Pepe Le Pew There She Goes Again
| Pepé Le Pew | |
|---|---|
| Looney Tunes character | |
| | |
| Start appearance | Odor-able Kitty (1945) (preliminary version) For Scent-imental Reasons (1949) (official version) |
| Created by | Chuck Jones Michael Maltese |
| Designed past | Bob Givens (1945) Robert Gribbroek (1947–present) |
| Voiced by | Mel Blanc (1945–1989) Jeff Bergman (1990–1991, 2004, 2012–2015) Greg Burson (1990–2003) Maurice LaMarche (1996) Joe Alaskey (2000–2010) Baton West (2000–2003) Terry Klassen (Baby Looney Tunes; 2002–2006) Bruce Lanoil (2003) René Auberjonois (2011) Eric Bauza (2017–present) (see below) |
| In-universe data | |
| Alias | Henri, Stinky (meet Cameo appearances), Pepe Henri Le Pew (full proper noun) |
| Species | Striped skunk |
| Gender | Male |
| Significant other | Penelope Pussycat |
| Nationality | French |
Pepé Le Pew is an animated grapheme from the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons, introduced in 1945. Depicted as a French striped skunk, Pepé is constantly on the quest for love. However, his offensive skunk odor and his aggressive pursuit of romance typically cause other characters to run away from him.[ane]
Premise [edit]
Pepé Le Pew storylines typically involve Pepé in pursuit of a female black cat, whom Pepé mistakes for a skunk ("la belle femme skunk fatale"). The true cat, who was retroactively named Penelope Pussycat, oft has a white stripe painted down her back, usually by blow (such as by squeezing under a fence with wet white paint). Penelope frantically races to get abroad from him because of his putrid aroma, his overly aggressive manner or both, while Pepé hops after her at a leisurely footstep.
Settings [edit]
The setting is always a mise-en-scène echoing with fractured French. They include Paris in the springtime, the Matterhorn, or the fiddling village of Due north'est-ce Pas in the French Alps. The exotic locales, such as Algiers, are drawn from the story of the 1937 film Pépé le Moko. Settings associated in popular culture with romance, such as the Champs-Élysées or the Eiffel Tower, are sometimes nowadays.[2] Ane episode was in the Sahara Desert, with Pepe seeking to work as a Legionaire at a French armed forces outpost.
Narcissism [edit]
Pepé describes Penelope as lucky to exist the object of his affections and uses a romantic paradigm to explain his failures to seduce her. For example, he describes a hammer blow to his head every bit a class of amour rather than rejection. Appropriately, he shows no sign of narcissistic injury or loss of confidence, no matter how many times he is rebuffed.[2]
Reversals [edit]
In a role-reversal, the Academy Award-winning[iii] 1949 brusk For Scent-imental Reasons ended with an accidentally painted blue (and now terrified) Pepé being pursued by a madly smitten Penelope (who has been dunked in muddied water, leaving her with a ratty appearance and a developing head common cold, completely bottleneck up her olfactory organ). It turns out that Pepé's new color is just correct for her (plus the fact that the blue pigment at present covers his putrid aroma). Penelope locks him upward inside a perfume shop, hiding the key downwardly her chest, and gain to hunt the now-imprisoned and effectively odorless Pepé.
In another curt, Picayune Boyfriend Pepé, Pepé, attempting to find the nigh arousing cologne with which to print Penelope, sprays a combination of perfumes and colognes upon himself. This resulted in something close to a love potion, leading Penelope to fall madly in beloved with Pepé in an explosion of hearts. Pepé is revealed to be extremely frightened of overly-affectionate women ("But Madame!"), much to his dismay, as Penelope quickly captures him and smothers him in more love than even he could imagine.
And yet again, in Really Scent, Pepé removes his aroma by locking himself in a deodorant plant then Penelope (known in this brusk as 'Fabrette'; a black cat with an unfortunate marking) would like him (this is as well the only episode that Pepé is acutely aware of his own aroma, having checked the word "pew" in the dictionary). Nevertheless, Penelope (who in this picture is actually trying to take a human relationship with Pepé because all the male cats of New Orleans accept her to be a skunk and run like blazes, but is appalled by his odor) had decided to brand her ain olfactory property match her appearance and had locked herself in a Limburger cheese factory. Now more forceful and demanding, Penelope quickly corners the terrified Pepé, who, after smelling her new stench, wants nothing more than than to escape the amorous female cat. Unfortunately, now she will not take "no" for an answer and gain to hunt Pepé off into the distance, with no intention of letting him escape.[a]
Although Pepé usually mistakes Penelope for a female skunk, in Past Perfumance, he realizes that she is a cat when her stripe washes off. Undeterred, he proceeds to cover his white stripe with black paint, taking the advent of a cat before resuming the chase.
