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And this puppy coloring page from Monday Mandala hits the mark perfectly. 2. Excited Puppy. ... Use this color-by-numbers puppy page from Homemade Gifts Made Easy. 21. D is for Dog.
Bosko is an animated cartoon character created by animators Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising.Bosko was the first recurring character in Leon Schlesinger's cartoon series and was the star of thirty-nine Looney Tunes shorts released by Warner Bros. [2] He was voiced by Carman Maxwell, Bernard B. Brown, Johnny Murray, and Philip Hurlic during the 1920s and 1930s and once by Don Messick during the 1990s.
Schlesinger began to phase in the production of color Looney Tunes with the 1942 cartoon The Hep Cat. The final black-and-white Looney Tunes short was Puss n' Booty in 1943, directed by Frank Tashlin. The inspiration for the changeover was Warner's decision to re-release only the color cartoons in the Blue Ribbon Classics series of Merrie Melodies.
Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies: A Complete Illustrated Guide to the Warner Bros. Cartoons, by Jerry Beck and Will Friedwald (1989), Henry Holt, ISBN 0-8050-0894-2; Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist by Chuck Jones, published by Farrar Straus & Giroux, ISBN 0-374-12348-9; That's Not All, Folks! by Mel Blanc, Philip Bashe.
Their success convinced Schlesinger to produce all future Merrie Melodies shorts in color, using two-strip Technicolor. Looney Tunes continued in black and white until 1943. In 1936, the cartoons began to end with the slogan "That's all Folks!" which had previously only been used on the Looney Tunes series. The old slogan "So Long, Folks!"
Claude appears in the episode "Mr. Popular's Rules of Cool" of Tiny Toon Adventures. Claude appeared as one of the spectators in the basketball game of the 1996 film Space Jam. In the 2006 Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, Claude Cat has a very brief cameo as a Lucky Duck Superstore employee going home for Christmas.
Laserdisc - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes, Vol. 1, Side 10: The Art of Bugs; VHS - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes, Vol. 10: The Art of Bugs; VHS - Looney Tunes: The Collectors Edition, Vol. 1: All-Stars; DVD – Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2, disc 1: Bugs Bunny Masterpieces; Blu-Ray - Bugs Bunny 80th Anniversary Collection, disc 1
Bosko, the Talk-Ink Kid is a 1929 live-action/animated short film produced to sell a series of Bosko cartoons. [3] The film was never released to theaters, [4] and therefore not seen by a wide audience until 2000 (71 years later) on Cartoon Network's television special Toonheads: The Lost Cartoons.