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Tweety
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Name: Tweety
Geburtstag: 19 April
Kino-Premiere: "A tale of two kitties"
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs unny Show"

Wile E.
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NAME: Wile E. Coyote
Birthdate:September 17,1949
Birthplace:Southern California
Mission: To Catch an eat the Road Runner
Weapon of Choice: Anything made by ACME


History

Creator:Chuck Jones
Voices:
First Appearance:1949: "Fast and Furry-ous"
Interesting Info:It began as a parody and ended as a paradigm.Like much else in the Road Runner series,plans just seem to back fire.
Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese thought it would be funny to do a parody of chase cartoons. They tried things like an anteater chasing a dugong,a giraffe chasing a snail and other things similar. But relizing that there's logic at work in chases like cats and mice;they're natural adversaries,so you dont have to establish thier motivations.
Upon reading Mark Twain's book Roughing It as a kid Chuck came up with the idea of using the coyote (as there was a whole chapter on the coyote-what kind of person the coyote really is.) There was also a chapter on the jackrabbit in which he gives a description of thier speed.
And that's what gave Chuck the clue to the speed of the Road Runner:
they're all over Southren California and they seem kind of funny-a bird that runs Chuck said.
It would be three years before the Coyote would chase the Road Runner again appearing in his next cartoon the 1952 Beep Beep.
While establishing a framework for the Coyote's cartoons that gave them resilience and coherence. calling them "disciplines" which were restrictions that Jones consciously applied after the cartoons had found their groove. He has enumerated six of these "disciplines":
1)The cartoons are always set in the desert of the American Southwest;
2)The Road Runner never leaves the road;
3)Never is there dialogue;
4)The Coyote is never injured by the Road Runner;
5)The audiences sympathy must remain with Wile E. Coyote;
6)And the cartoons are always seen from the perspective of the Coyote.
The Coyote brings about all of the film's mayhem,as the schemes he concocts to catch the Road Runner misfire and make him the victom of his own machinations. Using nutsy gadgetry acquired,(with no indication of how) from a company known as ACME;it's products include Dehydrated Boulders,Do-It-Yourself Tornadoes,and Axle Grease (Guaranteed Slippery).
Wile E. Coyote has a purely physical expressivity that makes him as rounded and real as any flesh-and-blood actor,fully capable of engaging our affections-even though his ostensible goal is to kill a carefree bird. Wile E. is a Ralph Cramden-like Everyman whose deluded schemes for accomplishment or advancement eternally crash back down upon him ( elven times per outing). It is clear that Wile E. is no longer at war with the Road Runner,but with himself,for the payoff for actully catching the Road Runner could in no way justify what had gone into achieving it;rather,each effort to get the Road Runner became foremost an attempt by Wile E, to salvage his own dignity.
In the 1953 Don't Give Up the Sheep cartoon Wile E. was given a twist in which he plays a Wolf a distinction that is only visible in that the Wolf's nose is usally red. He has also picked up a new name, Ralph Wolf and a new adversary, a chunky sheepdog named Sam whose eyes are entirely covered by his bangs.
Wile E. Coyote would also go on to star with Bugs Bunny,where he brings all his tricks to catch the rabbit,which still ends in disater.



Filmography

1949: Fast and Furry-ous
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: September,17; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries an boomerang, crosswalk, rocket, boulder, fake tunnel, superhero outfit, fridge and skis, jet propelled shoes to catch the Raod Runner

1952: Operation: Rabbit
Wile E. Coyote,Bugs Bunny: Janurary,19; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote ,gives Bugs Bunny a choice to surrender,either easy or the hard way,Bugs chooses the hard way so Wlie E. Coyote uses a pressure cooker lid on Bug's hole,also a remote cannon,mechanical rabbit bomb, flying saucer,and nitro-glycerin filled carrots.

1952: Beep,Beep
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: May,24; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. coyote tries a spring-loaded boxing glove, dropping an anvil from a tightrope, rocket-powered roller skates, and a fake railroad crossing to catch Road Runner.

1952: Going! Going! Gosh!
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: August,23; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote uses a bow & arrow, slingshot, cement, grenade, boulder, balloon to catch Road Runner.

1953: Zipping Along
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: September,19; MM Chuck Jones
After repeatedly getting run over at the rail road intersection, Wile E. Coyote tries using a mousetraps, kite bomb, telephone pole, hypnotism, being a human cannonball, and a booby-trapped door to catch Road Runner.

1954: Stop,Look and Hasten
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: August,28; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a boulder, burmese tiger trap, motorcycle, bridge saw, and leg muscle vitamins to catch Road Runner.

1955: Ready, Set, Zoom
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: April,30; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries glue, weight, lassoing, outboard motor, rocket, and a Road Runner costume to catch the Road Runner.

1955: Guided Muscle
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: December,10; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a slingshot, cannon, wrecking ball, acme grease, and tar & feathers to catch the Road Runner.

1956: Gee Whiz-z-z-z
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: May,5; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a steel plate, dynamite, dressing in a bat-man outfit, stretching a rubber band and a rocket motor to catch the Road Runner.

1956: There They Go-Go-Go
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: November,10; LT Chuck Jones
A fter trying to eat a clay turkey dinner, Wile E. Coyoter tries a gun, slingshot, cat o' nine tails, rocket, and a avalanche to catch the Road Runner.

1956: To Hare is Human
Wile E. Coyote,Bugs Bunny: December,8; MM Chuck Jones
Note: An expansion on Operation Rabbit.
Wile trying his best to capture Bugs using a "Univac Electronic Brain" which gives him answears to qustion's. Such gags are a hand grenade and sticks of TNT.


1957: Scrambled Aches
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: January,26; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a losso, fan-powered skates, rocket, dehydrated boulder, and a steam roller to catch the Road Runner,

1957: Zoom and Bored
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: September,14; LT Chuck Jones
Wile tries to capture the Road Runner using such methods as a pneumatic drill for digging holes, building a brick wall across the road and a jar of ACME bumble bees. The final try has Wile using a Harppon gun which ends in total dissater.

1958: Whoa,Be Gone
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: April,12; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries rocket, rifle, rubber banc, cynamite-loacec barrel , Wheelie helmet, do-it yourself tornado kit, to catch Road Runner. Finally Wile gets smart and places a trampoline at base of cliff to ease his falls

1958: Hook,Line and Stinker
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: October,11; LT Chuck Jones
Using such devices as swinging from a rope with a harpoon to clobbering with a mallet and Jone's famous Rube Goldberg schemes that will end with a cannon ball dropping.

1958: Hip,Hip-HuRoad Runnery!
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: December,6; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries grenades,slingshot,trapeze,boulder,motorboat, and HI-SPEED tonic to catch the Road Runner.

1959: Hot Rod and Reel
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: May,9; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries roller skates, trampoline, fake railroad crossing, bomb chute, jet-propelled pogo stick, and a jet-propelled unicycle to catch the Road Runner.

1959: Wild About HuRoad Runnery
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: October,10; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a rocket, slingshot, rocket sled, iron bird seed, hollow "indestructo steel ball" to catch the Road Runner.

1960: Fastest With The Mostest
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: January,9; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries to catch Road Runner using a balloon bomb, tranquilized bird seed, and a detour (causing him to travel through the water works).

1960: Rabbit's Feat
Wile E. Coyote,Bugs Bunny: June,4; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote wants rabbit for lunch but has to match wits with Bugs Bunny, who acts juvenile on occasion, sleeping in a crib & calling Wile E. Coyote "daddy".

1960: Hopalong Casualty
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: October,8; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a boulder, dynamite, Christmas packaging machine, earthquake pills to catch the Road Runner.

1961: Zip'n Snort
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: January,21; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a bow, model airplane, iron pellets & magnet, axle grease, a cannon, and even a bigger cannon, to catch the Road Runner.

1961: Lickety Splat
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: June,3; LT Chuck Jones
After trying roller skis to catch the Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote releases a horde of buzz bombs that continue to appear as he later tries a mallet, boomerang, shotgun, anvil.

1961: Compressed Hare
Wile E. Coyote,Bugs Bunny: July,29; MM Chuck Jones
Wile makes his secound attemp at capturing Bugs by using such devices as a vacum cleaner and a rabbit decoy made out of dynamite. and finally a 10,000,000,000 volt electric magnet.

1961: Beep Prepared
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: November,11; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries tripping the Road Runner, then luring him into a hole, but the Road Runner steals the hole and drops it on a bridge for Wile E. Coyote to fall through. Wile E. Coyote then tries a rocket man outfit, iron birdseed, spring platform, machine gun, and a rocket sled.

1962: Zoom At The Top
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: June,30; MM Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a bear trap, rocket plane, snow maker, iron glue on boomerang to catch the Road Runner.

1963: Hare-Breadth HuRoad Runnery
Wile E. Coyote,Bugs Bunny: June,8; LT Chuck Jones
Bugs Bunny stands in for the injured Road Runner, using speed vitamins while avoiding Wile E. Coyote's boulders, shotguns, anvils, and cannons.

1963: To Beep Or Not To Beep
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: December,28; MM Chuck Jones
After looking at a cook book with a picture of backed Road Runner, Wile tries a noose and a set of large coil springs, wrecking ball and then a catapult.


1964: War And Pieces
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: June,6; LT Chuck Jones
Wile E. Coyote tries a grenade, bow, compresso-wall, invisible paint, shotgun, kinescope, grappling hook, and a rocket to catch the Road Runner.

1965: The Wild Chase
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner,Speedy Gonzales,Sylvester: Feburary,27; MM Hawley Pratt
A big race is arranged between Speedy Gonzales and the Road Runner, and each participant has his own nemesis (Sylvester & Wile E. Coyote) joining in the race.

1965: Rushing Roulette
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: July,31; MM Robert McKimson
Wile E. Coyote tries a rope, photo booth, "sproing boots", glue, mirror, and a helicopter to catch the Road Runner.

1965: Run,Run Sweet Road Runner
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: August,21; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
After losing at hopscotch, Wile E. Coyote tries to drop spikes on the Road Runner, then builds a decoy out of lightning rods and performs a rain dance.

1965: Tired And Feathered
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: September,18; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile E. Coyote tries rolling a log, wearing a propeller backpack, and building a fake bird sanctuary to catch the RoadRunner.

1965: Boulder Wham
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: October,9; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
The Road Runner is on the other side of a chasm, so Wile E. Coyote tries to tightrope walk, pole vault, trampoline, and to hypnotize the Road Runner to get across.

1965: Just Plane Beep
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: October,30; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile E. Coyote buys a war surplus biplane to catch the Road Runner, but he doesn't prove ept at flying, dive bombing, or strafing.

1965: Harried And Hurried
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: November,13; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile E. Coyote tries a snow machine, kite bomb, skydiving, steel door, extendo-grip, karate to catch the Road Runner.

1965: Highway Runnery
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: December,11; LT Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Road Runner runs Wile E. Coyote down with a car, Wile E. Coyote tries a rubber band, fan- powered skateboard, egg bomb, rocket scooter to catch the Road Runner.

