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Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Biography: June Foray

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Birth/Death

Birth: September 18, 1917, Springfield Massachussets.

Occupation/Title

Voice Actress.

Bio Summary

Miss Foray is one of the most prolific voice actresses in history. She is particularly well known for lending her voice to Rocky the Flying Squirrel and Natasha Fatale in Jay Ward’s Rocky and Bullwinkle series. She was also the voice of Tweety Bird’s protector Granny in the Warner Bros cartoons, and played Lucifer the Cat in Disney’s Cindarella. June started work as an actress in 1943 in Red Hot Riding Hood and most recently worked on the video game release Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal. She has worked in Feature Films, Television, and Radio and has appeared on Television.

Early Life/Family

June describes her parents as artistic people; her mother was a singer and pianist. They often took June and her siblings to the Bijou theater in Springfield. As a child she enjoyed reading the classics, which she memorized. Her first performance was at the age of 12 in a local radio broadcast. June came to Los Angeles with her parents when they moved.

Education/Training

When June’s parents realized that their daughter had a talent for acting they found her teachers to help her develop her abilities. The most notable of these was Ms. Larson who had the radio show that June debuted in.

Career Outline

June’s first job in Red Hot Riding Hood in (1943) was uncredited as was her work in Disney’s Peter Pan in (1953) and in Disney’s Cindarella (1950). Her work as Granny went uncredited, due to an arrangement to give all credit for voice characterizations to Mel Blanc. Even so June was already known for her abilities throughout the animation industry and she was often sought out.

In 1957 she met with Jay Ward to talk about the Rocky and Bullwinkle show which made it’s debut two years later. June voiced virtually every female character on Rocky and Bullwinkle. For that matter she acted in almost every Jay Ward cartoon.

A younger audience will better remember June for her work as Ma Beagle in Ducktales, Queen Tabitha in Thumbalina, and for other work in Rugrats, Garfield and Friends, and Power Puff Girls. She was also the voice of Grandmother Fa in Disney’s Mulan.

It has been written that because of her diversity as an actress that June Foray is often thought of as the Female Mel Blanc, but that the truth is Mel Blanc is actually the Male June Foray.

Comments On Style

Her work as Granny, Witchhazel and Grandma Fa seem to indicate that no one can do the Granny voice quite as well as June.

Her work on the Rocky and Bullwinkle show was usually recorded in just two hours (which included some goofing around) which goes to show just how quickly June could get into character.

Influences

Apart from her childhood teacher (Ms. Larson), and trips to the Bijou Theater, the only other influences that June remarks on are the books that she read. Her hunger for reading certainly seems to have been powerful fuel for her imagination.

Personality

Quick, quirky, and a lot of fun to be around.

Anecdotes

June and Jay had their first talk about Rocky and Bullwinkle over cocktails.

Miscellaneous

June appeared on Carson’s Cellar, Johnny Carson’s earlier show.

Filmography

Honors

Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 1982

Related Links

www.famousinterview.ca/interviews/june_foray.htm

www.povonline.com/cols/COL302.htm

www.povonline.com/cols/COL302.htm

www.imdb.com/name/nm0004931/bio”>www.imdb.com/name/nm0004931/bio

Bibliographic References

Contributors To This Listing

Liston Morris

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Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Biography: Daws Butler

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Birth/Death

Birth: November 16, 1916 in Toledo, Ohio

Death: May 18, 1988

Occupation/Title

Voice Actor, Writer, Record director.

Bio Summary

Charles Dawson “Daws” Butler, grew up in a suburb of Chicago, and originally wanted to be a cartoonist. He began his career in show business during the Depression, winning amateur contests at neighborhood theaters by doing impressions of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Rudy Vallee, and a Model T Ford. He teamed with two other young men to form an act called “The Three Short Waves”; they did impressions of radio personalities. The act played night clubs and supper clubs throughout the Midwest. After service in the Naval Reserve during World War II, Butler moved to California and picked up radio parts on such network broadcasts as “Suspense” and “The Whistler” before spending five years teamed with Stan Freberg doing voices, handling puppets and writing for Bob Clampett’s “Time for Beany” daily live television series.

