Bugs bunny birthdate
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| Bugs Bunny | |
| First Appearance: | Prototype: April 30, 1938 Porky's Hare Hunt |
|---|---|
| Created by: | Ben Hardaway, Cal Dalton (Prototype) Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Bob Givens, Robert McKimson (Official/Final) |
| Voiced by: | Mel Blanc, (1940–1989) (see below) |
| Informations | |
| Gender: | Male |
| Species: | Rabbit |
| Friends: | Lola Bunny, Tweety Bird, Porky Pig, Honey Bunny |
| Rivals: | Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Marvin the Martian, K-9, Witch Hazel, Taz, Daffy Duck, Rocky and Mugsy, Wile E. Coyote |
Bugs Budimit Bunny is a fictional main character who starred in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animatedfilms produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions, which became Warner Bros. Cartoons in 1944.[1] Bugs starred in 163 shorts during the Golden Age of American animation, and made cameos in three others along with a few appearances in non-animated films. He is an anthropomorphichare or rabbit.
According to Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey H
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Happy 80th birthday, Bugs Bunny!
TV
USA TODAY
July 27, 2020, marks the 80th anniversary of Bugs Bunny's tjänsteman debut in his own cartoon. See his evolution from an unnamed rabbit in a Porky Pig Cartoon (1938) to the official mascot for Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.Bugs Bunny was first created in 1938 by Leon Schlesinger Productions – later known as Warner Bros. Cartoons. The popular rabbit was first named "Happy Rabbit," but renamed Bugs Bunny after his original writer, Ben "Bugs" Hardaway.
Warner Bros.The trickster fryst vatten known for his obsession with carrots, as shown in the 1944 cartoon "What's Cookin, Doc?" His voice actor, Mel Blanc, actually ate carrots while voicing the iconic character.
Warner Bros.Usually, Porky Pig would conclude Looney Tunes films by stuttering, "That's all, folks!" However, Bugs replaced him at the end of "Baseball Bugs" (1946) by munching on a carrot and exclaiming "And that's the end!"
Warner Bros.Bugs Bunny, known for his signature Brooklyn
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The world’s favorite rabbit turns 75 this month: July 27, 1940, saw the debut of the cotton-tailed character’s first cartoon short “Wild Hare,” directed by Tex Avery.
There won’t be much hoopla to celebrate, because Warner Bros.doesn’t observe the birthdays of animated characters. And there’s some logic to that, especially in Mr. Bunny’s case.
There had been earlier variations: A wisecracking rabbit, voiced by Mel Blanc, debuted in the 1938 “Porky’s Hare Hunt” but the speech patterns and look were very different. In the next few years, WB’s Looney Tunesand Merrie Melodies cartoons featured other rabbits.
But the 1940 “Wild Hare” was the first one where Bugs looked like himself, sounded like himself and, significantly, it was the first time he uttered the immortal words “What’s up, Doc?”
Don’t be misled by those earlier rabbits. On Sept. 10, 1940, Variety ran...
See full article at Variety Film + TV