Events in 2004 in animation.
- January 1 - Bob the Builder: Snowed Under: The Bobblesberg Winter Games (United Kingdom and United States)
- January 16 - Teacher's Pet (United States) (produced in 2003)
- January 17 - Dead Leaves (Japan)
- January 22 - The Butterfly Lovers (China)
- February 9 - Pinocchio 3000 (Canada, France, and Spain)
- February 10:
- February 11 - The Island of Black Mor (France)
- February 14 - Saint Seiya: Heaven Chapter ~ Overture (Japan)
- February 20 - Clifford's Really Big Movie (limited)
- March 6:
- March 7 - Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey (Japan)
- March 9 - Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo (United States)
- March 18 - Boo, Zino & the Snurks (Germany and Spain)
- March 24:
- Los balunis en la aventura del fin del mundo (Spain)
- Immortel (France)
- April 1 - Derrick – Duty Calls! (Germany and Ireland)
- April 2:
- April 6 - Corto Maltese: La maison dorée de Samarkand (France)
- April 7 - Charley and Mimmo (France, Luxembourg, and South Korea)
- April 17:
- April 18 - Appleseed (Japan)
- April 23:
- May 18 - VeggieTales: A Snoodle's Tale (United States)
- May 19 - Shrek 2 (United States)
- June 22 - Scooby-Doo! and the Loch Ness Monster (United States)
- June 24 - McDull, prince de la bun (Hong Kong)
- June 30 - Les Aventures extraordinaires de Michel Strogoff (France)
- July 8 - Patoruzito (Argentina)
- July 9 - MovieComic: The Movie (Brazil)
- July 12 - Stellaluna (United States and Canada)
- July 17:
- July 24:
- August 3 - Bratz: Starrin' & Stylin' (United States)
- August 7 - Mind Game (Japan)
- August 13 - Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie: Pyramid of Light (Japan)
- August 17 - Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers (United States)
- August 21 - Naruto the Movie: Snow Princess' Book of Ninja Arts (Japan)
- August 27 - Mobile Suit Gundam SEED: Special Edition I – The Empty Battlefield (Japan)
- August 31 - VeggieTales: Sumo of the Opera (United States)
- September 4 - Strings (Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and United Kingdom)
- September 5 - The Easter Egg Adventure (United States)
- September 14 - G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom (United States)
- September 24 - Mobile Suit Gundam SEED: Special Edition II – The Far-Away Dawn (Japan)
- September 26 - Laura's Star (Germany and Bulgaria)
- September 28:
- September 30 - Balto III: Wings of Change (United States)
- October 1 - Shark Tale (United States)
- October 5:
- October 12:
- October 19 - Bionicle 2: Legends of Metru Nui (United States)
- October 22:
- October 28 - Neznayka and the Barrabass (Russia)
- November 5:
- The Incredibles (United States)
- The Little Polar Bear: A Visitor from the South Pole (Germany)
- November 9:
- November 10 - The Polar Express (United States)
- November 14 - Muhammad: The Last Prophet (United States)
- November 16:
- November 19 - The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie (United States)
- November 20:
- November 23 - In Search of Santa (United States)
- November 24 - LeapFrog: Math Circus (United States)
- December 1:
- Souvenir from the Capital (Russia)
- Supertramps (Spain)
- December 2 - My Little Pony: Dancing in the Clouds (United States)
- December 3 - Frank and Wendy (Estonia)
- December 4 - Blade of the Phantom Master (South Korea)
- December 9:
- The District! (Hungary)
- Teo, Intergalactic Hunter (Spain and Argentina)
- December 10 - Circleen: Little Big Mouse (Denmark)
- December 23:
- Specific date unknown:
- Genghis Khan (Italy)
- Homeland (India)
- Tentacolino (Italy)
- Tracing Jake (Japan)
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November
- November 17: Andre Robinson, American actor (voice of Donny McStuffins in Doc McStuffins, Meerkat Baby in Khumba, Niko in Niko and the Sword of Light, Clyde McBride in seasons 3-5 of The Loud House and The Loud House Movie, young Bilal in Bilal: A New Breed of Hero, Oliver in Summer Camp Island, Cutter in Dragons: Rescue Riders, Hansel in A Tale Dark & Grimm, Brandon in the American Dad! episode "Mused and Abused").