1965: Chaser On The Rocks
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: December,25; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile E. Coyote gets dehydrated and starts seeking water in mirages; tries painted TNT, birdbath, and a cannon to catch the Road Runner.

1966: Shot And Bothered
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: January,8; LT Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
After chasing the Road Runner through a pipe system, Wile E. Coyote tries a boulder, suction cups, tennis net, dynamite on a rope, skateboard, turning self into bomb-carrying blimp to catch him.

1966: The Solid Tin Coyote
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: Feburary,19; LT Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile puts hot tar on the road which backfires. Wile other gags include a large mirror and a giant robot.

1966: Out And Out Rout
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: January,29; MM Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Using a skateboard a falcon and a giant hot rod made of odd and ends from a junkyard.

1966: Clippety Clobbered
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: March,26; LT Rudy LaRoad Runneriva
Wile E. Coyote mail orders a chemistry set and tries to use invisible paint, super bouncing solution, hand jets to catch the Road Runner.

1966: Surgar And Spies
Wile E. Coyote,Road Runner: November,5; LT Robert McKimson
Wile E. Coyote finds a spy kit and uses its contents to go after the Road Runner with sleeping gas, time bomb, x-plosive putty, spy car, remote control missile bombs.
 
Sylvester
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Name: Sylvester
Geburtstag: 24 Mars
Kino-Premiere: "life with feathers"
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs Bunny Show"
Granny
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Name: Granny
Birthdate:October 7, 1950
Mission: To stop Sylvester from eating Tweety
Weapon of Choice: Either a broom or her trusted umbrella
Sidekick: Hector (The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries)

History

Creator: Friz Freleng
Voices: Originally voiced by Bea Benaderet
June Foray stepped into the role in the mid-1950s and continues to perform the role, as needed, today. Gege Pearson and Joan Gerber also voiced Granny during the 1960's.
First Appearance: 1950 "Canary Row"

Interesting Info:

The old and kindly guardian of Tweety, Granny is often Sylvester's chief obstacle to a free canary lunch. First appearing in "1950's Canary Row" as an enthusiastic nemesis to Sylvester's effort to sneak into the Broken Arms Hotel, which has a strict " NO CATS and DOGS " policy.
Granny may seem to be a harmless old lady , wearing those spectacles and her white hair tied into a bun, but for Sylvester she is to be feared.
In those rare instances when Tweety can't protect himself, Granny seems to appear to save the day as in "1952's Gift Wrapped" where she foils Sylvester's plans to capture Tweety with a bow and arrow-"Who were you expecting, Pocahontas?" she asks. Or at sea in "1951's Tweety's S.O.S." where Granny's glasses are the object of Sylvester's desire; since she can't see him without them, Sylvester paints a crude likeness of Tweety onto one of the lenses, fooling Granny temporarily. But it doesn't take long for the tables to turn, and when they do, Granny teaches Sylvester not "to molest helpless little birdies" with a whack of the umbrella she sends Sylvester soaring into the sky.
You can still find Granny on television today as the world detective in "he Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries."

Filmography

1950: Cannery Row
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: October 7 MM Friz Freleng
While moving in to the Broken Arms Hotel Sylvester tries a variety of schemes to steal Tweety, only to be stopped by a dog(Hector) or Tweety.

1952: Gift Wrapped
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: February 16 LT. Friz Freleng
It's Christmas in Granny's house, and Tweety is a present good enough for Sylvester to eat.

1952: Little Red Rodent Hood
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: May 3 MM Friz Freleng
Teeny dreams she's red riding hood to Sylvester's Wolf/Granny. when Sylvester finds himself outside, he turns into the three little pigs wolf, trying to blow down (and then up) the house. finally, Sylvester tries to be a shocking fairy godmother.

1952: Ain't She Tweet
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: June 21 LT. Friz Freleng
A whole yard-full of dogs stands between Sylvester and Tweety.

1953: Snow Business
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: January 17 LT. Friz Freleng
Tweety and Sylvester are trapped in a cabin by a snow storm with nothing to eat but birdseed....Sylvester tries many schemes to eat Tweety. meanwhile, a starving mouse tries to cook Sylvester.

1953: Fowl Weather
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: April 4 MM Friz Freleng
When Granny leaves the farm for the day, Sylvester chases Tweety, but ends up fighting a Rooster, and running from the dog.

1953: Tom Tomcat
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: June 27 MM Friz Freleng
As western settlers Granny and Tweety move into their territory, Chief Sylvester and his tribe of injun cats attack. the two hole up in a empty fort and the cats try many ways to get in.

1953: A Streetcat Named Sylvester
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: September 5 LT. Friz Freleng
Sylvester lets Tweety in from the cold, and tries to eat him without letting Granny know and avoiding a injured dog.

1955: Sandy Claws
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: April 2 LT. Friz Freleng
(Academy Award Nominee)
Granny and Tweety spend a day at the beach, while Sylvester has to contend with the surf to get at Tweety.

1955: Red Riding Hoodwinked
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: October 29 LT. Friz Freleng
Red is delivering Tweety to Granny's house, so both the Wolf and Sylvester lie in wait at Granny's for a meal.

1956: Tweet and Sour
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: March 24 LT. Friz Freleng
Granny leaves the farm for a short while, and if Tweety is harmed in her absence, granny will send Sylvester to the violin factory. but Sylvester isn't the only cat looking for lunch...

1956: Tugboat Granny
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: June 23 MM Friz Freleng
Note: Granny for the first and only time gets her name in the title.
Granny appears only in the first few secounds singing with Tweety, then its off with Sylvester trying to capture Tweety on a tug boat.

1957: Greedy for Tweety
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: September 28 LT. Friz Freleng
A dog chases Sylvester who chases Tweety; all 3 land in the animal hospital with casts...and lots of shenanigans.

1958: A Pizza Tweety Pie
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: February 22 LT. Friz Freleng
Granny welcomes Tweety to Italy, where a Italian Sylvester tries his usual tricks of capturing Tweety.

1958: A Bird in a Bonnet
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: September 27 MM Friz Freleng
Sylvester is seen chasing Tweety into a hat store where Granny is picking out a new hat. Granny choses a darling hat which she thinks has a stoffed yellow bird.

1960: Trip for Tat
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: October 29 MM Friz Freleng
Granny goes on a world tour with Tweety and Sylvester is a stowaway, setting off a around the world chase.

1961: The Last Hungry Cat
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: December 2 MM Friz Freleng
A spoof of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" with a bear opening the story line. While Tweety is sleeping in his bird cage, Sylvester tries to get Tweety but trips and falls. fearing that Granny heard he runs out into a alley where he is heckled by the narrator.

1962: The Jet Gage
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: September 22 LT. Friz Freleng
Tweety gains mobility in the form of a jet-propelled cage; Sylvester tries to get in the air too, but with no such luck.

1964: Hawaiian Aye Aye
Tweety, Sylvester,Granny: June 27 MM Gerry Chiniquy
While on a Hawaiian vacation Tweety is cahsed by Sylvester who is chased by a shark named Sharky.

1965: It's Nice to Have A Mouse Around the House
Sylvester,Daffy Duck,Granny,Speedy Gonzales: January 16, LT. Friz Freleng
Granny's had enough of Speedy Gonzales (who has given Sylvester a nervous breakdown), so she hires Daffy Duck to exterminate him
 
Marvin
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Name: Marvin the Martian
Birthdate:July 24, 1948
Birthplace: Mars
Commanding Officer: General E=McSquared
Mission: To blow up the planet Earth With his Illudium Pew-36 Explosive Space Modulator ,Since the Earth blocks his view of Venus
Mode of Transportation: His high-speed spaceship, the Martian Maggot
Weapon of Choice: ACME Disintegrator
Instant Martians ( just add water )
Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator
Sidekick: His trusty green dog K-9
Formerly known as: Commander X-2


History

Creator: Chuck Jones
Voices: Originally done by Mel Blanc.
His voice, is now done by Bob Bergen since Mel Blanc passed away.It is noteworthy that the voice changed noticeably from that used in the debut, to the later, creamier voice in the later cartoons.
First Appearance: 1948: Haredevil Hare
Interesting Info: Like Michigan J. Frog, his current name is an ex facto moniker;he was never identified as such in any of the cartoons, his name did appear as Commander x-2 in Hasty Hare, in the instructions he reads from his Commander E=Mcsquared.
It probably seems obvious, Jones and Maltese obviously patterned the character after the god Mars,with the helmet and skirt. Jones noticed that as time went on,Bug's enemies were getting bigger and noisier. He then introduced a new villain into the Looney Tunes circle, a villain that was a great deal smaller and quieter than the rest of the bad characters...but a lot more dangerous. So what could be more dangerous than a hostile extraterrestrial bent on destroying Earth? As you watch Marvin in the cartoons you'll notice that while Marvin is often in a bad mood, he never gets out of control and never gets loud.
The 1958 cartoon, Hare-Way to the Stars is one of the more unusual entries, in that it boast visionary graphics by Maurice Noble, with cities suspended seemingly in mid space.

Filmography

1948: Haredevil-Hare
Bugs Bunny,Marvin Martian: July,24; LT Chuck Jones
Marvin and K-9's first apearance. The two Martians have a run-in with Bugs Bunny on their Mars-toMoon Expedition, and Bugs ruins Marvin's plan to blow up the Earth with his Uranium Pew-36 Explosive Space Modulator.

1952: The Hasty Hare
Bugs Bunny,Marvin Martian: June,7 LT Chuck Jones
Marvin receives orders from General E=Mcsquared to bring back to Mars one Earth creature Unfortunatly, he makes the mistake of choosing Bugs Bunny.

1953: Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2 Century
Daffy Duck,Porky Pig,Marvin Martian: July,25 MM Chuck Jones
Marvin makes his third appearance in this cartoon parody of
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.Duck Dodgers(Daffy Duck) and his eager space cadet, Porky Pig, traval to Planet X, the only remaining source of Illudium Phosdex(the shaving cream atom) to claim it for Earth. But Duck Dodgers winds up in a battle with Marvin, who's dead-set on claiming Planet X in the name of Mars.

1958: Hare-Way to the Stars
Bugs Bunny,Marvin Martian: March,29 LT Chuck Jones
Once again, Marvins ready to destroy the Earth with his Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator....And once again Bugs Bunny interrupts his plans, stealing Marvin's Space Modulator to save his planet.Marvin creates a group of instant Martians(just add water!) and send them after Bugs.

1963: Mad as a Mars Hare
Bugs Bunny,Marvin Martian: October,19 MM Chuck Jones
From his laboratory on mars, Marvin observes a rocket launching from earth through his telescope. He doesn't know that the rocket is headed for Mars-until it crashes into his lab, with Bugs Bunny inside of it.Marvin zaps Bugs with his ACME Space-Time Gun, hopping to send Bugs into the future where he'll be "a useful but harmless slave" to the Martian. But Marvin has the gun in reverse, and he accidentally turns Bugs into a hulking Neanderthal bunny!

1980: Duck Dodgers and the Return of the
24 1/2 Century
Bugs Bunny,Hugo,Marvin Martian
Duck Dodgers is assigned to protect the Rack-and-Pinion Molecule, the only substance that can polish yo-yos. Meanwhile, Marvin the Martian attempts to (what else?) blow up Earth

1980: Spaced-Out Bunny
Marvin captures Bugs Bunny and brings the rabbit back to Mars as a playmate for Hugo.

