Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
During battle with Ninetails, the tails turn into women and must be defeated individually. This character's name is spelled differently than Ninetales. Pretztail in Viva Piñata. Pretztails is a fox piñata. Psycho Fox, the main character in a Master System game of the same name. Reynardo, the player character of Stories: The Path of Destinies.
Basil Brush is a fictional fox best known for his appearances on daytime British children's television. He is primarily portrayed by a glove puppet, but has also been depicted in animated cartoon shorts, books, annuals and comic strips. The character has featured on children's television from the 1960s to the present day.
This category contains fictional fox characters from films, books, television shows, comic books and video games. Subcategories.
1999 – Kij Johnson, The Fox Woman, in which one of the protagonists is a fox woman named Kitsune. 2001 and 2003 – Mordicai Gerstein, Fox Eyes and Old Country, in which anyone can switch bodies with fox if he looks into their eyes long enough. 2002 – N. M. Browne, Hunted: A comatose girl wakes up in a fox's body in a fantasy world.
This list of fictional reptiles is subsidiary to the list of fictional animals and is a collection of various notable reptilian characters that appear in various works of fiction. It is limited to well-referenced examples of reptiles in literature, film, television, comics, animation, video games and mythology , organized by species.
Main character in a French-Belgian children's TV series. The Killer Bees: Killer bees: Saturday Night Live: A group of bees in a recurring sketch on the show Maya Bee: Maya the Bee: Main character in a popular German TV series based on the original novels. Pepe the King Prawn: Prawn: Muppets Tonight: Seymour Spider: H.R. Pufnstuf: One of ...
The White Cat is a character of the Animal Bride cycle of stories (ATU 402). It is present in a variant of the story: French literary fairytale La Chatte Blanche, penned by Madame d'Aulnoy. The character also features as a cameo in Tchaikovisky's ballet The Sleeping Beauty, during Aurora's wedding in Act III. Señor Don Gato: Children's song
A well-known example of the fox woman motif involves the astrologer-magician Abe no Seimei, to whom was attached a legend that he was born from a fox-woman (named Kuzunoha), and taken up in a number of works during the early modern period, commonly referred to as "Shinoda no mori" ("Shinoda Forest") material (cf. below). [25]