- November 27: Jet Jurgensmeyer, American actor (voice of Gabriel, Aiden and Rudy in Special Agent Oso, Nonny in seasons 3–4 of Bubble Guppies, Kaz and Zac in Shimmer and Shine, Orby and Dudley in Puppy Dog Pals, Dirty in The Stinky & Dirty Show, Stinky in Hey Arnold!: The Jungle Movie, young Guapo in Ferdinand, Junior in Next Gen, Pip in T.O.T.S., Cornelius in The Chicken Squad episode "House Guest").
January
- January 1: Yevgeniy Migunov, Russian film director, caricaturist, illustrator, and animator (Karandash and Klyaska - Merry Hunters, Familiar Pictures), dies at age 82.[38][39]
- January 8: Eddy Ryssack, Belgian comics artist and animator (Belvision), dies from a heart attack at age 75.[40]
- January 10: Sidney Miller, American actor (voice of The Dungeon Master in Dungeons & Dragons, Hornswoggle in The Gary Coleman Show, Horrg in Monchhichis, Oompe in Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland), dies at age 87.[41]
February
- February 1: James Simpkins, Canadian animator and comics artist (National Film Board of Canada), dies at age 93.[42]
- February 3: Jason Raize, American actor and singer (voice of Denahi in Brother Bear), commits suicide at age 28.[43]
- February 5: John Hench, American animator, designer and creative director (Walt Disney Company), dies at age 95.[44]
- February 11: Tony Pope, American actor (voice of the Big Bad Wolf in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Geppetto in House of Mouse, Wreck-Gar in The Transformers, Junior in What a Cartoon!, Scientist in the Superman: The Animated Series episode "New Kids in Town", continued voice of Goofy), dies at age 56.[45]
- February 12: Anthony Rizzo, Italian-American film director (Duck and Cover), dies at age 85.
March
- March 1: Barbara Frawley, Australian actress (voice of Dot in Dot and the Kangaroo and its sequels), dies at age 68.
- March 6: Peggy DeCastro, American singer (Bird and Animal voices in Song of the South), dies at age 83.[46]
- March 7: Paul Winfield, American actor (voice of Mr. Smith in The Wish That Changed Christmas, Jeffrey Robbins in Gargoyles, Mr. Ruhle in The Magic School Bus, Omar Mosley/Black Marvel in Spider-Man, Sam Young in Batman Beyond, Lucious Sweet in The Simpsons, Earl Cooper in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "The Mechanic", Father in the Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child episode "Beauty and the Beast"), dies from a heart attack at age 64.[47]
- March 8: Robin Klein, American casting director (Foodfight!), dies at age 43.
- March 12: William Moritz, American animation film historian, dies at age 62.
- March 14: René Laloux, French animator and film director (Les Escargots, La Planète Sauvage, Les Maîtres du temps), dies at age 74 from a heart attack.[48][49]
- March 28: Peter Ustinov, English actor (voice of Prince John and King Richard in Robin Hood, and the title character in Dr. Snuggles), dies at age 82.[50]
- Specific date unknown: John Grace, English television writer (64 Zoo Lane, Pablo the Little Red Fox, Kipper, Ethelbert the Tiger, co-creator of ReBoot), dies at an unknown age.
May
- May 3: Volus Jones, American animator (Warner Bros. Cartoons, Walter Lantz, Format Films, Hanna-Barbera, Famous Studios, UPA, Ralph Bakshi), dies at age 90.[55]
- May 9: Robert Naylor, American animator and comics artist, dies at age 94. [56]
- May 15: Jack Bradbury, American animator and comics artist (Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros. Cartoons), dies at age 89.[57]
July
- July 7: Vlado Kristl, Yugoslavian-Croatian film director and animator (Don Kihot), dies at age 81.[61]
- July 9: Isabel Sanford, American actress and comedian (voice of Betsy in the Wait Till Your Father Gets Home episode "Help Wanted", Shirley McLoon in the A Pup Named Scooby-Doo episode "A Bicycle Built for Boo!", Bernice in the Pepper Ann episode "Cocoon Gables", herself in The Simpsons episode "Milhouse Doesn't Live Here Anymore"), dies at age 86.[62]
- July 16: Andy Engman, Swedish-Finnish-American animator (Walt Disney Company), dies at age 92.[63][64]
- July 21: Jerry Goldsmith, American composer and conductor (The Secret of NIMH, Mulan, Looney Tunes: Back in Action), dies at age 75.[65][66]
- July 26: Oğuz Aral, Turkish comics artist, animator, and film director and producer (Koca Yusuf (Yusuf the Wrestler), Direkler Arası (Theater), Bu Şehr-i İstanbul (This City Called Istanbul), Ağustos Böceği ile Karınca (The Cricket and the Ant), dies at age 68.[67]
- July 28:
- Jackson Beck, American actor (voice of Perry White in The New Adventures of Superman, the fox in Baby Huey cartoons, the father in Little Lulu, Buzzy the Crow in Herman and Katnip, Brutus the Cat in Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown, continued voice of Bluto, narrator in G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero), dies at age 92.[68]
- Sam Edwards, American actor (voice of young Bambi in Bambi, and the title character in Rod Rocket), dies at age 89.[69]
October
- October 5: Rodney Dangerfield, American comedian (writer, producer, and voice of the title character in Rover Dangerfield, Rat-A-Tat-Tat in The Electric Piper, Larry Burns in The Simpsons episode "Burns, Baby Burns", himself in the Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist episode "Day Planner"), dies at age 82.[76]
- October 10: Christopher Reeve, American actor (voice of Clark Kent in a AT&T commercial, It Zwibble in the HBO Storybook Musicals episode "Earthday Birthday"), director (Everyone's Hero), and activist, dies at age 52.[77][78][79][80][81][82]
- October 25: John Peel, English disc jockey, radio presenter, record producer and journalist (voice of Announcer in the Space Ghost Coast to Coast episode "Explode"), dies from a heart attack at age 65.[83]
December
- December 8: Dimebag Darrell, American musician and member of Pantera (composed the track "Prehibernation" which was used in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Prehibernation Week", and "Walk" which was used in Sonic the Hedgehog 2), was murdered at age 38.[90]
- December 15: Alma Duncan, Canadian painter, graphic artist and film director ( Kumak the Sleepy Hunter, Hearts and Soles), dies at age 86.[91]
- December 22: Ben van Voorn, Dutch comics artist and animator (worked for Marten Toonder's animation department and on the films Asterix Versus Caesar and Asterix and the Big Fight), dies at age 67.[92]
- December 28: Jerry Orbach, American actor (voice of Lumière in Beauty and the Beast), dies at age 69.[93][94]
American release of the anime.
Episodes 168 through 195 did not air on television in the United States, but did air in Australia. Episodes 196 to 206 also due not air. These episodes were, however, released on DVD. Episodes 385 onwards also did not air due to low ratings for the previous episodes. However, they were released on DVD as mentioned earlier. Beginning with episode 579 in 2020, Funimation decided to release the every episode on TVoD services.
"Mystery Meat. Director: Butch Hartman; Writer: Butch Hartman, Mark Banner, Steve Marmel.". Danny Phantom. Season 1. Episode 01. April 3, 2004. Nickelodeon.
Galbraith IV, Stuart (2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 1461673747, 2008, page 433.
"Donald Duck". Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on July 7, 2012. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
Cartoon Network (August 24, 2004), Samurai Jack Says "Sayonara" with Final Four Episodes During Special Toonami Presentation on Saturday, Sept. 25 (press release)
"Toddworld". TVGuide.com. Archived from the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved August 24, 2017.
"Peggy DeCastro, 82, the Oldest Of the Singing DeCastro Sisters". New York Times. April 21, 2004. Archived from the original on June 9, 2023. Retrieved April 12, 2010. Peggy DeCastro, the oldest member of the DeCastro Sisters, the Latin singing group that gained fame with the 1950s hit Teach Me Tonight and was a popular attraction at Las Vegas hotels and nightclubs for years, died here on March 6. She was 82. The cause was lung cancer, her manager, Alan Eichler, said.
Claude Turcotte, "Death drama of Micheline Charest", Le Devoir, April 15, 2004, p. A1.
Thrash, Steven. "15 Shocking Things You Didn't Know About The Horrible Superman III". Screen Rant. Valnet, September 19, 2017. Web. August 20, 2018.
Reeve, Christopher (2004), p 6
Reeve, Christopher (1998), pp 106–108
III, Harris M. Lentz (April 20, 2005). Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2004: Film, Television, Radio, Theatre, Dance, Music, Cartoons and Pop Culture. McFarland. ISBN 9780786421039. Archived from the original on July 7, 2024. Retrieved November 23, 2020 – via Google Books.
McSorley, Tom; Maheux, Anne; Meloche, Jaclyn; Sinclair, Catherine; Tovell, Rosemarie L. (2014). Alma: the life and art of Alma Duncan (1917-2004). Ottawa: Ottawa Art Gallery & Judith & Norman Alix Art Gallery. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-894906-49-4.