1991: Bugs Bunny's Lunar Tunes
Marvin is furious with the people of Earth....So much so that he wants to blow up the planet (as usual). But this time he's going to get it done legally (you need a permit for that), and the little Martian takes his case before an interstellar court, with Bugs Bunny defending Earth.

1996: Marvin the Martian in the 3rd Dimension
A 12 minute, 3-D cartoon starring Marvin, K-9, and Daffy Duck that can only be seen at the Warner Bros. Flagship Store in Manhattan, NY.

1996: Space Jam
The first Looney Tunes movie to hit the big screen. Marvin winds up as the referee for the basketball game pitting the Tune Squad against the Monstars.

Guest Appearances
Marvin had a role in the Tiny Toons episode, Duck Dodgers Jr.,also starring Daffy Duck,Pluckey Duck, and Marcia the Martian. He had a brief cameo role in a Simpsons episode titled The Springfield Files.
Marvin also appears at the end of Another Froggy Evening, To discover that
Michigan J. speaks Martian.(Thanks to Harry L. Clayton for this bit of infomation)
Daffy Duck
#7
Hobgoblin
MA
6
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3
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3
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7
R
28
B
47
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0
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2
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28
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0
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0
Cs
0
Td
0
Mvp
5
GPP
25
XPP
0
SPP
25
Injuries
 
Skills
Block
Sure Hands
Name : Daffy Duck
Geburtstag : 17 April
Geburtsort: Termite Terrace
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs Bunny Show"
 
Lola Bunny
#8
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
4
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3
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2
AV
9
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0
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0
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0
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0
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0
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0
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0
Mvp
0
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0
XPP
0
SPP
0
Injuries
 
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
Name: Lola Bunny
Geburtstag : 15 Novembre
Geburtsort : Los Angeles
Kino Premiere: "Space Jam"
Fernsehn Premiere: "Baby Looney Tunes"

Taz
#9
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
4
ST
3
AG
2
AV
9
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0
B
131
P
0
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0
G
24
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
3
Td
0
Mvp
1
GPP
11
XPP
0
SPP
11
Injuries
 
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
Guard
Name: Tasmanian Devil
Birthdate:June 19,1954
Birthplace: Tasmania


History

Creator: Robert McKimson
Voices: Mel Blanc
First Appearance: 1954: Devil May Hare
Interesting Info: The Tasmanian Devil devoured,boulders,trees shrubbery,and everything else in his path as he moved like a whirling,gyrating tornado through the jungle landscape. Taz sent all of the other animals in sight stampeding for cover. When he stopped, his snorting, sputtering effusions-as well as his waggling hands-indicated that his was an appetite that could never be slaked. Unfortunately,the meal he favored above all others was rabbit.
First appearing in Robert McKimson's (1954 Devil May Hare) in which ,he wrangles with Bugs Bunny ,who to rid himself of this stertorous nuisance,ends up phoning the "Tasmanian Post Dispatch" and placing a personal ad for a "Lonely lady Devil, object matrimony." The Devilette quickly arrives in a airplane, wearing a veil and carrying a bouquet, and drags the startled bridegroom away. Yet this film did not please Edward Selzer, executive producer of Warner's cartoon division,and he told studio head McKimson to make no more Devil Shorts. Several years would pass until studio head Jack Warner asked Selzer what had become of the character. When Selzer replied that Taz had been retired, Warner commanded Selzer to revive him. Apparently, a character that consumed everything it saw appealed to this Hollywood mogul.
Mckimson brought Taz back in the (1957 Bedeviled Rabbit) in which Bugs Bunny has hidden himself in a crate of carrots,just before it is dropped into Tasmania. The she Devil is also back, but this time as Taz's wife-which gives her all the more reason for lacing into Taz when
Bugs Bunny impersonates a frilly she-devil and hot-wires him.

Filmography

1954: Devil May Hare
Bugs Bunny,Tasmanian Devil: June 19,1954 LT Robert McKimson
Taz is on the loose and chases all the other animals away, but Bugs Bunny
sticks around to order a bride for Taz.

1957: Bedeviled Rabbit
Bugs Bunny,Tasmanian Devil: April 13,1957 MM Robert McKimson
Bugs Bunny's carrot shipment lands in Tasmania where he takes on the
local terror.

1957: Ducking the Devil
Daffy Duck,Tasmanian Devil: August 17,1957 MM Robert McKimson
Daffy Duck uses music to lure the escaped Taz back to the zoo to collect
a $1,000.00 dallar reward.

1962: Bill of Hare
Bugs Bunny,Tasmanian Devil: June 9,1962 MM Robert McKimson
Taz is brought to the U.S. by an expedition ship,when the cage falls an breaks open Taz escapes. Taz tries to eat Bugs Bunny who ends up shooting him out to the sea,runs over him with a truck,train which he mistakes for a moose.

1964: Doctor Devil and Mister Hare
Bugs Bunny,Tasmanian Devil: March 28,1964 MM Robert McKimson
After Taz interrupts Bugs Bunny's bath,Bugs calms him by being his doctor,psychiatrist,and nurse. In the end Bugs and Taz both wind up being beaten up by Frank-en-stien.
 
Foghorn
#10
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
4
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3
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2
AV
9
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0
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141
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0
G
26
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0
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0
Cs
1
Td
0
Mvp
1
GPP
7
XPP
0
SPP
7
Injuries
 
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
Guard
Name: Foghorn Leghorn
Birthdate:August 31, 1946
Birthplace: Warner Studios
Sidekick: The Barnyard Dog
Favorite Song: Camptown Races

History

Creator: Robert McKimson
Voices: Mel Blanc
First Appearance: 1946 Walky Talky Hawky
Interesting Info: I say, the loudmouthed southern rooster called Foghorn Leghorn is the lone major Warner character to be wholly derived from personalities out side of the studio.The Dixie yapping bird is a parody of the "Senator Claghorn from Bighorn" character on the old Fred Allen radio program. But Robert McKimson -who introduced Foghorn and managed all of his subsequent outings, also cited the sheriff character on an earlier radio show called "Blue Monday Jamboree," as a source.
Foghorn first appeared in 1946's Walky Talky Hawky,(Academy Award Nominee) which was really intended to be the star vehicle for Henery Hawk; but Henrey was reduced to having his career of only being a supporting player. Walky Talky Hawky begins with Henery setting out to bring home a meal, without having a shard idea what a chicken really is. Foghorn discovers this ignorance and turns Henery into an unwitting pawn for his never-ending pranks on the Barnyard Dog. In the seventeen years of films, Foghorn shows an undying affection for the song "Camptown Races".
In 1947's Crowing Pains, Foghorn convinces Henery that Sylvester is a Chicken; and has Henery get inside an eggshell, then sneak under the sitting cat, which leads to a momentary identity crisis ("Thufferin' thuccotash-I'm a mother"). Foghorn would go on to star with other minor characters such as Miss Prissy,Egghead JR. ,a Weasel and others.

Filmography

1946: Walky Talky Hawky
Henery Hawk, Foghorn Leghorn: August 31; MM; Robert McKimson
Note: Academy award-nominated cartoon.
Henery Hawk sets out to get dinner,only he doesn't know what a chicken looks like. Foghorn tricks Henery into thinking the Barnyard Dog is a chicken. At the end, Henery is seen draging off a horse, Barnyard Dawg and Foghorn since "one of these things has got to be a chicken".

1947: Crowing Pains
Sylvester,Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: July 12; LT; Robert McKimson
Sylvester and Barnyard Dawg become entangled with Foghorn's attempts to confuse Henery Hawk. Once again the inexperienced Henery is out looking for a chicken but isn't sure what a chicken looks like. Henery decides to determine who is a chicken (Foghorn Leghorn, Sylvester or Barnyard Dawg) by watching to see who crows at sunrise.

1948: Foghorn Leghorn
Henry Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: October 9; MM; Robert McKimson
After Henery Hawk's Dad tells him that Foghorn isn't a chicken, but a "loud-mouthed shnook", Henery goes looking for a real chicken. In a bit of a reversal of the usual plotline, Foghorn spends the rest of the cartoon trying to convince Henery that he is a chicken. In the end Henery decides that he'll take Foghorn Leghorn home for dinner - not caring whether he's really a chicken or a shnook.

1949: Hen House Henery
Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: July 2; LT; Robert McKimson
Henery Hawk is looking for a chicken, while Foghorn and the Barnyard Dawg are having a "prank war" in which Foghorn Leghorn gets ahead early but eventually loses. Eventually Barnyard Dawg and Henery work togther to bag Foghorn Leghorn.

1950: The Leghorn Blows at Midnight
Foghorn Leghorn: May 6; LT; Robert McKimson
Note: Foghorn is heard singing "Old MacDonald" instead of his usual "Camptown Races"
Barnyard Dawg and Foghorn are in thier usual prank wars, while Henery is looking for a chicken, but unsure what a chicken is, Foghorn tells Henery that Barnyard Dawg is a chicken.

1950: A Fractured Leghorn
Foghorn Leghorn: September 16; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn and the Barnyard Cat spend most of thier time fighting over a worm (the Cat wants it for bait to go fishing and Foghorn wants it for his lunch). Foghorn Leghorn is at his loud-mouthed peak in this cartoon, as he does all the talking except for one line.

1951: Leghorn Swoggled
Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: July 28; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn tells Henery that he is too small to eat, but Barnyard Dawg offers to help for a bone which he can get from the Cat for a fish, Foghorn Leghorn inadvertantly helps Henery get what he needs and so Henery drags off Foghorn in the end with Barnyard Dawg's help (the bonehead technique).

1951: Lovelorn Leghorn
Foghorn Leghorn: September 8; LT; Robert McKimson
After reading the book "Live Alone and Hate It", Miss Prissy sets out to bag her a husband, with rolling pin in hand (while the other hens laugh at her). In this "prank war" Foghorn is able to get Prissy to believe that Barnyard Dawg is a rooster in a dog suit. But in the end Barnyard Dawg and Miss Prissy combine forces to get her a husband(Foghorn).

1952: Sock-A-Doodle Doo
Foghorn Leghorn: May 10; LT; Robert McKimson
Note: In addition to Camptown Races, Foghorn hums the "This is the way we wash our clothes" tune.
After falling off a truck, the pinfeatherweight boxing champ, (Kid Banty) finds himself at Foghorn's farm. Anytime the Kid hears a bell he comes out swinging, even punching a cow after the cowbell rings (a cowpuncher?). This leads to a series of gags in which Foghorn and the Barnyard Dawg try to arrange for a bell to ring whenever Banty is near the one or the other.

1952: Egg-Cited Rooster
Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: October 4; MM; Robert McKimson
Mrs. Leghorn orders Foghorn to sit on her egg. And so the Barnyard Dawg takes advantage of Foghorn. Henery wanders by and Foghorn convinces him to watch the egg while he exacts his revenge. Eventually Foghorn gets his lumps from his wife when he is caught neglecting his duty.

