Robert McKimson’s “Little Boy Boo” (1954)
This week’s installment of “Warners Wednesday” features Foghorn Leghorn, “a natural born father”, and his attempts to entertain Miss Prissy’s little egg-head.
This week’s installment of “Warners Wednesday” features Foghorn Leghorn, “a natural born father”, and his attempts to entertain Miss Prissy’s little egg-head.
A look at several records that were released over three decades that were inspired by the final segment of the 1948 package feature.
Still more Hanna-Barbera material from the Hal Humphrey file at USC. This week a press release relating to Jonny Quest, a Saturday Evening Post article and Hanna-Barbera’s tenth year anniversary.
Director Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese have Duffy Duck as the downright sadistic host of “Truth or AAAAHHH!” – sponsored by the Eagle Hand Laudry.
Paramount Pictures closed its cartoon studio in December 1967. The studio’s last cartoons were distributed well into 1968, and most of them came and went without any notice in newspapers.
The lady of the house in the classic MGM Tom & Jerry cartoons — did you ever want to see her face? Well now you can!
And a handful of Paramount Screen Songs frame grabs!
It’s the first of “All-Warners Wednesday” which means we breakdown a Looney Tunes or Merrie Melodies short each Wednesday this month. Today: the debut of the Tasmanian Devil!
It’s no lie: this is the obscure soundtrack to the first TV show to use the stop-motion “Animagic” process, years before Rudolph, Frosty, the Snow Miser and the Heat Miser.
Jerry Beck is a writer, animation producer, college professor and author of more than 15 books on animation history. He is a former studio exec with Nickelodeon Movies and Disney, and has written for The Hollywood Reporter and Variety. He has curated cartoons for DVD and Blu-ray compilations and has lent his expertise to dozens of bonus documentaries and audio commentaries on such. Beck is currently on the faculty of CalArts in Valencia, UCLA in Westwood and Woodbury University in Burbank – teaching animation history. More about Jerry Beck [Click Here]