To emphasize Pepé's cheerful say-so of the situation, Penelope is e'er mute (or more than precisely, makes merely natural cat sounds, albeit with a stereotypical "le" before each one) in these stories; simply the self-deluded Pepé speaks (several non-recurring human characters are given minimal dialogue, frequently nothing more than than a repulsed "Le pew!").
Variations [edit]
Sometimes this formula is varied. In his initial cartoon, Scent-able Kitty, Pepé (who was revealed to be a French-American skunk named Henri in this curt) unwittingly pursues a ruby tabby cat who has accidentally disguised himself as a skunk (complete with the scent of Limburger cheese) in order to scare off a agglomeration of characters who take mistreated him. Smell-imental Over You has Pepé pursuing a female Chihuahua who has donned a skunk pelt (mistaking it for a fur coat). In the end, she removes her pelt, revealing that she is a dog. However, he and so reveals to the audition that he is a real skunk. In Wild Over You, Pepé attempts to seduce a female wildcat who had escaped a zoo (during what is called "Le grande tour du Zoo" at a 1900 exhibition) and painted herself to expect like a skunk to escape her keepers. This cartoon is notable for not but diverging from the Pepé/female-black-cat dynamic, but likewise rather cheekily showing that Pepé likes to be browbeaten upwards, considering the mutiny thrashes him numerous times. Actually Odour is also a subversion with Penelope (hither chosen Fabrette) attracted to him from the beginning, removing the need for Pepé to chase her as she goes to him. But Pepé's scent all the same causes a trouble for her as they try to build a relationship.
Production [edit]
Pepé was created at Warner Bros. Cartoons past blitheness director Chuck Jones. Animation producer Eddie Selzer, who was and so Jones' bitterest foe at the studio, once profanely commented that no i would express joy at the Pepé cartoons.[4] : 92 However, this did not continue Selzer from accepting an laurels for 1 of Pepé's pictures several years later.
Jones wrote that Pepé was based (loosely) on the personality of his Termite Terrace colleague, author Tedd Pierce, a cocky-styled "ladies' human being" who reportedly always assumed that his infatuations were reciprocated.[4] : 119 In a short documentary flick, Chuck Jones: Memories of Childhood, Jones told an interviewer (perhaps jokingly) that Pepé was actually based on himself, except that he was very shy with girls.
A epitome of Pepé appeared in 1947's Bugs Bunny Rides Once again, but sounded similar to Porky Pig. When the character of Pepé was more than fully adult for cartoons of his ain, Mel Blanc based Pepé's phonation on Charles Boyer's Pépé le Moko from Algiers (1938), a remake of the 1937 French picture show Pépé le Moko.[5] Blanc's voice for the character closely resembled a vocalisation he had used for "Professor Le Blanc", a harried violin instructor on The Jack Benny Program. There have also been theories that Pepé'due south voice was based on vocalizer Maurice Chevalier.
In Pepé'south brusk cartoons, a kind of pseudo-French or Franglais is spoken and written primarily by adding the French article le to English words (as in "le skunk de pew") or by more than creative mangling of English expressions and French syntax, such as "Sacré maroon!", "My sweet peanut of brittle", "Come to me, my piffling melon-baby collie!", "Ah, my little darling, it is love at first sight, is it not, no?", and "It is love at sight first!" The writer responsible for these malapropisms was Michael Maltese.
An example of dialogue from the Oscar-winning 1949 short For Scent-imental Reasons illustrates the utilize of French and cleaved French:
- Pepé: (sings) Affaire d'flirtation? Affaire de coeur? Je ne sais quoi, je vive en espoir… (sniffs) Mmmm m mm… un smell à vous finez… (hums)
- Gendarme: Le kittée quel terrible odeur!
- Proprietor: Allez, Gendarme! Allez! Retournez-moi! This instonce! Oh, pauvre moi, I am ze bankrupt… (sobs)
- Cat/Penelope: Le mew? Le purrrrrrr.
- Proprietor: A-a-ahhh. Le pussy ferocious! Remove zot skunk! Zot cat-pole from ze premises! Avec!
- Cat/Penelope: (smells skunk) Sniff, sniff, sniff-sniff, sniff-sniff.