1953: Plop Goes the Weasel
Foghorn Leghorn: August 22; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn and Barnyard Dawg are each using the weasel to to cause trouble for the other. Foghorn tries to get Barnyard Dawg in trouble by letting the weasel get near the chickens, while in return Barnyard Dawg encourages the weasel to go after Foghorn Leghorn. Eventually Barnyard Dawg clubs Foghorn and leads the dizzy rooster into the weasel's clutches.

1953: Of Rice and Hen
Foghorn Leghorn: November 14; LT; Robert McKimson
Miss Prissy is distraught over her lack of a husband and sets out to commit suicide. Foghorn happens upon the scene and catches her, while saving her life and making the hen fall in love with him. Her attempts to attract Foghorn are resisited, so Barnyard Dawg offers to help her catch Foghorn. Barnyard Dawg dresses up as a rooster, and acts interested in Miss Prissy. Foghorn can't stand that Miss Prissy seems to like someone else, and in the end Miss Prissy gets Foghorn for her husband.

1954: Little Boy Boo
Foghorn Leghorn: June 5; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn is seeking warming living quarters when he woos Miss Prissy by saying saying he needs her love to keep him warm. She consents to let him in if he proves that he can be a good father to her son Egghead Jr.. Foghorn's attempts to engage Egghead in various games they all wind up the same: Egghead always outdoes Foghorn by using his genius. Eventually Foghorn gives up by saying that his bandages will keep him warm instead.

1955: Feather Dusted
Foghorn Leghorn: Janurary 15; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn decides to take it upon himself to make sure Egghead Jr. learns to be more than a bookworm and play like a boy should. But as always Egghead Jr. figures a better way to accomplish better than Foghorn.

1955: All Fowled Up
Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: February 19; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn and Barnyard Dawg start out with a barrage of pranks, into which Henery wanders in looking for a chicken. As Foghorn's pranks start backfiring - resulting in a cement-covered rooster, which Henery carries off.

1956: Weasel Stop
Foghorn Leghorn: February; MM; Robert McKimson
The chicken yard is threatened by a hungry and hyperactive little weasel. So Foghorn decides to use the little guy to torment the Hillbilly Dog. But the weasel and Foghorn don't work out well as a team and everything they try seems to backfire.

1956: The High and the Flighty
Daffy Duck,Foghorn Leghorn: February 18; LT; Robert McKimson
Daffy is a traveling salesman from Ace Novelty who happens upon the prank wars between the Barnyard Dawg and Foghorn. Seeing this as a great opportunity for sales, Daffy sells his trick items to both sides. After catching on they combine forces to bottle Daffy.

1956: Raw! Raw! Roster
Foghorn Leghorn: August 25; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn's old college chum, Rhode Island Red, drops in by surprise (they went to Chicken Tech). Red is an incurable prankster who Foghorn Leghorn doesn't want around and he spends the rest of the cartoon trying to get rid of him. Most of the attempts backfire, but he eventually prevails

1957: Fox Terror
Foghorn Leghorn: May 11; MM; Robert McKimson
A fox appears and keeps trying to lure away the two protectors of the hens, Foghorn and the Barnyard Dawg. Eventually they figure out what is going on and cooperate together to out-fox the fox

1958: Feather Bluster
Foghorn Leghorn: May 10; MM; Robert McKimson
Somehow Barnyard Dawg and Foghorn have survived each others activities to make it to old age. The two old friends watch their grandkids renewing the rivalry, which brings back fond memories of their old battles.

1958: Weasel While You Work
Foghorn Leghorn: August 6; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn doesn't deny being a chicken this time, but he convinces the weasel that he would rather eat other animals instead. So Foghorn dresses Barnyard Dawg in antlers (after telling weasel he wants a deer) and in a girtle (after telling weasel he wants a seal). In the end the Barnyard Dawg sends Foghorn up on a rocket.

1959: A Broken Leghorn
Foghorn Leghorn: September 26; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn tries to help out the eggless Miss Prissy by slipping an egg under her. The egg hatches into a young rooster who immediately wants to displace Foghorn. Foghorn takes the role of mentor to the little guy but his attempts to trick the little rooster keeps backfiring and Foghorn is sent packing.

1960: Crockett-Doodle-Doo
Foghorn Leghorn: June 25; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn takes Junior out camping. Of course, every lesson Foghorn tries to teach the bright lad is answered by a better solution from Egghead Jr.

1960: Dixie Fryer
Foghorn Leghorn: September 24; MM; Robert McKimson
Note: Elvis and Papa are the same ones who tried to get Bugs Bunny
While Foghorn takes a trip to south of the Ozark Mountains he finds himself the target of two hungry chickenhawks, Elvis and Pappy . But Foghorn doesn't have to try very hard two outsmart those two and they eventually give up.

1961: Strangled Eggs
Henery Hawk,Foghorn Leghorn: March 18; MM; Robert McKimson
In search of warmer living quarters for the winter, Foghorn woos Miss Prissy. Things seem to be going his way until Henery shows up as a foundling on the doorstep. Foghorn sets out to convince Henery that he (Henery) is a Chicken Hawk, but to no avail.

1962: The Slick Chick
Foghorn Leghorn: July 21; LT; Robert McKimson
Foghorn is babysitting Junior, the son of Widder Hen. As it turns out, Junior is a born trouble-maker who spends the day pulling pranks on Foghorn Leghorn, who eventually decides that the kid is trouble.

1962: Mother Was a Rooster
Foghorn Leghorn: October 20; MM; Robert McKimson
Barnyard Dawg puts an ostrich egg under Foghorn, who thinks he is a the mother after he notices it. Foghorn proceeds to try to raise the ostrich, but Barnyard Dawg is constantly working to undermine the ostrich's self-confidence. This leads to afight between Foghorn and the Barnyard Dawg.

1963: Banty Raids
Foghorn Leghorn: June 29; MM; Robert McKimson
Foghorn is duped into parenthood again, this time by a beatnik rooster who pretends to be an orphan left on Foghorn's doorstep. But his real purpose is to get in to see the "chicks". Foghorn keeps trying to teach him how to outsmart Barnyard Dawg, while "sonny boy" just wants to sneak off to see the chicks. Barnyard Dawg gets the upper hand in the end however.

1979: The Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol
Foghorn Leghorn: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
The tale of Scrooge.

1980: The Yolks on You
Foghorn Leghorn: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Originally produced for the TV special Daffy Duck's Easter Special
Foghorn is the forman of a eggfarm where Miss Prissy lays a golden egg, and Daffy
and Sylvester battle over it.T
Pepè Le Pew
#11
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
3
ST
3
AG
2
AV
9
R
0
B
82
P
0
F
0
G
43
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
2
Td
0
Mvp
2
GPP
14
XPP
0
SPP
14
Injuries
n, -ma, m
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
Guard
Name: Pepe Le Pew
Birthdate:January 6, 1945
Birthplace: Warner studio's
Mission: To win the love of all the felines.


History

Creator: Originally: Michael Maltese
Charles (Chuck) Jones
Voices: Mel Blanc
First Appearance: "Odor-able Kitty."
Interesting Info: A suave French Skunk oozes amour and is ready to run after every female of his kind that crosses his path. In the tradition of a great French lover, he believes that he is irresistible. But there are the occasional setbacks, which will never daunt him; the problem is only the timidity of his overwhelmed partner. But little does he know that he is so offensive that his presence evacuates buildings, much less that he uniformly traumatizes those he would woo. Love may be blind, but there are other senses to consider.
Yet, Pepe Le Pew, holds a special charm for his director, Chuck Jones. "He's the man I always wanted to be," said Jones. "I never had much luck with girls when I was in school. But there is somebody who is absolutely certain about his own sexuality, who's so secure with women that it's inconceivable to him that he could offend them. So Pepe was something very personal to me. I tried to get some of his personality inside of me so I could draw on it in my relations with women."
After Pepe had originally been conceived by Michael Maltese. his essence would take years before he would be fined tuned. A close forerunner of the character had its debut in Jones' 1945 "Odor-able Kitty."
In "Odor-able Kitty" a orange tomcat who grows tired of the world's abuses (from boots and bulldogs and the like) decides to disguise himself as a skunk to achieve some solitude; with the help of some white paint, black paint, Limburger, onions, and garlic.
But soon enough a real Pepe catches his scent and leaps upon him and pants with, French coos, and caresses, showing him that there are worse alternatives than the life he had known. But at the end of the cartoon, Pepe turns out to have kids and a wife (a wife with a rolling pin).
Two years would pass before Chuck Jones worked with the character again. And in 1947's "Scent-imental Over You" the hallmarks began to fall into place: A hairless Mexican dog, female and petite, is laughed at by the luxuriantly-coated pedigrees on New York's Park Avenue, and so she obtains a skunk fur to dress up in. But a French skunk - identified on a mailbox as "Stinky" - mistakes her for the real thing, and immediately begins "zee woo-eeng" all through a city park. Ultimately, however, when the Mexican hairless reveals herself to be a dog. Pepe also transforms himself into a hound.
The components of the Pepe series would be locked in with the character's next film, 1949's "Scent-imental Reasons". Set in France, Pepe is in a perfume shop - a sight that drives the shop's owner to paint a stripe down the back of a curvy pussycat in the hope of luring Pepe away. As Pepe lunges after the terrified cat with clutches and tender words ("Ah, c'est l'amour…Ahhh, c'est toujours!"). Her writhing horror will not stop Pepe for an instant.
Pepe's name was derived from that of Pepe Le Moko, a character played by Charles Boyer in the gurgly love-classic Algiers. But the skunk's unctuous accent, was patterned not only on Boyer, but on all the French actors. " In particular, Jones had the sound of Maurice Chevalier in his ear when he worked with Mel Blanc on developing Pepe fetid Franglias. Another ingredient in the Le Pew series is the structure of the love-struck chase; the panicky cat who frantically scrambles away as a smiling Pepe hops along with leisurely aplomb, and for Jones, the Pepe series would have another distinguishing feature. While the history of animation is indeed clogged with chase cartoons - cat and mouse, cat and canary, Road Runner and Coyote - they usually had one thing in common. "It was a matter of eating somebody, but for Pepe he was unique in that he was after that cat, well, …"

Filmography

1945: Odor-Able Kitty
Pepe Le Pew: January,6; LT; Chuck Jones
Note: In one scene the tomcat disguises himself as Bugs Bunny. It should also be noted that Pepe
is chasing a male cat, and in the future the pseudo-skunks were to be decidedly female.
An orange tomcat decides the only way to get respect, is to disguise himself as a skunk. But the plan works too well. As he attracts the attention of Pepe Le Pew, a hot-blooded skunk who pursues his new found love all over the countryside. In the end, "Pepe's" wife and kids appear and brings the odorous Casanova home. This tormented tabby happily returns to his former identity,a hungry and abused alley cat.

1947: Scent-imental Over You
Pepe Le Pew: May,8; LT; Chuck Jones
All the fancy dogs except a little female Mexican hairless are sporting new coats. After trying on the furs on her owner, she finally glues on one that fits - a skunk fur. She tries to join the other dogs, but they all run from her. Crying, she attracts the attention of Pepe Le Pew, who chases her all over the city. Eventually, she tires of the chase, and Pepe brings her to his tree home (mailbox reads "Stinky"). She reveals that she is just a little dog. Pepe is delighted, "I too am zee canine!" As they embrace, Pepe reveals to us that he's really a skunk after all.

