
Fred is cast as Ebenezer Scrooge in a stage adaption of the classic Christmas story, but is acting a bit stingy in real life.
Does A Flintstones Christmas Carol have end credit scenes?
No!
A Flintstones Christmas Carol does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of A Flintstones Christmas Carol, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Frank Welker
Barney Rubble / Dino (voice)

Don Messick
Bamm-Bamm Rubble / Joe Rockhead (voice)

Henry Corden
Fred Flintstone (voice)

Russi Taylor
Pebbles Flintstone (voice)

Jean Vander Pyl
Wilma Flintstone (voice)

Marsha Clark
Maggie / Miss Feldspar (voice)

John Rhys-Davies
Charles Brickens (voice)

Brian Cummings
Ghost of Christmas Present (voice)

B.J. Ward
Betty Rubble (voice)
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Challenge your knowledge of A Flintstones Christmas Carol with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Which character does Fred Flintstone portray in the special?
Jacob Marbley
Ebonezer Scrooge
Bob Cragit
Charles Brickens
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of A Flintstones Christmas Carol, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Barney Rubble Frank Welker is playing Bob Cragit, with Betty Rubble Bj Ward as Mrs. Cragit and his son Bamm-Bamm Rubble Don Messick as Tiny Tim; Mr. Slate John Stephenson is Jacob Marbley, while Wilma Flintstone Jean Vander Pyl serves as the stage manager, and her daughter Pebbles Flintstone Russi Taylor plays Martha Cragit; even Dino has a role, playing the Cragit’s family pet. It is Fred Flintstone Henry Corden who lands the leading role of Ebonezer Scrooge. Fred’s performance-driven mindset starts to overshadow the rest of his life, and his pride grows as he treats the stage spotlight like a personal prize, neglecting his day job and the needs of his family.
On Christmas Eve, the tension rises as Fred rushes to both work and holiday shopping, forgetting a crucial family obligation: taking Pebbles to “cave care” and then picking her up later. When Fred arrives at the theater, Wilma’s face cracks with tears as she explains the mistake, underscoring how his single-minded focus is unraveling the balance of their household. The show goes on, with narrator Charles Brickens John Rhys-Davies reading the opening lines and the onstage drama unfolding in a familiar Bedrock setting. As the second act begins, the production encounters a practical crisis: Miss Feldspar Marsha Clark, Pebbles’ and Bamm-Bamm’s teacher who plays the Ghost of Christmas Past, contracts the Bedrock Bug, a flu-like illness. Wilma, stepping in as stage manager, reluctantly takes over that role herself, and the troupe keeps moving.
Betty informs Wilma that Maggie Marsha Clark, also known as Miss Feldspar, has fallen ill with the Bedrock Bug, so Wilma crafts Belle’s part on the fly. Fred realizes he forgot the presents and dashes to the store, only to be confronted by the hooded Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, who drives him back toward the theater. The second act proceeds with the onstage routine, while the production’s behind-the-scenes scramble reveals how a single absentee actor can ripple through a community performance.
The third act introduces a chilling moment as the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come shows Scrooge an abandoned gravestone bearing the name “EBONEZER SCROOGE.” The scene shifts to Scrooge’s bedchamber on Christmas morning; he is alive and eager to make amends. He enlists a passing boy to deliver a prize “Turkeysaurus” to the Cragits’ home, signaling a broader redemption arc. Along the way, Wilma appears in public as a Piltdown Charitable Foundation member, a role she assumes because the original actor is sidelined by illness. Fred, in a rare moment of self-reflection, interactively pretends the Piltdown charity worker is Belle, which even the narrator Brickens finds somewhat ad-libbed and outside the script, hinting at Fred’s growing awareness of the consequences of his actions.
The play reaches its emotional crest as the audience sees a changed Fred acknowledge that friendship and family matter more than any theatrical glory. Pebbles, however, forgets her line “God bless us, everyone!” leaving the moment to her sister-like responsibility to deliver the famous closing thought for the cast. The curtain falls, and the troupe gently admonishes Fred for his earlier Scrooge-like selfishness, while he accepts the critique with grace and promises to realign his priorities. In a lighthearted twist, the hooded Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come finally removes his hood to reveal Dino in disguise, taking over the role after Philo Quartz’s illness. The climactic transformation concludes with Fred deciding to return home, plan a warm dinner, and invite Wilma’s mother to join, only to contract the Bedrock Bug himself—an illness that, in keeping with the story’s festive spirit, lasts only for a day.
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