill Rosenthal supervising producer | Norma Safford Vela co-executive producer | Nell Scovell executive producer | Jon Sherman co-producer | Adam England co-producer | David Babcock executive producer | Trish Baker co-producer | Andrew Borakove supervising producer | Adam Hamburger consulting producer | David Hamburger consulting producer | Todd Himmell co-producer | Torian Hughes co-producer | Betsy Borns consulting producer | Gary Halvorson producer | Jennifer Glickman consulting producer | Mike Larsen co-executive producer | Rachel Lipman co-producer | Tony DeRosa-Grund executive producer in charge of production | Diane Dixon producer |

Kenneth R. Koch | Gary Halvorson | Brian K. Roberts | Linda Day | Peter Baldwin | Anson Williams | Jeffrey Melman | Melissa Joan Hart | David Trainer | Robby Benson | Mark Cendrowski | Sheldon Bull | Andrew Tsao | Beth Broderick | Gail Mancuso | Chuck Vinson | David Grossman | Henry Winkler | Leonard R. Garner Jr. | Bill Layton | Asaad Kelada | Paul Hoen

7

163 (including 3 TV movies)

September 27, 1996 – April 24, 2003

Series Original Music by Danny Lux | Gary Stockdale

George Wendt | Penn Jillette | Barbara Eden | Erik Estrada | Donna D'Errico | Robby Benson | Teller | Avril Lavigne | Ryan Reynolds | Racquel Welch | Loni Anderson | Paula Abdul | Usher | Justin Timberlake | Jerry Springer | Ashanti | Kathy Ireland | Kelly Clarkson | Britney Spears |

ALMA Awards

2000 Nominated ALMA Award Emerging Actor in a Drama Series Jon Huertas

Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films

1997 Nominated Saturn Award Best Genre TV Actress Melissa Joan Hart

American Cinema Editors

1998 Nominated Eddie Best Edited Half-Hour Series for Television Stuart Bass For episode "The Crucible".

Emmy Awards

2003 Nominated Emmy Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series For episode "Sabrina In Wonderland".

1997 Nominated Emmy Outstanding Costume Design for a Series for: episode "Third Aunt From The Sun"

Kids Choice Awards

2003 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Actress Melissa Joan Hart

2002 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Actress Melissa Joan Hart

2001 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Actress Melissa Joan Hart

2001 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Show

2000 Won Blimp Award Favorite Animal Star "Salem, the cat"

2000 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Actress Melissa Joan Hart

2000 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Show

1999 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Animal Actor "Salem the Cat"

1999 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite TV Actress Melissa Joan Hart

1998 Won Blimp Award Favorite Animal Star "Salem the Cat"

1998 Won Blimp Award Favorite Television Actress Melissa Joan Hart

1998 Nominated Blimp Award Favorite Television Show

TV Guide Awards

2000 Nominated TV Guide Award Favorite TV Pet "Salem"

Teen Choice Awards

1999 Nominated Teen Choice Award TV - Choice Actress Melissa Joan Hart

1999 Nominated Teen Choice Award TV - Choice Comedy

Young Artist Awards

2003 Won Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series (Comedy or Drama) - Supporting Young Actress Emily Hart

2003 Nominated Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy or Drama Series - Guest Starring Young Actress Age Ten or Under Alexandra Hart-Gilliams

2000 Nominated Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series - Guest Starring Young Performer Alexandra Hart-Gilliams

1999 Nominated Young Artist Award Best Family TV Comedy Series

1998 Won Young Artist Award Best Family TV Comedy Series

1998 Won Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series - Leading Young Performer Melissa Joan Hart

1998 Nominated Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series - Guest Starring Young Actress Emily Hart

1997 Won Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy - Guest Starring Young Performer Seth Adkins Tied with Courtney Peldon for "Home Improvement" (1991).

1997 Won Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy - Leading Young Actress Melissa Joan Hart

1997 Nominated Young Artist Award Best Family TV Comedy Series

YoungStar Awards

1997 Nominated YoungStar Award Best Performance by a Young Actress in a Comedy TV Series Melissa Joan Hart




The cat from Sabrina The Teenage Witch Sabrina The Teenage Witch The cast of Sabrina The Teenage Witch

This bright, frothy sitcom was a ‘Bewitched’ for the ‘90s. Perky Sabrina was a pretty normal teenager in a new school who, on her sixteenth birthday, began to do strange things like levitate in her sleep and bring dead frogs in biology class back to life. Her two eccentric aunts, with whom she lived, then gave her a little cauldron for her birthday – happy birthday, you’re a witch! Witchly powers seemed like a neat thing to have down at Westbridge High School in Boston, but Sabrina soon found out they were kind of hard to master and could backfire if she wasn’t careful. So, under the tutelage of sweet Aunt Hilda Spellman (Caroline Rhea) and acerbic Aunt Zelda Spellman (Beth Broderick) and with a little counseling from her absent dad, seen as a talking picture in an old book (he was in another dimension), she began to learn the ropes. Salem (Nick Bakay) was a mischievous warlock doing penance as the Spellman’s sarcastic black cat; Mr. Eugene Pool (Paul Feig), the nerdy biology teacher; Jenny Kelley (Michelle Beaudoin), her best friend; Harvey Kinkle (Nate Richert), a would-be love interest; and Libby Chessler (Jenna Leigh Green), the stuck-up cheerleader, who Sabrina could now turn into a pineapple. There was a lot of opening closet doors and walking into other dimensions, comic negotiations with the witch’s council and turning people and things into unlikely objects.