- Pepé: Quel est? (notices cat) Ahh! Le belle femme skunk fatale! (clicks tongue twice)
Pepé Le Pew's cartoons take been translated and dubbed in French. In the French version, the voice of "Pépé le putois" was dubbed by François Tavares, using a heavy Italian accent in a vocal caricature of Yves Montand.
Cameo appearances [edit]
Chuck Jones first introduced the graphic symbol (originally named Stinky) in the 1945 brusque Odor-able Kitty (come across "Variations"), in which he was revealed to be a French skunk named Henri who had been speaking in that emphasis. For the remaining cartoons Jones directed, Pepé retained his emphasis, nationality, and purported available status throughout, and the object of his pursuit was (almost) ever female.
A possible[ vague ] 2d cameo appearance is at the finish of Fair and Worm-er (Chuck Jones, 1946). This skunk does non speak, but looks identical (or is a shut relation) and shares the aforementioned manner of travel and a slight variation of Pepé's hopping music. His role hither is to chase a string of characters who had all been chasing each other (à la "At that place Was an Onetime Lady Who Swallowed a Fly").
A skunk oftentimes identified equally Pepé appears in the Art Davis-directed drawing Odor of the Day (1948); in this entry, the theme of romantic pursuit is missing as the skunk (in a non-speaking role, save for a shared "Gesundheit!" at the stop) vies with a male canis familiaris for lodging accommodations on a cold wintertime day. This is one of the two cartoons where the grapheme, if this is indeed Pepé, uses his scent-spray equally a deliberate weapon: shot from his tail as if it were a machine gun. The other one is Touché and Go, where he frees himself from the jaws of a shark by releasing his smell into the shark'due south oral fissure.
Pepé makes a more obvious cameo in Dog Pounded (1954), where he is attracted to Sylvester after the latter tried to get around a pack of guard dogs, in his latest attempt to capture and swallow Tweety, past painting a white stripe down his back (in Pepé'southward only appearance in a Freleng brusque).
Pepé appears in the 1979 Tv special Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales equally a caroler.
Pepé makes a cameo in the 1994 Super NES video game Bugs Bunny: Rabbit Rampage, based on several Bugs Bunny cartoons. He is seen in the audience along with several other Looney Tunes characters when Bugs fights Toro the Bull and the Crusher in dissimilar stages. Pepé is waving a pennant reading "El Toro" or "Le Crusher", dependent on the stage.
Later appearances [edit]
Pepé appeared with several other Looney Tunes characters in Filmation's 1972 made-for-TV special Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies. In the King Arthur flick Daffy Duck'southward studio was producing in the story, Pepé played banana to Mordred (played by Yosemite Sam).
Pepé was going to have a cameo in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, but was later dropped for unknown reasons.[vi]
Pepé fabricated several cameo appearances on the 1990 series Tiny Toon Adventures (voiced by Greg Burson) equally a professor at Acme Looniversity and the mentor to the female person skunk character Fifi La Smoke. He appeared briefly in "The Looney Start" and had a more extended cameo in "Information technology'south a Wonderful Tiny Toon Adventures Christmas Special". The segment "Out of Odor" from the episode "Viewer Postal service Solar day" saw character Elmyra disguise herself as Pepé in an attempt to lure Fifi into a trap, only to have Fifi begin aggressively wooing her.
Pepé also made cameo appearances in the Histeria! episode "When America Was Young" and in the Goodfeathers segment, "We're No Pigeons", on Animaniacs.
In the 1995 blithe brusk Carrotblanca, a parody/homage of the classic moving picture Casablanca, both Pepé and Penelope appear: Pepé (voiced again by Greg Burson) as Captain Renault and Penelope (voiced by Tress MacNeille) as "Kitty Ketty" (modeled after Ingrid Bergman's performance as Ilsa). Dissimilar the character's other appearances in cartoons, Penelope (equally Kitty) has extensive speaking parts in Carrotblanca.
In The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries, in the episode, "Platinum Bicycle of Fortune", when Sylvester gets a white stripe on his back, a skunk immediately falls in beloved with him. This is not Pepé, simply a similar character identified every bit "Pitu Le Pew" (voiced by Jeff Bennett). Notwithstanding, he does say, "What tin can I say, Pepé Le Pew is my tertiary cousin. It runs in the family." Pepé would later appear in the episode "Is Paris Stinking" (voiced one time once again by Greg Burson), where he pursues Sylvester who is unintentionally dressed in drag. Pepé would appear once more in Tweety's High-Flying Adventure (voiced by Joe Alaskey), falling in dear with both Sylvester and Penelope (Sylvester had gotten a white stripe on his dorsum from Penelope while they fought over Tweety.
