The Genius of Being Looney

66

By Constant Walker

Mel Blanc
Mel Blanc
Blanc in 1976
Blanc in 1976
Bugs & Daffy
Bugs & Daffy
Foghorn Leghorn & "Doggie"
Foghorn Leghorn & "Doggie"
Yosemite Sam
Yosemite Sam
Sylvester the Cat & Tweety
Sylvester the Cat & Tweety
Chuck Jones
Chuck Jones
Jones in 1996
Jones in 1996
What's Opera, Doc
What's Opera, Doc
Bugs & Mr. Hyde
Bugs & Mr. Hyde
Wolf & Sheepdog
Wolf & Sheepdog
Marvin the Martian
Marvin the Martian
Friz Freleng
Friz Freleng
Freleng, date unknown
Freleng, date unknown
Witch Hazel
Witch Hazel
PePe LePew
PePe LePew
Roadrunner & Wyle E. Coyote
Roadrunner & Wyle E. Coyote
Elmer Fudd
Elmer Fudd
Tex Avery
Tex Avery
Tazmanian Devil
Tazmanian Devil
The bull
The bull
Porky Pig
Porky Pig
Avery's directing style
Avery's directing style
original opening title
original opening title

___________________________

A Positive Influence

I grew up watching Looney Tunes cartoons. I credit them with my intellectual curiosity, sense of humor - both intelligent and "locker room," and my appreciation of classical music. I remember being amazed when I learned these cartoons were made between 1930 and 1969!

When I decided to write a hub about the men who brought these wonderful cartoons to life I knew, if I wanted to honor them properly, I would need to do some research. To be honest, the only thing I knew about them was that they were all dead now. But, I knew they were comic geniuses who were masters of expressing subtle humor. And I could tell that these guys were having fun! There were at least seven main players responsible for creating Looney Tunes, and all their stories are interesting and colorful. Obviously, I didn't have space to feature them all, or to even tell the whole tales of the men I did feature. But, if you would like to know more, please visit The Non-Stick Looney Page.

Trivia: The Looney Tunes theme is titled "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down"

So, here are just four of the pioneers whose contributions to Looney Tunes animated shorts set the standard which still holds today.

______________________________

Mel Blanc

Born Melvin Jerome Blank,1908, in San Francisco, California to Jewish parents and raised in Portland, Oregon, he was known throughout the industry as The Man of a Thousand Voices. Mel began his 60 years in show business doing radio (including The Abbott & Costello Show and Burns & Allen) and television commercials until he found his way to voicing cartoon characters in 1939. He changed the "k" in his name to a "c" when a teacher told him he would amount to nothing and be, like his name, "blank." While he was the voices of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Yosemite Sam, Foghorn Leghorn, Tweety Bird, Porky Pig and many others, his first cartoon voice was that of a drunken bull in a Porky Pig cartoon titled Picador Porky and his natural voice was that of Sylvester the Cat, without the lispy spray.

On January 24th,1961 he was in a near-fatal car accident on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, CA. Along with fractures to both legs and pelvis, he suffered a triple skull fracture which left him in a coma for three weeks. While in the hospital, he received some 15,000 get-well cards from fans, many addressed only to "Bugs Bunny, Hollywood, California." While in the coma, his wife and son swear that when the doctor would ask him "How are you today, Bugs Bunny?", he would answer back in Bugs' voice. He thus credited Bugs Bunny with saving his life. While he was still at home in recovery, he voiced the character of Barney Rubble on The Flintstones. And, contrary to the myth, he was not auditioned by George Lucas for the voice of C-3PO.

Mel Blanc died at the age of 81 from cardiovascular disease in 1989. It was a significant loss to the cartoon industry. No one has since matched his skill, expressive range and volume of characters.

______________________________

Chuck Jones

Born Charles Martin Jones, 1912, in Spokane, Washington, he was the greatest animation director of all time. His work is noted for refinement of character to the point that a single eyebrow raise or sidewards glance could could say more and be funnier than any dialogue. Chuck Jones was the reason Looney Tunes were so funny and so intelligent.