He also co-wrote and voiced many of Stan Freberg’s greatest comedy records. He went on to write and voice countless television and radio commercials and voice now-classic characters for Tex Avery, Hanna-Barbera, Walter Lantz, Jay Ward and others. The successful characters he voiced are staggering in number: Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Quick Draw McGraw, Baba Looey, Mr. Jinx, Dixie, Super Snooper, Blabbermouse, Augie Doggie, Snagglepuss, Hokey Wolf, Fibber Fox, Loop de Loop, Wally Gator, Lippy Lion, Peter Potamus, Chilly Willy, Elroy Jetson, Mr. Cogswell, Henry Orbit, Cap’n Crunch, Hair Bear, and on and on…

Early Life/Family

He grew up winning locale contests doing impressions of famous people in popular culture. This act he had with a couple of others played night clubs and they began to build a base for what was to be his career. He had spent two years in the Navy where he met his wife Myrtis Martin, a native to Albemarle North Carolina. After his service he moved to California where he picked up radio jobs, he later moved onto a daily live television series.

“I never really thought of it as doing voices. When I was a kid, when I was in high school, I was very shy, very inhibited, withdrawn. And I was sort of a playground clown. I was a funny guy for the guys. Afraid of the girls. But they looked at me as being somewhat of a comic and I was doing little impersonations. I wasn’t even aware of the fact that I was doing impersonations. I was just taking off people who were very prominent on radio and the guys got a kick out of it and laughed and it alleviated some of my shyness. But it didn’t help me when I was in school because I was really too embarrassed to get up and give aural recitations and I lost a lot of credits that way. So I sort of just stumbled into acting or doing voices I think to get the attention of my peers. I was short. I was at that time probably very aware of my size. I haven’t been since I broke through… through my talents but I like to write and I was very good. That was my first love really, writing and drawing, doing cartoons. I wanted to be a cartoonist when I grew up. And I was writing poetry and funny little sketches when I was in grammar school. The acting came much later.”

He had spent two years in the Navy where he met his wife Myrtis Martin, a native to Albemarle North Carolina. After his service he moved to California where he picked up radio jobs, he later moved onto a daily live television series.

Education/Training

Career Outline

Daws’ big break came between 1946 and 1947 as he went to see Warner Brothers Production manager Johnny Burton, in his office on Sunset Boulevard. Daws auditioned right in front of him, at his desk, and did about 25 different voices, every dialect and character he could think of. Johnny Burton seemed impressed, but Mel Blanc was doing all the voices for Warner Bros. Cartoons, so Burton sent Daws to Tex Avery at MGM. With Tex sitting in a studio theatre, Daws stood in a control room and talked into a microphone for forty minutes, again doing every voice he could think of-Scotch, Irish, cockney, Russian, Polish, Souther, old men, little kids, etc. Tex was impressed and the next morning he got a call for a cartoon. Daws got his membership with the Screen Actors guild and went to his first cartoon job on a big recording stage at MGM.

Tex Avery hired Butler to provide narration work for several of his cartoons. In many cartoons, there was a nameless wolf who spoke in a southern accent and whistled all the time. Butler provided the voice for this wolf. While at MGM, Avery wanted Butler to try to do the voice of Droopy Dog, a character that Bill Thompson regularly voiced. Butler performed the voice for a few cartoons, but he then told Avery about Don Messick, another voice actor and Butler’s life-long friend. Messick quickly became a voice actor.

In 1949, Butler landed a role in a televised puppet show created by former Warner Brothers cartoon director Bob Clampett called Time for Beany. 33-year-old Butler was teamed up with 23-year-old Stan Freberg, and together they did all the voices of the puppets. Butler voiced Beany Boy and Captain Huffenpuff. Freberg voiced Cecil and Dishonest John. An entire stable of recurring characters were seen. The show’s writers were Charles Shows and Lloyd Turner, whose dependably funny dialog was still always at the mercy of Butler’s and Freberg’s ad libs. Time for Beany ran from 1949 to 1954 and won several Emmy Awards. It was the basis for the cartoon Beany and Cecil.

Butler briefly turned his attention to TV commercials, although he quickly moved to providing the voice to many nameless Walter Lantz characters for theatrical shorts later seen on the Woody Woodpecker program. His notable character was the penguin “Chilly Willy” and his sidekick, the southern-speaking dog Smedley (the same voice used for Tex Avery’s laid-back wolf character).