1948: Odor of the Day
Pepe Le Pew: October,2; LT; Arthur Davis
It's snowing and a homeless dog is looking for a place to sleep. He takes shelter in a doghouse, eagle's nest and a turtle's shell, which he gets thrown out of them. Finally the dog finds a house with a real bed. Pepe Le Pew walks in and climbs under the covers to sleep. The dog smells something, sees the skunk, holds his nose, and throws the stinker out. When he returns to bed, Pepe is there again. The dog puts a clothespin on his nose and attacks the skunk, fighting with him under the bed. They chase each other outside. The dogs falls into frozen water, Pepe chops him out of the ice, and snow the dog has a cold and can't smell. He locks Pepe out and returns to his sleep. Pepe throws a brick through the window with a note. "Colds can be fatal, get help now!" The dog calls for a doctor, and Pepe arrives in disguise. He puts the pooch in a washing machine, and hangs him out to dry. It actually cures the cold! Smelling the skunk, the dog runs from the house, lands in the lake, and catches cold again. The dog sprays Pepe with perfume, causing Pepe to run from the house. He falls in the lake, catches a cold as well. Unable to smell each other, they give up and sleep together. There is no dialogue in this film, except for a mutual "Gesundtheit" at the end.

1949: For Scent-imental Reasons
Pepe Le Pew: November,12; LT; Chuck Jones
Pepe Le Pew is in a perfume shop sniffing the various scents. The shopkeeper runs in horror and recruits a female cat to lure the skunk out of the shop. She tosses the cat inside, and a bottle of dye falls over, painting a white stripe down the cat's back. Pepe pursues the cat, intent on making love. The frightened cat hides in a glass case. Pepe pretends to shoot himself. The cat runs out, concerned. Pepe peers over the transom, boasting, "I am zee locksmith of love!" and chases the cat out the window. She falls into a water bucket, and he plops into a can of blue paint. The paint blocks his smell, and, thinking Pepe is a fellow feline, the cat falls in love with Pepe and chases the skunk. Running in horror, Pepe declares, "You know, it is possible to be too attractive!"

1951: Scentimental Romeo
Pepe Le Pew: March,24; MM; Chuck Jones
"Ah ze l'amour! Ah ze toujour! Ah ze grande illusion!" Mam'selle kitty, in order to get in on feeding time at her zoo, paints a white stripe down her back, and before you can say "Django Reinhardt," Pepe Le Pew is whispering sweet nothings and sweet something's in her ear. Pulling down theatre-set walls from nowhere, he turns his cage in the zoo into a hotel room for a rendezvous. By the time he's opened the champagne, she's fled, and be becomes ze lovair chaser, pursuing her all over the park and zoo ("Where are you, my stutz-bearcat of love?"). When she climbs a wall, Pepe is there to do an impression of Chevalier singing, "Baby Face." When she dashes down an alley, he engages her in an Apache dance. When the keeper drags Pepe back to his zoo, he waves a sad farewell. "Sweeting is a such part sorrow!" This last "generic" Pepe. Future entries mixed in other elements (usually settings) This doesn't make much use of the zoo or the park background except for a good bit in the tunnel of love and could use a stronger ending. All one can say is "Viva L'amour!" Theme: "April in Paris." More music: "Strolling Through Le Park" (sung by Pepe), "Latin Quarter," "Kiss Me Again."

1952: Little Beau Pepe
Pepe Le Pew: March,29; MM; Chuck Jones
The Foreign Legionnaires are attending to business as usual, drilling and marching, when who should arrive but "ze disillusioned" Pepe Le Pew. "I weesh to eenlish in ze Foreign Legion so I may forget." On getting a whiff of the new applicant, not only does the recruiting officer scram-ez vous, so does the entire company! Pepe deduces this is because they have already appointed him to their highest post of honor: left to defend the fort! But even honor can wait when Pepe casts his eyes on a la belle femme skunk fatale (actually, a pussycats who passed under a freshly-painted ladder). With "Le Vie En Rose" in the background, Pepe smothers his little demi-monde with kisses, but of course she wishes to "put on her face before we continue with ze wooing (such dainty rabbits these ladies!)". La Belle flees around the upper wall (seeing Pepe in Napoleon costume) and into a barrel ("Like shooting fish in a barrel, is it not?") and dashes out of the fort, he taking the dunes in his stride. By the time they make it to an oasis she has passed out. Dressed as a Valentino-style sheik, he carries the prostrate pussy into a tent. Wondering how she can rest with him so near he "decides to restoke the furnace of love" with a mixture of Aromas Arabienne the function as an aphrodisiac. The haunting primitive love song he strums for her overstrokes the furnace, and she chases him: "Le rowr-rowr!"

1953: Wild Over You
Pepe Le Pew: July,11; MM; Chuck Jones
"All is love in fair and war." A female wildcat escapes from the zoo at the Paris Exposition of 1900, providing Pepe Le Pew not only with something a little out of the ordinary to chase (she gets a white stripe down her back, self-applied to scare off a zoo keeper and dog), but a witty setting to chase through. He thinks she is a "Keeng-sized belle femme skunk fatale." Each time Pepe gets close to her he makes with the sweet nothings and the kisses ("You are ze corned beef to me, I am ze cabbage to you"). Their embrace becomes a dizzying blur of flying claws, after which Pepe emerges not the least bit discouraged, saying, "I like eet." The amorous pursuit takes them through a fortune-teller's tend ("You are going to meet a small dark male who weel bring romance into your drab existence"), around various wax works (she is Marie Antoinette's stole, he as Daniel Boone's coonskin) and other exhibits (suites of armor for amour and Madame Pompadour's coach). The wildcat thinks she's gotten away when she leaves the earth in a balloon, but guess who's in the basket with her? As they ascend skyward out of sight, she starts clawing again, and he tells us, "If you have not tried eet, do not knock eet!"

1954: The Cat's Bah
Pepe Le Pew: March,20; MM; Chuck Jones
The fourth Le Moko epic (after Pepe le Moko, Algiers and Casbah), and Le Pew's most direct homage to Boyer in the film that inspired his name. "You are here to interview me about ze greatest love of my life, yes?" says Pepe to the camera. "Come with me to the Casbah, a very long time ago, when I had set up Bachelor's Quarters and was putting the finishing touches to my toilette before setting forth in search of amorous adventure." The object of said search is a "belle americaine touriste femme skunk," actually the victim of dripping white paint, whom he "liberates" from her lady owner. "Just theenk, radiant flower, you do not have to come weeth me to ze Casbah, we are already here!" She hides in one of a hundred ceramic jugs placed on the seat of a camel built for two (who has learned to put up with everything). Out of a nearby basket comes Pepe, making like a snake ("and you have charmed me"), into Omar Tent's (where Pepe misquotes the Rubiyat). Funniest of all, into a Rick's inspired café that affords Pepe the opportunity to spoonerize "As Time Goes By" in his phony French. After the flashback, the cartoon ends on a kinky note: "Now we are inseparable," says Pepe, meaning literally ball and chain. "Are we not, darling?" She nods in agreement, but immediately gets to work on the chain with a hacksaw!

1955: Past Perfumance
Pepe Le Pew: May,21; MM; Chuck Jones
Paris, 1913: the casting director for animals (Arthur Q. Bryan) at Super Magnifique Productiones (Studios de Le Picteurs Motion) has procured all the creatures necessary for M'sieu Le Directeur's new motion picture (including "Chimps Elysees"), except for one odorless skunk, a female cat with white stripe on her back. Pepe enters the studio and frightens everyone off the set, including the animal trainer who leaves the female pseudo-skunk directly to Pepe! Pepe chases his latest love interest all over the studio. They run across the set for Julio and Romiet, wherein Pepe, looking adorable in pantaloops, calls her his "little much ado about something." In the midst of a Dumasian action scence, he finds that the other two musketeers are less than anxious to have Pepe as their third ("Le yipe"). After removing her from the film magazine, he finds his "pink rabbeet" next in a room de projection, his aroma causing a black and white silent sheik on the screen to exclaim, "Un pole cat de pew es en le audience! Take it vous on le lam!" The pair run past sets for Uncle Tom, Tarzan, and "Daring Young Flea on the Manly Trapeze" and the "Pearls de Pauline." When the white stripe washes off the cat, Pepe continues the chase, painting over his own stripe. "If you can not beat them, join them! Wait for baby!"

1955: Two Scents Worth
Pepe Le Pew: October,15; MM; Chuck Jones
"It is not a just a case of physical attraction, I admire her mind too!" In a little village nestled in the French Alps, a nogoodnik Apache-type hoodlum buys a fish, uses it as a bait to catch a cat, and, with the aid of white paint, transforms it into a skunk that he lowers into a bank. When everybody beats it, he cleans the place out. Meeting Pepe outside, the crook voluntarily locks himself in the nearest jail, leaving his unwilling accomplice, the pseudoskunk, even less willing to take part in Pepe's amorous activities ("Permit me to introduce myself, I am Pepe Le Pew, your lover"). She starts up the Alps in a ski-lift car, and runs to the top. This builds to a first-class chase sequence: Jones uses the idea of a snow-chase so effectively you wish he'd devised a Road Runner-type series with a winter backdrop. Riding down the ski ramp, the girl cat/skunk on one ski and Pepe on two, Pepe makes like a World War II pilot ("I pierce you with the ack-ack of love, flower pot"). Crashing into a tree fails to stop him-he swings through the branches like Tarzan and makes it back on to his skis. When she heads towards the end of the slope and backpedals furiously, managing to stop the ski just at the edge, it is time for Pepe to whoosh by. As he flies through the air, she grabs on to him for dear life. "She is no longer timid" Pepe notes as he releases his parachute.

1956: Heaven Scent
Pepe Le Pew: March,31; MM; Chuck Jones
This basic Pepe routine would be without any distinguishing characteristics were it not so funny. The femme cat applies the stripe to get past a bunch of relentless dogs who separate her from a basket of fish at the waterfront, and does it by rubbing her back against a freshly-painted flagpole. Pepe chases her through the park (that he sings about "strolling through") where she hides in a basket of grapes ready to be made into wine, then up a tree, where Pepe appears and says "marry me." Resolved to play "not quite so easy to get," he runs ahead of her saying, "Marriage, I don't know…" He heads her off at the pass and chases her through the mountains where he combines single echoes into the phrase "I love you" and advises, "all you need is a little occupational therapy, like making love." Pepe hangs from a cliff by his toes ("security isn't everything"), she runs into a tunnel. Pepe sees the sign, "No entre- Le tunnel is blocked."
Before he goes in "for the kill," he quotes, "as a distinguished colleague of mine once noted, there is very little difference between men and women," but, Pepe concludes, "Viva la difference!"