Pepé was, at one signal, integral to the storyline for the picture Looney Tunes: Back in Action (voiced by Bruce Lanoil). Originally, once Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, DJ, and Kate arrived in Paris, Pepé was to give them a mission briefing inside a gift shop. Maybe because of the group receiving their equipment in Area 52, Pepé'southward scene was cut, and in the final film, he plays but a fleck part, dressed similar a police officer, who tries to aid DJ (played by Brendan Fraser) after Kate (played past Jenna Elfman) is kidnapped. However, some unused blitheness of him and Penelope appears during the end credits, thus giving viewers a rare glimpse at his cut scene, and his cut scene appears in the movie's print adaptations. Pepé also appears in Space Jam (voiced by Maurice LaMarche), where his voice has curiously been inverse into an approximation of Maurice Chevalier, as opposed to more than traditional vocalization.
In Loonatics Unleashed, a human based on Pepé Le Pew called Pierre Le Pew (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) has appeared every bit ane of the villains of the 2d flavour of the show. Additionally, Pepé and Penelope Pussycat appear every bit cameos in a brandish of Otto the Odd in the episode "The Hunter". In the episode "The World is My Circus", Lexi Bunny complains that "this Pepé Le Pew look is definitely not me" after being mutated into a skunk-like beast.
Pepé also appeared on the 2006 direct-to-DVD movie Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas (voiced again by Joe Alaskey) as one of Daffy's employees.
A 2009 Valentine's Day-themed AT&T commercial brings Pepé (voiced over again by Joe Alaskey) and Penelope'southward relationship up to date, depicting Penelope not equally repulsed past Pepé, but madly in love with him. The commercial begins with Penelope deliberately painting a white stripe on her own back; when her jail cell phone rings and displays Pepé'south motion picture, Penelope'southward lovestruck beating center bulges beneath her chest in a classic drawing paradigm.
A babe version of Pepé Le Pew appeared in Baby Looney Tunes, voiced by Terry Klassen. In the episode "New Cat in Boondocks", anybody thought that he was a cat. Sylvester was the just one who knew the truth. When Daffy was playing with a laptop, Sylvester removed the battery considering he was afraid that everybody would avert him. We also see a grown-up version of him on the laptop. In some other episode, titled "End and Odor Up the Flowers", Pepé Le Pew is shown to be skilful friends with a baby Gossamer and seemed slightly older than his previous appearance.
Pepé Le Pew has appeared in The Looney Tunes Evidence episode "Members Only", voiced by René Auberjonois in flavor one and by Jeff Bergman in season two. He was present at the bundled matrimony of Bugs Bunny and Lola Bunny, in which Lola somewhen fell in love with Pepé. He also made a short cameo appearance with Penelope Pussycat in the Merrie Melodies segment "Cock of the Walk" sung by Foghorn Leghorn. He appeared in his ain music video "Skunk Funk" in the 16th episode "That'south My Infant". He also appeared again in another Merrie Melodies segment "You Similar/I Like" sung by Mac and Tosh. His starting time advent in the second season was in the second episode entitled "You've Got Hate Mail service", reading a hate-filled email accidentally sent by Daffy Duck. He also had a brusk appearance in the Christmas special "A Christmas Carol" where he takes part in the song "Christmas Rules." In "Gribbler's Quest," Pepé Le Pew is shown to be in the same group therapy with Daffy Duck, Marvin the Martian, and Yosemite Sam.
Pepé fabricated a cameo in a MetLife commercial in 2012 titled "Everyone". He is seen standing in the forest, so sees his love interest Penelope Pussycat riding on the back of Battle Cat with He-Man, and immediately hops after her.
Pepé appeared in Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run, voiced again by Jeff Bergman, as the head of a major perfumery for whom Lola wants to create a signature scent.
Pepé likewise appeared in New Looney Tunes (formerly called Wabbit), voiced by Eric Bauza, in the function of a James Bond-similar secret agent.
Pepé makes a cameo in the Looney Tunes Cartoons episode "Happy Birthday Bugs Bunny!". The character was removed in the Annecy Festival 60th-ceremony version of the episode.[seven]
He fabricated a cameo appearance in the Animaniacs reboot's 2d season episode "Yakko Amakko".[8]
The character appeared in the video games The Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout, Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage, Infinite Jam, Bugs Bunny: Crazy Castle iii, Bugs Bunny: Crazy Castle 4, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Looney Tunes: Top Arsenal, and Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem.