Also in the 1950s, Stan Freberg asked Butler to help him write comedy skits for his Capitol Records albums. Their first collaboration, “St. George and the Dragon-Net” (based on Dragnet), was the first comedy record to sell over one million copies. Freberg was more of a satirist who did song parodies, but the bulk of his “talking” routines were co-written by, and co-starred, Daws Butler. Butler also teamed up again with Freberg and cartoon actress June Foray in a short-lived network radio series, The Stan Freberg Show, which ran from July to October, 1957 on the CBS Radio Network.

When Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera left MGM they called Daws Butler and Don Messick to join them because they were “thinking, inventive actors” to work on Ruff and Reddy, which were 3.5 to 4 minute cartoons that were to be interspersed with old Columbia Cartoons. Bill and Joe wanted to start making their own TV cartoons, so they came up with the idea of Huckleberry Hound based on Daws southern voice, which they were fond of. These cartoons set the formula for the rest of the series of cartoons that the two would helm until the mid 1960s.

When Mel Blanc was recovering from a motor vehicle accident, Butler stepped in to provide the voice of Barney Rubble (another rather Carney-esque voice) in four episodes of Flintstones. Butler remained somewhat low-key in the 1970s and 1980s, until a 1985 revival of The Jetsons. In 1975, Butler began an acting workshop that spawned such talents as Nancy Cartwright (The Simpsons), Corey Burton (Old Navy, Disney), and Joe Bevilacqua (NPR).

Daws Butler died of a heart attack on May 18, 1988 at age 71. Daws Butler is interred in Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. Many of his roles were assumed by Greg Burson, who had personally studied with Butler for years.

Before his death Daws also began a friendship over the mail with Nancy Cartwright, who would go on to a successful career as a voiceover artist, best known as the voice of Bart Simpson on The Simpsons. In her autobiography Cartwright cites Butler as being her mentor and the greatest influence on her life.

In the year of his death, The Good, the Bad, and Huckleberry Hound was released, a tour-de-force featuring most of his classic early characters.

Comments On Style

Influences

Butler based some of his voices on popular celebrities of the day. Yogi Bear began as an Art Carney impression; Butler had done a similar voice in several of Robert McKimson’s films at Warner Brothers and Stan Freberg’s comedy record “The Honey-Earthers.” However, Butler soon changed Yogi’s voice, making it much deeper and more sing-songy, thus making it a more original voice. Hokey Wolf began as an impression of Phil Silvers, and Snagglepuss as Bert Lahr. Again, Butler redesigned these voices, making them his own inventions. Huckleberry Hound was inspired many years earlier, in 1945, by the North Carolina neighbor of Daws’s wife’s family, and he had in fact been using that voice for a long time, for Avery’s laid-back wolf and Lantz’s Smedley.

Quote:
“An Art Carney dog I had done a couple of times for Bill and Joe became Yogi Bear; of course, I went far beyond Art Carney- the extended vowels, the expansiveness, exuberance, diaphragm control, ebullience, and the bigness, the massiveness of a bear. “

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Annie Award: Winsor McCay Award 1984

Related Links

In his own words, Daws Discusses his career and voice acting:
Official Site: www.dawsbutler.com

Stan Freberg’s box-set, Tip of the Freberg (Rhino Entertainment, 1999) chronicles every aspect of Freberg’s career except the cartoon voice-over work, and it showcases his career with Daws Butler.

Bibliographic References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daws_Butler
http://www.dawsbutler.com/
www.tvparty.com/vaultdaws.html

Contributors To This Listing

Josh Heisie
cesar2c

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…

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Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Biography: Stan Freberg

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Birth/Death

Birth: August 7, 1926.

Occupation/Title

Radio comic, voice actor, and advertiser

Bio Summary

Stan Freberg was born in Pasadena, CA. He is known as the last network radio comic who changed comedy forever. He was also the father of funny TV and commercials. He was very young when he started his career in 1943 and made a name for himself by working at studios such as: Paramount, Disney, Warner Bros, and Walter Lantz. Throughout his career, he has made hundreds of comical radio shows, commercials, and series. His career spanned for over 50 years and in the 1950’s he had more record hits than any other artist at the time.

Early Life/Family

He was the son of a Baptist minister. He had two children named Donna Jr. and Donovan. Their mother passed away in 2000. Freberg married a woman named Betty Hunter in the 2002.

Education/Training

He put on his own live radio shows in Alhambra High School. After graduating high school, he took a bus to Los Angeles to audition for Warner Bros. That is where his career began and took off.