1957: Touche and Go
Pepe Le Pew: October,12; MM; Chuck Jones
Even underwater, Pepe Le Pew can sense the presence of a female skunk and makes a beeline for her. Well, she's not really a skunk but a cat who has been chased by a dog down a highway just as a painter is applying a white stripe to the road. Embracing her, Pepe starts singing his amorous air, "Ze arms of Pepe are upon you." When she runs from his side, he reasons, "Zere are pleenty of othair feesh in ze ocean…zat ees, eef you like feesh. Personally, I prefer a rock." He appears out of the drink offering to get her a glass of water. She's gone by the two seconds he takes to fetch it from the shore, so he pours the water onto the rock explaining how he never touches the stuff himself. Hiding on a yacht, she encounters Pepe in a Captain's cap. "I am ze captain and you are ze first mate, promotions will follow quickly!" The chase continues under water (Pepe needing no oxygen mask since a skunk can hold its breath for a long time). His aromatic strengths drives off a shark who swallows her and sends him yelping onto the beach like a dog. He searches for her in the sea. "Where are you, me leetle she-anemone?" She thinks she's safe when, hours later, she swims ashore on a desert island, but Pepe is waiting for her in Crusoe costume. "Friday? Monday? Right now?" The chase goes on. "One nice thing is, the game of love is never called on account of darkness." The camera pulls back to display the island's heart shape.

1959: Really Scent
Pepe Le Pew: June,27; MM; Abe Levitow
A breath of fresh air for a series that needs it. Here virtually all of the rules de Le Pew are reversed. June Foray narrates this tale set in old New Orleans, beginning on a momentous day in the lives of Pierre and Fifi Cat. This is the day their daughters are born, one little kitten, by a "calamity of birth" coming into the world with a white stripe down her back! It only matters to "Fabrette" the following spring. Her sister easily attracts an eager boy friend, but the local tomcats are frightened by her skunk-like stripe. As fate would have it, Fabrette's ship comes in - from France, and containing Pepe Le Pew! The two spots each other and instantly there are stars in their eyes. Their passionate embrace is disturbed only by her sad discovery that one whiff of her lover is enough to make her pass out! She tries to combat Pepe's pungency by holding her breath (turning all sorts of colors). Pepe mistakes her red face for blushing and sprays himself with perfume. Pepe decides to look up "what thees 'pew' means every time I appear." He declares, "For her I will make myself dainty" and heads into "Henri's Deodorizing Service," just as Fabrette, about to commit suicide, realizes, "If you can't lick them…" and dashes into "Pierre's Limberger Cheese Co." The last scene has the foul-smelling female chasing after the now-sanitary Pepe.

1960: Who Scent You ?
Pepe Le Pew: April,23; LT; Chuck Jones
A female feline studies a "Pleasure Cruise" travel poster and tries to board the ship. The cat sneaks under a freshly painted fence, and gets a white stripe on her black back. Pepe Le Pew spots the female from the shore and runs into the sea (running because he cannot swim) even the fish "smell" him! The captain abandons ship because of the female "skunk," leaving Pepe free to pursue his love. He uses great lines such as "Your aloneness is almost over!" and "You are my peanut, I am your brittle!" Pepe freshens up in the beauty salon, then chases the cat all over the abandoned ship. When the cat finally escapes in a life boat, Pepe is adrift with her. He hangs a sign, "This is the life" over the side.

1961: A Scent of the Matterhorn
Pepe Le Pew: June,24; LT; Chuck Jones
In the French mountains a highway-white-stripe painting machine gets loose and rolls to a nearby farm where it paints everything, including a female cat whom Pepe Le Pew naturally mistakes for a girl skunk. Pepe chases the feline with lines like, "Everyone should have a hobby - mine is making love!" and "You may call me Streetcar because of my desire for you!" Pepe chases her all over the mountain. Finally, the cat jumps off a cliff to escape and lands in Pepe's paws. They slide into an ice-cave, where the multiple reflections of the female drives Pepe wild. "Acres and acres of girls, and they're mine, all mine!"

1962: Louvre Come Back to Me
Pepe Le Pew: August,18; LT; Chuck Jones
It is Paris in spring and Pepe Le Pew, the lovesick skunk, is walking and singing in the park. Everything in his path melts or stiffens at his scent. The stink makes one female alley cat jump up a freshly-painted flagpole, painting a white stripe on her black fur back. Pepe pursues the feline through the Louvre Museum, where even the statues react to his smell. The girl's orange tomcat boy friend tries to chase after Pepe, but is done in by the smell. Pepe seeks out his love, asking, "Where are you, my little object d'art? I am going to collect you!" The tomcat catches up to Pepe (holding his breath with a clothespin on his nose). Pepe understands, and at great length, describes a duel they will have. The cat runs out for air. Pepe continues to search for his love, and finds her in the air conditioning unit in the basement, spreading his scent throughout the museum, causing the great paintings to react. The watches in Dali's "The Persistance Of Vision" pop their main springs; the farm couple of "American Gothic" hide their heads; Millet's "The Gleaners" run away; the paint from a Degas ballet portrait fall off, revealing it was "paint-by-numbers"; and the "Mona Lisa" just grins. "I can tell you chaps one thing. It's not always easy to hold this smile!"

Guest Appearances

1954: Dog Pounded
Tweety, Sylvester, Pepe Le Pew: January,2; LT; I Freleng
Note:Pepe makes a guest appearance.
A very funny series of blackout gags with Tweety in a nest in the middle of a city dog pound where hundreds of vicious bulldog Tweetie-protectors are just waiting for Sylvester to try and cross their yard so they can make mince-meat out of him. Freleng and Foster cram in more gag sequences. A few highlights are Sylvester's walk across a tight rope holding an umbrella for balance, the dogs collectively blowing a wind of doggie-breath at him; disguising himself in a dog suit, the dog catcher putting him right back in the pound (Blanc voicing Sylvester as a dog is terrific: like Jimmy Stewart imitating John Wayne). Sylvester gets the idea of mass hypnotism to knock out the pooches, but Tweety tricks him into blurting out the secret of how to restore them to normal. Tip-toeing through the apparently empty yard, and climbing Tweety's tree. Sylvester discovers the bulldogs all sitting on various branches. Trying to swing through the pound Sylvester has all the dogs jumping on the swing with him (uninvited). Sylvester manages at last to scare them all away with a phoney skunk strip painted down his back, but just as he is grabbing Tweety, Pepe Le Pew, out of nowhere, arrives to make love to him.

 
Porky Pig
#12
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
4
ST
4
AG
2
AV
9
R
0
B
160
P
0
F
0
G
19
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
8
Td
0
Mvp
1
GPP
21
XPP
0
SPP
21
Injuries
m
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
+ST
Mighty Blow
Name : Porky Pig
Geburtstag : 9 Mars
Kino-Premiere: "I Haven't Got a Hat" (de Friz Frelang)
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs Bunny show"
Elmer Fudd
#13
Chaos Dwarf Blocker
MA
4
ST
3
AG
2
AV
9
R
0
B
136
P
0
F
0
G
40
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
3
Td
0
Mvp
1
GPP
11
XPP
0
SPP
11
Injuries
 
Skills
Block
Tackle
Thick Skull
Mighty Blow
Name: Elmer Fudd
Birthdate:July 24, 1948
Birthplace: Warner Bros.
Formerly known as: EggHead


History

Creator: Tex Avery
Voices: Joe penner(egghead)
Arthor Q Bryan (Elmer Fudd)
First Appearance: Egghead Rides Again (1937) as Egghead
Elmer's Candid Camera (1940) as Elmer Fudd

Interesting Info: Elemer evolved from a character called Egghead. Egghead was first introduced in Tex Avery's (Egghead Rides Again 1937), playing such parts as a duck hunter,(Daffy Duck and Egghead), Fairy-Tale Crasher (Cinderella Meets Fella 1938)and amateur boxer (Count Me Out 1938)in some dozen cartoons. And although his personality varied from role to role,Egghead was a kind of hybird of some of the comedians of his day.
But egghead was rather too bizzare to generate any real popularity, Until an actor by the name of Arthor Q Bryan was frelancing in films and radio was called down to Warner Cartoons and one of his voices conveyed such world-class milksoppiness that it suggested itself for a character and was first used in Tex Avery's(Dangerous Dan McFoo 1939). After which Egghead was restyled to complement this stwiking new sonority.
Elmer Fudd made his screen debut in Chuck Jones (Elmer's Candid Camera 1940)In Elmer's Candid Camera,Fudd plays the numbskull naturalist,innocently going after wildlife,were he stumbles apun " Wabbit Twacks" marking his first encounter with a developing version of Bugs Bunny,who cons,hectors and heckles Elmer until he is reduced to stumbling wild-eyed around the forest wailing ("Wabbits! Wabbits!")
But it was Tex Avery's (A Wild Hare 1940) which also crystallized Bugs Bunny,that the difinitive Elmer was relized. As a hunter,with floppy hat and long rifle;based on a model sheet drawn by Robert Givens showing Elmer with a smaller nose,rounder head,and most importanly he has a chin.And he delivers all the telltale lines and legandary laugh. In A Wild Hare Elmer and Bugs would become the pairing that would last for over 20 yrs: dolt versus sharpster.
In 1941 Elmer took a detour of sorts with Bob Clampett's (Wabbit Trouble 1941)and three subsequent cartoons and in a fund-raiser in which Bugs sings "Any Bonds Today?" Elmer became exceedingly portly,although the voice and the personality remained. Elmer was plumped and Clampett and his fellow artist were'nt pleased with his current dimensions. So they decided to make Elmer resemble the man who provided his voice,the dumpling Arthur Q Bryan. But the bloated Elmer proved less amusing when animated and in 1942 Freleng's(The Hare-Brained Hypnotist) brought the svelte Elmer back for good.Through out the years Elmer would become Warner Cartoons evryman,playing parts from hunter,to Valkyrie Elmer in (What's Opera Doc?).

Filmography

1937: Egghead Rides Again
Egghead: July 17; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Egghead's first appearence (voiced by Joe penner)
Obsessed with the wild west, Egghead is thrown out of his apparment for making to much noise(playing a daburn cowboy). While walking around he stumbles across an add from the
Bar None Ranch in Wahoo. Wyoming, and mails himself there by pony express.

1938: Daffy Duck and Egghead
Daffy duck; Egghead: Janurary 1; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Egghead goes hunting but daffy's nuttiness gets the best of him.

1938: Cinderella Meets Fella
Egghead: July 23; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Note: Characters jump out of and back into audience.
Modernized Cinderella with sloshed fairy godmother, Egghead as prince charming.

1938: A-Lad-in Bagdad
Egghead, August 27; MM Cal Dalton; Cal Howard
Egghead as Alladin in this topical spoof of "The Arabian Nights"

1938: A Feud There Was
Egghead/Elmer Fudd fudd, September 24;MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Note: Egghead is identified as "Elmer Fudd fudd" by his motorcycle:
Elmer Fudd/Egghead tries to stop a family of hillbilly's from feuding in the Ozark moutains.

1938: Johnny Smith and Poker-Huntas
Egghead, October 22; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
The mayflower delivers Captain John Smith (Egghead) to the Americas, he is attacked by scalpers(peddling ticket to the Rose Bowl). He's then captured by Indians and then saved by Poker-Huntas.

