Porky Pig
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Assorted References
- Bugs Bunny
- In Bugs Bunny
…such as Daffy Duck and Porky Pig, and his most frequent nemeses are Elmer Fudd and Yosemite Sam. Classic Bugs cartoons include Hare Tonic (1945), The Big Snooze (1946), Hair-Raising Hare (1946), Buccaneer Bunny (1948), Mississippi Hare (1949), Mutiny on the Bunny (1950), What’s Up, Doc? (1950), The Rabbit of…
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- In Bugs Bunny
- Looney Tunes
- In Looney Tunes
…and Merrie Melodies marquees, including Porky Pig, who stuttered his first lines in the short I Haven’t Got a Hat (1935); Daffy Duck, a manic foil who debuted in Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937); and Bugs Bunny, a “wascally wabbit” whose true personality began to emerge in A Wild Hare (1940).
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- In Looney Tunes
- role of Blanc
work of
- Avery
- In Tex Avery
He also redesigned Porky Pig—then the studio’s star character—and created Daffy Duck, whose personality of unmotivated insanity was unprecedented in cartoons. Most important, he gave a definitive personality to Bugs Bunny in his fifth film, A Wild Hare (1940), and was responsible for Bugs’s immortal catchphrase “What’s up,…
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- In Tex Avery
- Clampett
- In Robert Clampett
…in Wackyland (1938), the stuttering Porky Pig finds himself in a wildly surrealistic world in which reside such oddities as a rabbit riding a swing that is supported through his ears, a ducklike creature who honks its bulbous, rubber-horn head, a three-headed man whose mother was “scared by a pawnbroker’s…
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- In Robert Clampett
- Jones
- In Chuck Jones
Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, and Porky Pig and created the Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote, Pepe LePew, and Marvin Martian.
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- In Chuck Jones