Career Outline

As a teenager, Freberg worked in children puppet shows. When he was 16, he began his career in radio. He started voice acting for Warner Bros. as characters named Goofy Gophers and Pete Puma. At 25 he released his first novelty single which led to the release of several more. He did voice acting for several shows and films including: Mickey Mouse Birthday Party, Nuttin’ For Christmas, Heartbreak Hotel, The Great Pretender, Banana Boat, Lady And The Tramp, and dozens more. In 1957, he was asked to replace Jack Benny on a CBS radio network. This made him the very last network comedian in the USA.
In the late 1950s he had his own show titled The Stan Freberg Show. It aired for only 15 weeks, but it made Freberg memorable as a radio comedian. After his controversial Green Christmas single, he created the musical comedy Stan Freberg Presents the United States of America, The Early Years. It was praised by many and it changed recorded comedy forever. Freberg experimented with Broadway before turning to the advertising industry in the 1960s. For decades after, he worked with advertisement. One of his most famous was a series on TV about the Encyclopedia Britannica.
In the early 1990s, he produced an autobiography titled It Only Hurts When I Laugh. He also created a series, Stan Freberg Here, which aired on the radio. He continued to do voice acting and advertising for several years after. In 1996, he released United States of America, Volume 2: The Middle Years. It was the sequel his very popular United States of America, The Early Years.

Comments On Style

Very visual, elaborate comical shows. Took full advantage of the vocal effects and sound effects that radio had to offer.

Influences

Freberg was a very big fan of Jack Benny, Henry Morgan, Fred Allen, Vic and Sade.

Personality

Very satirical and humorous. Loved to poke fun and mock everything which was a huge part of all his radio shows and series. Enjoyed being entertaining and comical to others.

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography
The following is a list of several of the films, episodes, shows, and series that Stan Freberg worked on or was apart of.
1940s:
A Ham in a Role, Bear Feat , The Bee-Deviled Bruin , “Time for Beany” , Two Gophers from
Texas , House Hunting Mice , What’s Brewin’, Bruin? , Mouse Wreckers , One Meat Brawl , The Goofy Gophers , It’s a Grand Old Nag , Roughly Squeaking
1950s:
“Matty’s Funday Funnies”, Gopher Broke, Three Little Bops , Lumber Jerks , Lady and the Tramp , Pests for Guests , Dr. Jerkyl’s Hide , “The Spike Jones Show”- Easter Show , Posse Cat , I Gopher You , Geraldine , Cat-Tails for Two , Rabbit’s Kin , Tree for Two , Susie the Little Blue Coupe, Foxy by Proxy , Callaway Went Thataway , A Bear for Punishment, Cheese Chasers, Alice in Wonderland , A Bone for a Bone , Hillbilly Hare, The Hypo-Chondri-Cat
1960s and 1970s:
The Incredible Detectives , “The Sylvester & Tweety Show”, “The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour”, “Frost on Saturday” , “The Girl from U.N.C.L.E.” , “The Monkees” ,”Tom and Jerry”, “Famous Adventures of Mr. Magoo” , It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World, “The Bugs Bunny Show”
1980s:
“Garfield and Friends”Down and Out with Donald Duck,”Amazing Stories” ,”The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show”,”The Wuzzles” ,The All-New Adventures of Disney’s Sport Goofy,The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie,Pogo for President: ‘I Go Pogo’
1990s:
Stuart Little, The Stan Freberg Commercials , “The Weird Al Show” , Pullet Surprise , “The Bugs n’ Daffy Show” ,”Roseanne” , “Freakazoid!” , “That’s Warner Bros.!” , “The Ren & Stimpy Show” , Amazing Stories: Book Two Bugs Bunny’s Overtures to Disaster, “Tiny Toon Adventures” , The Jackie Bison Show
2000s:
Looney Tunes: Back in Action , “Duck Dodgers” , Little Go Beep, Tweety’s High-Flying Adventure

Honors

– In 1995, Freberg was put into the Radio Hall of Fame
Annie Award: In 1992 he won the Winsor McCay award.
– Radio Advertising Bureau’s Orson Welles Award
– Venice Film Festival’s Grand Prix
– 21 Clios
– A star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
– He won three Emmys and a Grammy

Related Links

Bibliographic References

http://www.answers.com/topic/stan-freberg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stan_Freberg
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0292677/

Contributors To This Listing

Paulette Sorhaindo
editor: Brother Rabbit

To make additions or corrections to this listing, please click on COMMENTS below…

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