He joined the Looney Tunes team in 1933 and raised the bar for animation with such critically acclaimed shorts as What's Opera, Doc? In 1996 he was recognized with an Academy Honorary Award for Lifetime Achievement.Outside of his Looney Tunes classics, he is directed the Tom & Jerry cartoons, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, Horton Hear a Who!, Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book: Mowgli's Brothers and Rikki-Tikki-Tavi.

Chuck Jones died of heart failure in 2002.

______________________________

Friz Freleng

Born Isadore Freleng in Kansas City, Missouri, 1906, he was an animator, cartoonist, director and producer. He introduced and/or developed several of Looney Tune's biggest stars, including Bugs Bunny, Tweety Bird, Porky Pig, Sylverter the Cat, Yosemite Sam (to whom he was said to have more than a passing resemblance) and Speedy Gonzalez, and was honored with four Academy Awards.

He joined the Looney Tunes team (at Termite Terrace) in 1940 where his comedic timing quickly matured. Soon, he and Chuck Jones dominated Warner Brothers studios and kept pace with, and gave serious competition to, Walt Disney's cartoons. And it was Freleng who would later create, with Dave DePatie, the Pink Panther cartoons.

Friz Freleng died of natural causes in 1995 at the age of 89.

______________________________

Tex Avery

Born Frederick Bean Avery, 1908, in Taylor, Texas, he was an animator, cartoonist and director and was responsible for creating and/or developing Daffy Duck, Bugs Bunny, Droopy, Screwy Squirrel, Porky Pig and Chilly Willy. He came to the Looney Tunes/Termite Terrace team in 1935 and was soon heading his own animation team. His unique directing style broke the mold of strict realism established by Walt Disney and encouraged animators to stretch the boundaries of the medium to do things in a cartoon which could not be done in live action.

In 1941 he quit the Looney Tunes team, enraged, after the ending of one of his cartoons was edited and changed by the studio without his consent. He then went to MGM Studios, where he continued to create characters such as Droopy, Screwy Squirrel and Barney Bear. He stayed at MGM until 1953.

Tex Avery died from lung cancer on August 26, 1980, in Burbank, California.

______________________________

To these men and all of the Termite Terrace team; Rest in peace. You are missed and your work will remain forever loved.

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Comments

marisuewrites profile image

marisuewrites 4 years ago

I think my dog is Bugs Bunny re incarnated...O how I remember these Saturday morning delights! The world was ok and cartoons were the hit of the day. That and a can of food for the hungry for an afternoon matinee made the weekend...

Thanks Constant!! enjoyable...took me back in time th th th that's all folks!!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

Thanks Marisue, The hadrest part about doing this hub, after choosing who to omit - they were all fascinating, was choosing the images. Yahoo search is FULL of them and they're all good.

marisuewrites profile image

marisuewrites 4 years ago

A feast of yesterday!

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS Level 7 Commenter 4 years ago

Bugs Bunny was my favorite Character of any type in any show when I was a child. I think he still is! Pepe LePew was my second favorite.

Thanks for this Hub. It's been a long time since I've seen a good cartoon. I used to like to watch Looney Tunes form different decades and see how the cartooning changed from the 1940s through the 1980s. The fine men you've desccribed brought a lot of joy to people.

We have a giant Cartoon Research Museum at our university and it is expanding. I've seen some of the original work of these gentlemen. We are blessed to have the museum right here. I've seen old video of Mel Blanc on Sid Ceasars ancient show. lol

Thanks for the memories of the wonder years.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

Patty, You're very welcome - it was fun, and thank you for reading.

Did you know you can buy The Looney Tunes Golden Collection on DVD? They come in five boxed sets of 4 discs each. I have the first two. The easiest place to find them is Amazon.com.

Chef Jeff profile image

Chef Jeff 4 years ago

It's hard to believe there was a time when "Right-thinking Americans" would ban comics from their child's reading room. Comics were a "Communist plot" to weaken the minds of American children.

Now we use comics in school to help hard-pressed readers struggle over simple words. Why is that? It is NOT because comics have weakened the mind - it seems to me it is more because we, as parents, often do not have the time to simply read to our children when they are young.

