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Jiminy Cricket teaches children about the animals of nature, in a similar manner to the I'm No Fool series. This series also had live-action footage lifted from True-Life Adventures, and was also known as Animal Autobiography. Generally these had only intro sequence featuring Jiminy Cricket, while the rest was live-action of real animals.
Jiminy Cricket is a main character in the game Disney's Villains' Revenge (1999), wherein he must help the player save the stories of Dumbo, Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs from the stories' respective villains: the Ringmaster, the Queen of Hearts, Captain Hook, and the Evil Queen.
Jiminy Cricket: You and Yours January 13, 1998 You and Your Sense of Touch, You and Your Food, I'm No Fool with Electricity, I'm No Fool with Fire, You and Your Ears, I'm No Fool Having Fun 42 Goin' to the Zoo January 14, 1998 Goliath II, Working for Peanuts, Rescue Dog, Social Lion, Pluto at the Zoo, Daddy Donald 43 On Vacation January 15, 1998
Raphael Sbarge (born February 12, 1964) is an American actor and filmmaker. He is perhaps best known for his roles as Jake Straka on The Guardian (2001–04), Jiminy Cricket / Dr. Archibald Hopper on Once Upon a Time (2011–18) and Inspector David Molk on the TNT series Murder in the First (2014–16).
On many of the shows, Cliff Edwards recreated the voice of Jiminy Cricket and bantered with Welles between segments. Most of the series was produced while Welles was shooting his second feature film, The Magnificent Ambersons (October 28, 1941 – January 31, 1942), and many of the cast participated in The Orson Welles Show .
The episode featured Jiminy Cricket (played by Raphael Sbarge) "That Still Small Voice" was the first Once Upon a Time episode written by consulting producer Jane Espenson . [ 2 ] She was drawn to join the series because she believed a curse involving fairy tale characters was a "fantastic concept".
Jiminy Cricket first appears inside a large plant in a large house, exploring and singing "I'm a Happy-go-Lucky Fellow", until he happens to stumble upon a doll, a teddy bear, and a record player with some records, one of which is Bongo, a musical romance story narrated by actress Dinah Shore.
He would remain in this position until his retirement in the 1970s. His employer Walt Disney was sufficiently satisfied with Kimball's work that he entrusted him with designing the new character Jiminy Cricket in the Disney Studio's next feature film, Pinocchio. It took Kimball 12 or 14 drafts before completing his final design of Jiminy. [3]