Ad
related to: betty boop cartoon compilation full movie youtube action
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a list of films and other media in which Betty Boop has appeared. She was featured in 126 theatrical cartoons between 1930 and 1939 (89 in her own series and 37 in the Talkartoons, Screen Songs and Color Classics series).
Then a cartoon character, a big walrus with serpentine hips, performs the gyrations to the tune of the 'Minnie' song. The effect is short of a knockout, especially to those who are familiar with Cab's stuff on the radio or stage or night club. Betty Boop's part in the action concerns her running away from home because of her bad parents.
When Satan tries to put the moves on Betty, she fixes him with a (literally) icy stare, freezing him and all of Hell. When she falls through a hole and onto an icy surface below, Betty wakes up to find the fire out with the windows open and her bed frozen, and she goes to bed, this time under a pile of warm quilts .
The Betty Boop Movie Mystery; Betty Boop with Henry, the Funniest Living American; Betty Boop, M.D. Betty Boop's Big Boss; Betty Boop's Crazy Inventions; Betty Boop's Hallowe'en Party; Betty Boop's Ker-Choo; Betty Boop's Life Guard; Betty Boop's Little Pal; Betty Boop's May Party; Betty Boop's Museum; Betty Boop's Penthouse; Betty Boop's Prize ...
Meanwhile, Betty Boop is preparing the wash tub for a dog bath. When Pudgy realizes what Betty has planned, he tries to get away. Betty has to pursue him through the house, including several laps under the living room rug. Betty finally gets Pudgy into the tub and washes him while singing the title song.
Although Betty's first name was assumed to have been established in the 1931 Screen Songs cartoon Betty Co-ed, this "Betty" is a different character, which the official Betty Boop website describes as a "prototype" of Betty Boop. At least 12 Screen Songs cartoons featured Betty Boop or a similar character. [citation needed]
A Thousand Times No!! is a 1935 Fleischer Studio animated short film, starring Betty Boop. [ 2 ] This is the third of a series of Betty Boop melodrama spoofs, which also included She Wronged Him Right (1934), Betty Boop's Prize Show (1935) and Honest Love and True (1938).
A Betty Boop cartoon; Some TV versions are edited so as to remove scenes depicting racial stereotypes of African Americans; Billy Costello was the first voice of Popeye. 1 I Yam What I Yam: September 29 [3] Seymour Kneitel William Henning First entry in the Popeye the Sailor series; First screen appearance of J. Wellington Wimpy