Comcs light up the world, and I still love to watch both the old and the new. Adult Swim is one of my favorite evening viewing pleasures - yet I also love to watch channels that show old cartoons.

Recently I had the pleasure of watching the old Elmer Fudd cartoon about the Pledge of Allegience, the one before "under God" was added. I wonder how many "Right thinking Americans" think that the cartoon was doctored to cut that part out? Someone once told me in a most matter-of-fact way that some Liberal movement or another (ACLU???) had done just that!

It appreantly never entered the person's mind that the two words were not added until the 1950's, and the cartoon was made around the time of WWII!!!

I also love rocky & Bullwinkle, a cartoon that definitely was NOT for kids alone! Some great understated adult-oriented comments and situations there - not the X-rated adult kind, rather the kind of adult humor that used to require knowledge of current events and the ability to think!

Yes, I love humor, and I love cartoons! Long may they dwell in our imaginations and on our viewing screens!

momma's write profile image

momma's write 4 years ago

Great hub! I grew up watching Looney Tunes.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

Jeff, Adult Swim is good, but it's on so late, I'm a day person, I rarely see it and Cartoon Channel doesn't show the old Looney Tunes anymore... a travesty! And I LOVED "Moose and Squirrel."

momma's write, me too! That's why I HAD to write this hub. All parents must make sure their kids see Looney Tunes... it could the world!!! Well, maybe not, but it couldn't hurt!

Thank you both for reading.

Karen Ellis profile image

Karen Ellis Level 1 Commenter 4 years ago

They don't make 'em like they used to - cartoons. Don't you wish someone would come along and start a new series of cartoons in the old fashioned format?

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

That would be great, but I don't think it could ever be the same... sigh! But, we've got DVDs!

dutch84 profile image

dutch84 4 years ago

cool...

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

I am nodding, very coolly, in agreement.

Agro Donkey 4 years ago

This hub was great. I grew up on these same cartoons on Saturday morning and I too atribute my sense of humor to these cartoons. I loved them all but Taz was my favorite character. He demolished everything but was stupid enough that he was easily dupped.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

Agro, my apologies. Taz and Porky Pig are the two I couldn't find pictures that I liked.

Thanks for reading.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 4 years ago

Scratch that. I found some.

rmr profile image

rmr 3 years ago

For months now, I have been bemoaning the fact that nobody was showing the old looney toons, on tv. Now I can look for the dvd's! Thanks! *throws lighted match in the stove, because his friend cw is definitely not in the stove*

Jeanette M 3 years ago

Personally, I have a crush on Pepee la phew (Sp). And to think critics complained about the level of violence in these cartoons. Have you watched any of the new ones? Egads!

I loved those old cartoons...still do actually. Your piece is a great tribute.

J

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

Thank you very much, Jeanette. I've yet to meet anyone who's NOT a fan.

PS: It's "la Pew."

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

Hey rmr, sorry I missed your comment until now. I know, the DVDs are a life saver. I actually go into withdrawals without my occasional shot of Looney Tunes.

Thanks for reading, glad you liked it.

Chef Jeff profile image

Chef Jeff 3 years ago

I remember reading that the creators of Rocky & Bullwinle drove their van to Washington D.C. to get Mooselvania admitted as a new state, or get nationshood - I don't remember which.

Unfortunately they showed up just as the Cuban Missle Crisis was starting, and were escorted out of the vicinity. President Kennedy was said to have been a big fan of the Rocky & Bullwinkle show. They should bring it back - we could really use some adult-oriented political satire. Oh wait, we have Family Guy! LOL!!!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

He probably would have granted it, too. I was a "Moose & Squirrel" fan, meself. Remember "Fractured Fairy Tales"? Good stiff! And I love Family Guy. I watch just for the Stewie and Brian lines. Peter Griffin is, to me, like Homer Simpson; stupid to the point of being annoying, but Bart and Lisa kept me watching.

Thanks for reading, Jeff.

agvulpes profile image

agvulpes Level 3 Commenter 3 years ago

Mate I've just found you, your my idol, you waskly widdle wabbit, now im in a hurry so i'll join your fan club so i can come back for a laugh. Yibbada Yibbadda thats all folks!!