The second season saw the arrival of new best friend Valerie Birckhead (Lindsay Sloane), suspicious Vice Principal Willard Kraft (Martin Mull) and most importantly, the Quizmaster, who administered a series of tests allowing Sabrina to officially get her witch’s license. No sooner had she done that, however, but she was presented with a new challenge in 1998: to discover the family secret. It proved to be that she had an evil twin, Katrina, who was banished after a trial on a Hawaiian beach determined that Sabrina was the nice witch.

In the fall of 1999 Sabrina entered her senior year at Westbridge and although her nemesis Libby moved away, she was replaced by a new foil, Harvey’s new friend Brad Alcerro (Jon Huertas), who unbeknownst to Harvey was a witch hunter. That year Mr. Kraft was promoted to principal and Sabrina was stuck tutoring an accident-prone witch named Dreama (China Jesusita Shavers). During the year she was dating both Harvey and Josh. At the end of the season, after the two of them had fought over her affections, Harvey found out she was a witch and they broke up.

That September there were many changes, including moving from ABC to the WB. Sabrina, now a freshman journalism major at Adams College, moved out of the family home and into an apartment close to campus. Roxie King (Soleil Moon Frye) was her sexy, cynical roommate and Morgan Cavanaugh (Elisa Donovan), the ditsy resident assistant more interested in her social life than the students she was supposedly overseeing. Also living in the building was nerdy Miles Goodman (Trevor Lissauer), who believed in aliens. Zelda got a job as an associate professor of quantum physics at Adams; Hilda bought the coffee shop where Sabrina worked part time and Josh was the manager and renamed it Hilda’s.

At the start of the 2001 – 2002 season Sabrina and Josh were dating seriously. He got a job as a photo-journalist for the ‘Boston Citizen’ newspaper and convinced Mike Shelby (George Wendt) his boss, to hire Sabrina as an intern. Morgan, who had been cut off by her father, became a waitress at Hilda’s and started dating Harvey (they broke up in the spring), who was back and now a hockey player for Boston College. In May Hilda got married to her true love Will (Douglas Sills), Harvey professed his love for Sabrina and moved to California (he was back in the fall) and Josh left for a newspaper job in Prague. Sabrina, who had meddled, unsuccessfully, in Hilda’s love life, paid the price and was turned to stone.

As the last season began Sabrina was brought back to life when Zelda gave up her adult years for her and became a child and since both her aunts had returned to the witchly ‘Other Realm’, Sabrina moved back into the family home with Roxie and Morgan as her roommates. She also got her first paying job in journalism as a writer for ‘Scorch’, an alternative music magazine. Annie Martos (Diana-Maria Riva) was her demanding editor and hunky Cole (Andrew W. Walker), versatile Jeff and idea guy Leonard (John Cucey) were co-workers. Roxie was hosting a call-in radio show and Morgan was trying to make it as a fashion designer. In February Sabrina left ‘Scorch’ because Annie didn’t appreciate her work and decided to become a freelance writer. She also started dating Aaron Jacobs (Dylan Neal), who owned a small music club. After a whirlwind courtship he proposed and she accepted. A couple of months later they were planning the wedding while Roxie and Morgan, whom she was going to let keep the house, were looking for a new roommate. In the series finale Sabrina was saying her vows at the altar when she realized that Harvey was her true love. She bid farewell to a remarkably understanding Aaron and still in her wedding gown, departed on the back of Harvey’s motorcycle.

A cartoon version, ‘Sabrina: The Animated Series’, ran on Saturday mornings on ABC from September 1999 to October 2001, on UPN Sunday mornings from December 2000 to September 2001 and on UPN weekdays mornings from November 2000 to September 2001.

Based on the Archie comic book series ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch’.

The ZIP code for Sabrina's town of Westbridge, Massachusetts is 01970, the same ZIP code for Salem, Massachusetts, the "Witch City."

Sabrina's annoying cousin Amanda is actually played by Melissa Joan Hart's little sister Emily Hart.

Hilda: What's my bra doing on the roof?
Salem: Erm, the squirrels needed a nutfeeder...

Harvey Kinkle: [after an accident] Is everybody ok?
Sabrina: Well, I didn't hear a voice say, "Sabrina, step into the light," so I guess I'm ok.





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