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Sylvester and Tweety appeared in a DC Comics and Looney Tunes crossover comic called Catwoman/Tweety and Sylvester #1. In the issue, witches from the DC and Looney Tunes universes placed a wager where the existence of all birds and cats (as well as all bird- and cat-themed heroes and villains) depended on if Sylvester could eat Tweety.
The short was released on April 1, 1948, and stars Tweety and Sylvester. [4] Both Tweety and Sylvester are voiced by Mel Blanc. The uncredited voice of the lady of the house (seen only from the neck down, as she talks on the phone) is Bea Benaderet. [5] This is the first film whose title included Tweety's speech-impaired term for a cat.
Putty Tat Trouble is a 1951 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes animated short directed by Friz Freleng. [2] The short was released on February 24, 1951, and stars Tweety and Sylvester.It also marks the debut of Sylvester's recurring rival Sam Cat, who would next appear in 1956's Tweet and Sour.
Tweety and Sylvester have been used to endorse products such as Miracle Whip dressing and MCI Communications long distance. [15] In 1998, the United States Post Office honored Tweety and Sylvester with a 32-cent postage stamp. [25] Tweety also appears in products produced by Warner Brothers Studios.
The short was released on July 23, 1949, and stars Tweety and Sylvester. [3] Tweety must evade the titular "puddy tat," Sylvester, who is once again in hot pursuit of Tweety, just so that he can eat him for his own personal snack. It provides an anomaly in the Sylvester & Tweety pairings: In this one, Tweety provides almost all the dialogue ...
The lyrics depict the basic formula of the Tweety-Sylvester cartoons released by Warner Bros. throughout the late 1940s into the early 1960’s - Tweety is just being a canary. Sylvester, the cat, is always (he thinks, craftily), plotting to catch Tweetybird. While Tweety, being much smarter than Sylvester, is relentlessly teasing him and ...
After unsuccessfully begging Tweety to stop, Sylvester frightfully waves goodbye to the audience and falls from the tree, straight into the dogs. Tweety starts laughing ("That puddy tat's got a pink skin under his fur coat!"), whereas Sylvester closes the gate, bruised, battered and having lost most of his fur from the attack.
Tweety gives himself away (but not before have a conversation with an overconfident and oblivious Sylvester about how clever the cat is), leading to Sylvester trying to wallop Tweety with a stick, but Tweety jumps out of the way, and he bonks himself on the head. Tweety remarks if Sylvester were truly clever, he should have been a fox.