Sally Sargent

Sally Sargent was an American animated action-comedy spy television series, being created by TBD. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and it aired on NBC from TBD 1970 until TBD 1974.

Reruns of the show were shown on Cartoon Network in the 1990s and on Boomerang in the 2000s.

Synopsis
The series follows teenage agent Sally Sargent as she deals with several menaces, ranging from elaborate criminals to insane ecoterrorists.

Main

 * Sally Sargeant/G-16 (voiced by Janet Waldo) - a girly teenager who is also a secret agent out to stop any menace to national security.

Supporting

 * Senator Sargent (voiced by ) - Sally's father who is a senator and is caring TBD.
 * Blake Jameson (voiced by Gary Owens) - Senator Sargeant's close ally and the head of the origanization Sally works for who TBD.
 * Keelo (voiced by Frank Welker) - Senator Sargeant's chauffeur who often TBD.
 * Rick (voiced by ) - Sally's boyfriend who TBD.
 * The Narrator (also voiced by Gary Owens) - the series' offscreen narrator who usually explains some events that happen.
 * The Narrator (also voiced by Gary Owens) - the series' offscreen narrator who usually explains some events that happen.

Antagonists

 * Rico Stark (voiced by ) - a gangster who TBD.
 * Blaster (voiced by Paul Winchell) - TBD
 * Georgia Vine (voiced by ) - an ecoterrorist who TBD.
 * Xervos (voiced by ) - a rather powerhungry alien who TBD.
 * Lady Mesmra (voiced by TBD) - a stage hypnotist who secretly takes control of anyone she wants to extend her plans.

Reboot
See Agent Sargent.

A reboot of the series was produced by Warner Bros. Animation and it aired on Cartoon Network from TBD 2005 until TBD 2009, with its designs being updated to fit the current generation and the plot becoming more serious and having an overarching story, featuring the voice of Danica McKellar as Sally Sargeant.

Trivia

 * The original pilot was produced by, but it was eventually sold to Hanna-Barbera after its parent company CBS closing its distribution deal with 20th Century Fox, not showing too much interest in keeping the studio active.
 * This series can be considered the pioneer in female-led cartoons, being later followed by other shows like She-Ra: Princess of Power, The Powerpuff Girls, Totally Spies! and Kim Possible, with the last two also adopting a spy-themed plot.