
Arranged and Conducted by: John Scott Trotter.Original Score Composed and Performed by: Vince Guaraldi.Produced and Directed by: Bill Melendez.Roy appears but does not have a speaking role. Contented, Snoopy goes to nap on his dog house. The next day, after taking Linus on a wild blanket ride and picking a fight with Lucy, the gang is also glad that Snoopy is back. When Peppermint Patty comes out to check on him, he knocks her down, dashes out the garage, gathers all his belongings from inside the house and runs back home to an overjoyed Charlie Brown, with whom he compromises on promising to behave if his master doesn't send him away. While there, Snoopy realizes that he had a better life at home and starts to howl incessantly. Devastated by Snoopy's refusal to return home, the kids, along with Charlie Brown, cry, "Snoopy, come home!" That night, while doing dishes, Snoopy becomes infuriated and angrily starts breaking dishes, and Peppermint Patty puts him in the garage as punishment. Later, when Lucy and Linus both start to miss Snoopy, Charlie Brown tries again to bring him home, but Snoopy breaks the leash and sends Charlie Brown away. Peppermint Patty lets Snoopy stay, but instead of returning to the easy life he enjoyed before, she puts him to work doing menial chores. When he finds out that he is still at Peppermint Patty's house, Charlie Brown goes over to her house with a leash to take Snoopy home, but the dog escapes and runs back. As it is a two-day trip, Charlie Brown calls Peppermint Patty and asks to let Snoopy stay there for one night en route Peppermint Patty agrees, but a scheming Snoopy decides to stay on and has her waiting on him hand and foot, which confuses her.Ī week later, the Puppy Farm calls and informs Charlie Brown that Snoopy never showed up. Snoopy loathes the idea, but Charlie Brown tells him it is for his own good.

In a letter to the Daisy Hill Puppy Farm, Charlie Brown writes that he is going to send Snoopy back for a refresher course in obedience. Snoopy's persistent mischief is angering the other kids in the neighborhood, and they all demand that Charlie Brown do something about it because "He's your dog, Charlie Brown!"

It was originally broadcast on the CBS network on February 14, 1968.


He's Your Dog, Charlie Brown is the fifth prime-time animated TV special based upon the popular comic strip Peanuts, by Charles M. Charlie Brown and Charles Schulz (1969).
