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The cast has a simple structure as well: almost all the characters look essentially alike—mostly male (a few female Smurfs have appeared: Smurfette, Sassette, and Nanny Smurf), short ("three apples high"), [10] with blue skin, white trousers with a hole for their short tails, white hat in the style of a Phrygian cap, and sometimes some ...
Where's Wally? (called Where's Waldo? in North America) is a British series of children's puzzle books created by English illustrator Martin Handford.The books consist of a series of detailed double-page spread illustrations depicting dozens or more people doing a variety of amusing things at a given location.
Betty Boop is an animated cartoon character designed by Grim Natwick at the request of Dave Fleischer. [a] [6] [7] [8] She originally appeared in the Talkartoon and Betty Boop film series, which were produced by Fleischer Studios and released by Paramount Pictures.
Mickey Mouse (originally known as Mickey Mouse Sound Cartoons) [1] is a series of American animated comedy short films produced by Walt Disney Productions.The series started in 1928 with Steamboat Willie [b] with 2013’s Get a Horse! being the last in the series to date, otherwise taking a hiatus from 1953 to 1983.
Ten video games released from 1989 to 2021 were based on The Addams Family. Fester's Quest (1989) is a top-down adventure game that features Uncle Fester. The Addams Family LCD Video Game by Tiger Electronics is a handheld unit released in 1991. ICOM Simulations published The Addams Family video game for the TurboGrafx-CD in 1991.
Wally Gator (voiced by Daws Butler impersonating Ed Wynn) is an anthropomorphic, happy-go-lucky alligator who wears a collar and a pork pie hat.Although his catchy theme song describes him as a "swingin' alligator of the swamp," his home is in the city zoo. [5]
Heckle and Jeckle have been licensed for toys, T-shirts, puzzles, games, salt and pepper shakers, Halloween costumes, plush dolls, puppets, coloring books, cookie jars and other consumer products for decades, variously through Terrytoons, CBS Television and Viacom. Selected cartoons from the original series of 52 theatrical titles were briefly ...
Proof sheets were the means by which syndicates provided newspapers with black-and-white line art for the reproduction of strips (which they arranged to have colored in the case of Sunday strips). Michigan State University Comic Art Collection librarian Randy Scott describes these as "large sheets of paper on which newspaper comics have ...