1938: Count Me Out
Egghead, MM December 17; Ben Hardaway; Cal Dalton
After recieving some junk mail from the ACME Correspondance School of Boxing,Egghead sends away for the lessons. After which he boxes Biff Stew, and thru a series of gags he gets beat up. which he then wakes up it was only a dream.

1939: Hamateur Night
Egghead, Janurary 28; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Note: An audience hippo's voice is Tex Avery himself
A variety stage show at the "Warner Bros. Theater" with an assortment of 2-bit performers.

1939: A Day at the Zoo
Egghead, March 11; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
A narrated tour of the City Zoo; with inserts of Egghead teasing a lion.

1939: Believe it or Else
Egghead, June 25; MM Fred (Tex) Avery
Goofy parody of "Ripley's believe it or not," with a milk drinker, Snake charmer, hog caller, human basketball, etc.

1940: Elmer Fudd's Candid Camera
Elmer Fudd; (Bugs Bunny prototype), March 2; MM Charles (Chuck) Jones
Elmer Fudd heads into the woods to with camera to photograph wildlife, when he stumbles upon a bunny rabbit (Bugs Bunny in his early stages)who makes things harder than Elmer Fudd's book explained.

1940: Confederate Honey
Elmer Fudd, March 30; MM Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: First Freleng cartoon upon his return to Warner Bros. Studio after nearly 2 years away at MGM.
The story is set in Kentucky, 1861 and the Cival War breaks out before Ned Cutler(Elmer Fudd) arriving on horse can ask Crimson the big question. Crimson vows to keep a light burning in the window for him. After the war Ned returns to ask the question "Will you validate my ticket"

1940: Hardship of Miles Standish
Elmer Fudd, April 27; MM Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Date on the calendar during the story is April 1
An Granpa telling his grandson a story of Miles Standish, Pricilla, and John Alden(Elmer Fudd).

1940: The Wild Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, July 27;MM Tex Avery
Note: First official Bugs Bunny cartoon (which sets the blueprint of Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd)
Be vewy vewy qwiet; Elmer Fudd's hunting wabbits. Establishes many standards from very beginning, including sticking gun down hole, "what's up doc", etc.

1940: Good Night Elmer Fudd
Elmer Fudd, October 26;MM Charles (Chuck) Jones
Elmer gets in a fight with his candle while trying to go to sleep.


1941: Elmer's Pet Rabbit
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, Janurary 4; MM Charles (Chuck) Jones
Elmer buys a timid rabbit(introduced as Bugs Bunny for the first time in the opening credits) at the local pet shop.


1941: Wabbit Twouble
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, December 20; MM Robert clampett
Elmer takes a vacation to Jellostone National Park, where his "Restful Retreat" is disrupted by Bugs Bunny.

1942: The Wabbit Who Came to Supper
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, March 28; MM Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer gets a Telegram from his Uncle Louie(while hunting for Bugs Bunny) leaving him three million dollars on condition that he doesn't harm any animals, (especially rabbits). After hearing Uncle Louie passed on Elmer ends up owing $1.98 after taxes.

1942: The Wacky Wabbit
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, May 2; MM Robert Clampett
Bugs Bunny interupts Elmer's Gold digging prospects.

1942: Nutty News
Elmer Fudd, May 23; LT Robert Clampett
A newsreel spoof narrated by Arthur Q. Brayan, with topics on Hunting Season, a barber with a new invention to get kids to sit still in the barber chair, and many more stories.

1942: Fresh Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, August 22; MM Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer Fudd as a Mountie in search of Bugs Bunny who's wanted Dead or Alive(Preferably Dead!).

1942: The Hare-Brained Hypnotist
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd, October 31; MM Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer learns Hypnotism to catch Bugs Bunny who in turn hypotizes Elmer.

1943: To Duck or Not To Duck
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: March 6; LT Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: Some currently airing versions are missing referee's below-the-belt instructions.
Elmer shoots Daffy down, only to be challenged to a one sided boxing match.

1943: A Corny Concerto
Porky Pig; Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: September 18; MM: Robert Clampett
Note: A "4f" sign given to ugly duckling refers to lowest military physical fitness rating (read: complete washout).
Elmer conducts two musical cartoons in one. In "Tales of the Viennawoods", hunter Porky Pig and his dog(a pointer) are foiled by thier prey Bugs Bunny. The "Blue Danube" tells an "Ugly Duckling" story with a little black duck trying to join a family of swans.

1943: An Itch in Time
Elmer Fudd; Elmer Fudd's dog: December 4; MM: Robert Clampett
Note: Current censors have left in the same scene missed by '43 censors ("I’d better cut this out, I might get to like it") but have took out ending where cat shoots self in head.
Elmer is reading a LT comic book with his dog at his side asleep, when a wayfaring flea makes a home on the dog & uses increasingly severe methods to mine his dinner.

1944: The Old Grey Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: October 28; MM: Robert Clampett
Note: The only Bugs Bunny cartoon in which he never appears at his "normal" or "present" age, only as a young or old bunny. Notice the headlines in the "daily rocket": "Treasury waives tax on free movie day" and "Quintuplets give birth to Quintuplets"
A crying Elmer Fudd takes a look into the year 2000 A.D. (to see if he ever catches Bugs Bunny) The wrinkled Elmer Fudd and bearded Bugs Bunny reminisce about thier first meeting as little babies.

1944: The Stupid Cupid
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: November 25; LT: Frank Tashlin
Note: A version airing on Warner Bros. has the scene cut out where the cat is being wooed by a dog shoots himself in the head.
Cupid's (Elmer Fuud) arrows keep causing Daffy Duck problems.

1944: Stage Door Cartoon
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: December 30; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer Fudd chases Bugs Bunny into a vaudeville theater, were Bugs preforms various acts on Elmer.

1945: The Unruly Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: February 10; MM: Frank Tashlin
Elmer Fudd is a railroad surveyor who wants to lay track through Bugs Bunny's territory. While looking through his survey viewer, Bugs plays pleanty of jokes on Elmer.

1945: Hare Tonic
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: November 10; LT: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Elmer Fudd brings Bugs Bunny home for dinner, but the meal-to-be convinces Elmer that he has the dreaded disease "Rabititus" and that Elmer's house must be quarantined.

1946: Hare Remover
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: March 23; MM: Frank Tashlin
Elmer creates a formula to make a normal person into a"Deviwish Fiend"; After traping Bugs Bunny, Elmer makes him drink the formula. Bugs has fits,cold spells and spins around. But Elmer anticipates a gruesome monster, but "No Soap, Doc".

1946: The Big Snooze
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: October 5; LT: Robert Clampett
Note: Robert Clampett’s last Warner Bros. cartoon--and it's his masterpiece. Numerous pieces cut out of currently-airing version, including scene where bugs takes sleeping pills ("take deze and doze") to invade Elmer's dream.
After unsuccessfully trying to catch Bugs Bunny Elmer quits cartoons to take up fishing, After falling asleep, Bugs invades his dreams, and causes Elmer nightmares, after wich Elmer returns to the cartoon business.

1947: Easter Yeggs
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: June 28; LT: Robert McKimson
Bugs fills in for the Easter Bunny; and has a run-in with a mean little kid, while Elmer is looking for a rabbit dinner.

1947: A Pest in the House
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: August 3; MM: Charles (Chuck) Jones
A Bellhop Daffy keeps sleep-deprived guest(Arthor Q Bryan) awake who then beats on manager Elmer.

1947: Slick Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: November 1; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Contains caricatures of Leopold Stokowski, Ray Milland (star of The Lost Weekend, Frank Sinatra, Casablanca), Carmen Miranda, Loren Bacall and many other stars.
Bogey wants a rabbit for dinner, and Elmer tries to comply, but Bugs has other plans and becomes part of the floorshow to escape him.

1948: What Makes Daffy Duck
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: February 14; LT: Arthur Davis
Note: Daffy Duck sings a full chorus of "King for a Day"
Both Elmer and a hungry Fox fight for Daffy, which Daffy pits them against each other.

1948: Back Alley Oproar
Elmer Fudd; Sylvester: March 27; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: A color remake of 1941's "Notes to You"
Sylvester's all-night serenade on the back fence keeps Elmer awake.

1948: Kit for Cat
Elmer Fudd; Sylvester: November 6; LT: Isador (Friz) Freleng
A homeless Sylvester competes with an Orange Cat to win sole spot as Elmer's cat.

1949: Wise Quackers
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: Janurary 1; LT: Isador (Friz) Freleng
While flying south for the winter a tired Daffy Duck makes a three point landing near Elmer while he's hunting. Daffy begs Elmer not to shoot him and in return he'll be Elmers slave.

1949: Each Dawn I Crow
Elmer Fudd: September 23; MM: Isador (Friz) Freleng
A narrator convinces a paranoid Rooster to worry about becoming Elmer's dinner.

1950: The Scarlet Pumpernickel
Daffy Duck; Sylvester; Porky Pig; Three Bears (Ma Bear); Elmer Fudd: March 4; LT: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: A version currently airing on Nickelodeon has new video edited over scene where Daffy shoots himself in the head.
Daffy has written his own screenplay that parodies the Scarlet Pimpernel (saves the fair Melissa from marrying the evil Grand Duke).

1950: What's Up Doc?
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: June 17; LT: Robert McKimson
Note: Bugs Bunny is seen sitting in the park with Al Jolsen, Jack Benny, Eddie Cantor, Bing Crosby.
Bugs Bunny gets a call from the "Disassociated Press" asking for his life story. We learn that Bugs once was a chorus boy on Broadway,. One nite the star is sick and Bugs fills in. Despite giving his all, he only hears crckets. Elmer Fudd the big Vaudeville star is looking for a partner for his act and uses Bugs, where they become big stars i

1950: The Rabbit of Seville
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: December 16; LT: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: Bugs Bunny has 5 fingers per hand (for purposes of the close-up where he "plays" his fingers like a piano). Billboard lists "with Eduardo Selzeri, Michele Maltese, Carlo Jonzi"
Elmer chases Bugs into the theater where they find themself on stage. They proceed to act out the Barber of Seville, with (barber chairs, scalp massages, Indian razor charmer & all).

1951: Rabbit Fire
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: May 19; LT: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: See also 1952's Rabbit Seasoning and 1953's Duck! Rabbit, Duck!
Daffy Duck leaves rabbit tracks for Elmer Fudd to follow to Bugs Bunny's hole, and the debate over which season it is begins; disguises, cookbooks, and elephant guns are the many gags used.

1952: Rabbit Seasoning
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: September 20; MM: Chuck (Chuck) Jones
Note: One of Daffy Duck's most memorable dialogs. See also 1951's Rabbit Fire and 1953's Duck! Rabbit, Duck!
Elmer Fudd again has to decide what season it really is.

1953: Upswept Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: March 14; MM: Robert McKimson
Bugs Bunny’s home is transplanted with a rare flower to Elmer Fudd's penthouse, and they compete to see who leaves.

1953: Ant Pasted
Elmer Fudd: May 9; LT: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer Fudd's 4th of July picnick (complete with firecrackers) starts a war with a army of ants, who have some inventive ways of retaliating.