 

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

Thank you, Agvulpes. One would be hard-pressed to find someone who doesn't loves Looneys, eh?

Glad you liked it!

agvulpes profile image

agvulpes Level 3 Commenter 3 years ago

Something jogs my memory about an Aussie guy doing some voices after Mel Blanc passed away. Name may have been Scott! He came to fame by winning a talent contest here in OZ. Can't remember much after that, any thoughts?

Christoph Reilly profile image

Christoph Reilly Level 2 Commenter 3 years ago

I too am a Looney Tooney. They are masterpieces, and considering my actor inclinations, Mel Blanc was my hero. His Biography - What's Up Doc? - is a facinating look at the man who shaped my life. I have done a lot of "voice" work in show business, and I credit Blanc with my early schooling. Thanks for this fun ride!

Anna Marie Bowman profile image

Anna Marie Bowman Level 4 Commenter 3 years ago

I absolutely love Looney Tunes cartoons!! I had a cat I named Sylvester, and I currently have a Chilly Willy tattoo on my shoulder!! Great hub!!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

Agvulpes, no I didn't hear anything about that.

Christoph, you're very welcome. It was a labor of love.

Thanks, Anne Marie. There's just nothing else like them, is there?

Teresa McGurk profile image

Teresa McGurk 3 years ago

The Bugs Bunny cartoons could be wickedly clever sometimes -- real wit and substance. Thanks for reminding me how well-produced these cartoons were.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

It was my pleasure, Teresa. Completely a lobor of love. Thanks for reading!

The Lost Dutchman profile image

The Lost Dutchman 3 years ago

This one got me back in time! Nice read, well done!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

Thank you very much, Dutchman.

k@ri profile image

k@ri 3 years ago

I grew up on and still love Looney Tunes! I still cannot hear classical music without seeing a cartoon in my head!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 3 years ago

OMG! Me too! I still haven't seen animation, with all the technology we have, which is as engaging, and brilliantly funny, as Looney Tunes were.

Marlin 55 profile image

Marlin 55 Level 3 Commenter 21 months ago

That is a great article. I remember all those characters.I grew up watching afternoon cartoons and Saturday morning cartoons.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 21 months ago

As did I Martin. They're now available on YouTube and, of course, the boxed disc sets.

Stephen Rhodes Treadwell 21 months ago

I'm a huge Tom and Jerry fan. I'm especially a fan of the 1975 version where they're friends, which most people don't know about or do know but can't stand. I find those T&J's to be very fascinating!

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 21 months ago

The Tom & Jerry cartoons were, indeed, fun.

RobGems.ca 19 months ago

10/17/10

Great Hub, but I Notice the absence of certain Loony Tunes Directors as Robert Clampett, Bob McKimson,Frank "Tish Tash" Tashlin, Art Davis, & norman McCabe. These WB Directors All Deserve their cue next to Freeling &Jones, particularly Mr. Clampett, who was a genius who also had a long-heated rivalry with Mr. Jones (It Partially caused his 1946 exile from WB Animation), & Mr. McKimson, who I feel is sorely underrated by historians who should know better. these directors proved their worth As well as their talents, because they knew ahead of time that their visions were timeless For animation generations to come.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 19 months ago

RobGems, you are absolutely right. There were so many geniuses involved in the Looney Tunes that I was unable to include them all and keep the piece down to the size I wanted it.

Stephen Rhodes Treadwell 9 months ago

I've seen a message on google before saying when it came to T&J Gene Deitch was a genius. I disagree! His name may have been Gene but as far as T&J was concerned he was no genius, at least not in my book.

Constant Walker profile image

Constant Walker Hub Author 9 months ago

Stephen, thank you for reading. Tom & Jerry were fun to watch, but in no way compare to the comedic intelligence (and silly fun!) of Loony Tunes. Not even in the same league.

BTW: Both are back on the Cartoon Network ... the originals, that is. Loonies start at noon (PST) and T&J follow. Weekdays.

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