1953: Duck! Rabbit, Duck!
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: October 3; MM: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: This is one of the talkiest of the Elmer-Bugs-Daffy hunting trilogies. Also See previous year's Rabbit Seasoning for similar dialogue.
Daffy Duck tells Elmer Fudd it's rabbit season, but Bugs claims to be a "fricasseeing rabbit". And it soon becomes duck, goat, skunk, pigeon, mongoose, moose, fiddler crab, and baseball season.

1953: Robot Rabbit
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: December 12; LT: Isador (Friz) Freleng
Note: ABC has cut out scenes where robot attacks Donkey and Elmer.
Elmer Fudd wants Bugs Bunny out of his carrot patch, so he calls ACME Pest Control Service for thier "ewectwonic pest contrwoller with a wobot bwain". But at first the wobot attacks the wrong things and then quickly gets outwitted by Bugs Bunny who uses a sprinkler, robot outfit, pile driver.

1954: Design for Leaving
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: March 27;LT: Robert McKimson
Note: ABC version has the two-second Elmer choking scene cut out.
Daffy Duck ties to sell Elmer Fudd a line of supermodren household apllliances(for ten days free trial).

1954: Quack Shot
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: October 30; MM: Robert mckimson
Note: Daffy regains a smidgen of his 30s hoo-hoo-hoo hysteria
Daffy Duck tries to prevent Elmer Fudd from shooting ducks by using a drill, smoke, balloon, diving bell, toy boat, decoy bomb, dynamite.

1955: Pests for Guests
Goofy Gophers; Elmer Fudd: Janurary 29; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Elmer Fudd unwittingly buys a dresser were the Goofy Gophers have stashed thier nuts.

1955: Beanstalk Bunny
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: February12; MM: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny climb a giant beanstalk and are captured by giant Elmer Fudd. A chase ensues including a trip for the two inside of Elmer's head.

1955: Hare Brush
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: May 7; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Role-reversal idea recycled from 1942's The Hare Brained Hypnotist. Version that was airing on Nick was unedited
Millionaire Elmer Fudd thinks he's a rabbit, and is sent to a mental facility. He enlists Bugs Bunny's help to escape & changes places with him, leaving the real rabbit to be treated too think he's human.

1955: This is a Life?
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd; Yosemite Sam: July 9;MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
The ever-unruffled Bugs Bunny at the center of a lot of pressure. He's been unexpectedly put at the center of "America's most talked a bout program" by the shows emcee, Elmer Fudd.

1955: Heir Conditioned
Sylvester; Elmer Fudd; Granny: November 26; LT: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Contains a educational section on investments and the economy compare to 1956's Yankee Dood It.
Sylvester becomes a millionaire, and Elmer Fudd advises him not to spend it, & Sylvester's old alleycat pals try to help out by stealing the money.

1956: Bugs' Bonnets
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: Janurary 14; MM: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd try on a variety of hats--and the personalities that go with them

1956: A Star is Bored
Daffy Duck; Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Yosemite Sam: September 15; LT: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
After demanding to be put into pictures, Daffy Duck takes on the job as Bugs Bunny's stunt double.

1956: Yankee Dood It
Sylvester; Elmer Fudd: October 13; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
Note: Contains educational section on business development and the economy. Compare to 1955's Heir Conditioned.
Head Elf Elmer Fudd tries to recall shoemaker's elves, Sylvester turns liaison into mouse and tries to eat him, and Elmer arrives & explains the fundamentals of capitalist theory and how investments lead to new machinery that will :pwoduce a gweter pwoduct for evewy one and gweater pwofits".

1956: Wideo Wabbit
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: October 27; MM: Robert Clampett
Note: Bugs Bunny does impersonations of Groucho Marx, Liberace, and Art Carney. Every credit for this cartoon in the original database was wrong.
Bugs Bunny responds to an ad for a TV rabbit, but finds himself being hunted on Elmer Fudd's sportsman's show.

1957: What's Opera Doc?
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: July 6; MM: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Note: Along with Duck Dodgers, possibly Warner Bros. most famous cartoon. Lyrics for "Return My Love" by Micheal Maltese.

1957: Rabbit Romeo
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Millicent: December 14; MM: Robert Clampett
The ACME Animal Delivery Sevice drops off a package to Elmer Fudd from his Uncle. Inside is a temperamental Slobovian rabbit, so Elmer Fudd enlists Bugs Bunny to chaperone her and she becomes amorous.

1958: Don't Axe Me
Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: Janurary 4; MM: Robert Clampett
Elmer Fudd's wife wants roast duck for dinner.

1958: Pre-Hysterical Hare
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd: November 1; LT: Robert McKimson
Bugs falls into a cave and finds a time capsule containing a film from 10,000 B.C. showing how his an Elmer Fudd's ancestors got along.

1959: A Mutt in a Rutt
Elmer Fudd: May 23; LT: Robert McKimson
A Loving canine (Rover) gets paranoid after watching a TV show on dog abusers.

1960: Person to Bunny
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd: April 1; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng
A spoof of Edward R. Murrow's Person to Person. While Bugs Bunny is being interviewd Daffy Duck walks in and is flustered when ask about Elmer Fudd.

1960: Dog Gone People
Elmer Fudd; Rupert: November 12; MM: Robert McKimson
Note: Elmer Fudd's voice is done by Hal Smith
Elmer agrees to take care of the bosses' dog before realizing that the mutt thinks he's a person and that he has to maintain that notion.

1961: What's My Lion
Elmer Fudd; Rocky the Mountain Lion: October 21; LT:Robert McKimson
Rocky the Mountain Lion gets caught unprepared for hunting season, and takes refuge in a tourist lodge while trying to avoid being caught by Elmer Fudd.

1962: Crow's Feat
Two crows (Jose, Manuel); Elmer Fudd (cameo): April 21; MM: Isadore (Friz) Freleng; Hawley Pratt
Two dumb Mexican crows hitch a ride on a plane. While hopping off in Elmer Fudd's cornfield, they have a hard time telling Elmer Fudd from a "scarecrow".

Post- or Non-Theatrical

Bugs Bunny in King Arthur’s Court
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Daffy Duck; Yosemite Sam; Porky Pig: Charles (Chuck) Jones
Following Ray Bradbury's directions, Bugs tunnels into Camelot and is mistaken for a dragon, forcing himself to wile his way out of captivity. When he does, he sets up an armor factory but is tracked down again by Elmer and challenged to a duel.

Bugs Bunny's Christmas Carol
Bugs Bunny; Yosemite sam; Porky Pig; Sylvester; Elmer Fudd; Foghorn Leghorn; Pepe Le Pew; Petunia Pig; Tweety Pie
First 1/3 of the 30 min. Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales, broken out as a separate cartoon
Sam as Scrooge, Porky as Bob Cratchett, Bugs as ghost of Christmas.

Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Wile E. Coyote; Roadrunner; Marvin the Martian; Hugo: Charles (Chuck) Jones
A young Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd frolic after school lets out for the summer.

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Bunny
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Wile E. Coyote (cameo); Roadrunner (cameo): Charles (Chuck) Jones
Originally the first 1/3 of Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over
A look back to when a young Elmer started chasing young bugs.

Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers
Bugs Bunny; Elmer Fudd; Yosemite Sam; Daffy Duck; Porky Pig (cameo)
Low quality release with poor drawing and jokes blatantly ripped-off from earlier Warner Bros. releases; the creators don't even seem to be fans of Warner Bros. classic animation, as they made little attempt to use its style. Taxi has Warner Bros. logo on side. So new that it's not listed in beck & friedwald's book
Bugs tells story of strange looking carrots who replace Elmer, Sam, daffy with shallow dupes.

1991: Blooper Bunny
Bugs Bunny; Daffy Duck; Elmer Fudd; Yosemite Sam: Greg Ford; Terry Lennon
"That’s all folks" is written in trailer of filmstrip
Odd little special about the making of bugs' 51st 1/2 anniversary special, with shaky & out of focus "camera" recording the mayhem that preceded it, including Elmer using minoxidil and live ammo; bugs doing numerous takes; daffy complaining about scripts, using restroom, and uttering expletives; Sam running into camera.

 
Road Runner
#14
Bull Centaur
MA
6
ST
4
AG
2
AV
9
R
-5
B
23
P
-1
F
0
G
3
Cp
1
In
0
Cs
0
Td
0
Mvp
1
GPP
6
XPP
0
SPP
6
Injuries
 
Skills
Sprint
Sure Feet
Thick Skull
Block
Name : Road Runner
Geburtstag: 16 September
Kino-Premiere: "Fast and furry-ous"de Chuck Jones
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs Bunny Show"
Bugs Bunny
#15
Bull Centaur
MA
6
ST
4
AG
3
AV
9
R
67
B
36
P
0
F
0
G
5
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
1
Td
2
Mvp
1
GPP
13
XPP
0
SPP
13
Injuries
 
Skills
Sprint
Sure Feet
Thick Skull
+AG
Name : Bugs Bunny
Geburtstag : 27 Juil
Geburtsort : Termite Terrance
Kino-Premiere: "The Wild Hare" de tex Avery
TV-Premiere: "The Bugs Bunny Show"
 
Yosemite Sam
#16
Minotaur
MA
5
ST
4
AG
3
AV
8
R
0
B
62
P
0
F
0
G
14
Cp
0
In
0
Cs
8
Td
0
Mvp
3
GPP
31
XPP
0
SPP
31
Injuries
-st
Skills
Always Hungry
Big Guy
Frenzy
Horns
Mighty Blow
Thick Skull
Throw Team Mate
Wild Animal
+AG
Break Tackle
Guard
Birthdate:May 5, 1945
Birthplace: Warner Bros. Studio's

“The roughest, toughest, he-man stuffiest hombre as ever crossed the Rio Grande and I ain’t no mamby pamby” as Yosemite Sam would say. His first appearance was in 1945’s Hare Trigger. While Friz was looking for a character who was explosive enough to engage in combat with the unfazable Bugs Bunny (Elmer) wasn’t it-he was so dumb that a chicken could outsmart him Freleng recalled. So with Micheal Maltese and Hawley Pratt they designed the smallest, meanest,most loudest character they could imagine and named him Yosemite Sam.
Looking back at Tex Avery’s (Dangerous Dan McFoo 1939) Freleng adopted the character which was a short loud mouthed cowboy. But there were other contributions to the development of the firebrand Sam; Red Skelton fashioned a persona called Sheriff Deadeye, who was a hot western blowhard with a droopy moustache that flapped when he roared his words. Also within the Warner Bros. Studio, Bob Clampett’s (Buckaroo Bugs 1944) featured a sawed-off gunslinger that was based on both Deadeye and on the comic strip character Red Ryder named Red Hot Ryder.
In 1944’s Stage Door Cartoon we can see a Deadeye like sheriff (Bugs Bunny in disguise) which would later become Yosemite Sam. Writer Michael Maltese said that he patterned the character on the short tempered, risiable Friz Freleng himself “Friz was Yosemite Sam".
Yosemite Sam would go on to play many different characters from a Cowboy, Pirate, Sheik, to the Black Knight which would win him an Oscar award. With over thirty cartoon shorts to his credit Yosemite Sam has become Bugs Bunny’s number one archenemy.