Criticism [edit]
The grapheme's antics have been criticized for normalizing rape culture, and perpetuating stereotypes of French culture. Amber E. George, in her 2022 essay "Pride or Prejudice? Exploring Issues of Queerness, Speciesism, and Disability in Warner Bros. Looney Tunes", describes Pepé'south actions towards Penelope Pussycat as "sexual harassment, stalking, and abuse" and noted that Pepé's qualities mock the French people and their civilisation.[9]
In a 2022 column for The New York Times, Charles Thou. Blow wrote that Pepé normalized rape civilization.[10] [11] Linda Jones Clough, the daughter of Pepé's creator, says she does not think anyone would sentry Pepé cartoons and be inspired to rape someone, only she saw the choice to requite him a break for a while as an appropriate conclusion. Clough also suggested something that reflected her father's vision, to write him as a task-seeker who keeps getting rejected, but changes up his routine thinking he is perfect.[12] Gabriel Iglesias, voice of Speedy Gonzales in Infinite Jam: A New Legacy, said that he could not say that he ever saw the grapheme in a negative light and that growing up watching the original cartoons, he said that it was just from a different time.[xiii] At the University Museum of Motion Pictures, a slideshow named "Woman in U.S. Blitheness" shows cartoons that shows "imagery that implies sexual assault", including Pepe Le Pew.[14]
In March 2021, every bit a result of controversy surrounding the graphic symbol, Pepé Le Pew was reported to exist removed from modernistic Warner Bros. projects until farther notice, starting with Infinite Jam: A New Legacy.[15] Yet, the reports were denied past a Warner Bros. executive[ citation needed ] and the character has been seen in later projects.
Mark Evanier observed that even Pepé'due south co-creator Maltese "wasn't (...) too fond of him", and reported Maltese's merits that later Pepé cartoons were the result of the success of the first one.[sixteen]
Cancelled feature moving-picture show [edit]
In October 2010, information technology was reported that Mike Myers would voice Pepé Le Pew in a feature-length live-action film based on the character, although no information about this project has surfaced since.[17] In July 2016, it was revealed at San Diego Comic-Con that Max Landis was penning a Pepé Le Pew feature movie for Warner Bros.[18] There has been no new information since so due to sexual set on allegations against Landis in 2017, and a study that the grapheme has not all the same been planned to appear in future Warner Bros. productions leaves the feature pic in incertitude.[19] On March eleven, 2021, Max Landis has stated in a YouTube video that his Pepé Le Pew picture show was scrapped as Warner Bros. was planning to produce Space Jam: A New Legacy.[20]
In popular culture [edit]
Pepé Le Pew was referenced in the song "Beeswax" by popular American stone band Nirvana.[21] On April three, 2021, an SNL common cold opening aired called "Oops, You Did It Once again" (a pun on the Britney Spears song "Oops!... I Did It Again"), which stars celebrities acting as controversial figures including Kate McKinnon playing a cigar smoking Le Pew.[22]
Voice actors [edit]
- Mel Blanc (1945–1989)
- Gilbert Mack (Gilded Records records, Bugs Bunny Songfest)[23] [24]
- Jeff Bergman (Bugs Bunny's 50th Altogether Spectacular,[25] Bugs Bunny'south Lunar Tunes,[26] Boomerang bumper,[27] [28] The Looney Tunes Testify (flavour 2), Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run)[29]
- Greg Burson (Tiny Toon Adventures, Looney Tunes River Ride, The Toonite Show Starring Bugs Bunny,[30] Have Yourself a Looney Tunes Christmas, Carrotblanca, The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries, Bugs & Friends Sing Elvis,[31] MCI commercials, Bugs Bunny's Learning Adventures,[32] [33] The Royal Mallard [34])[29]
- Keith Scott (Spectacular Calorie-free and Sound Show Illuminanza,[35] [36] The Looney Tunes Radio Bear witness,[37] [38] Looney Rock)[29] [39] [xl] [41]
- Maurice LaMarche (Infinite Jam)[29]
- Joe Alaskey (Tweety's High Flight Adventure, The Looney Tunes Kwazy Christmas,[42] Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, AT&T commercial, TomTom Looney Tunes GPS[43])[29]
- Billy Westward (Looney Tunes Racing, Looney Tunes: Infinite Race, Looney Tunes: Back in Activeness – The Video Game)[29]
- Terry Klassen (Babe Looney Tunes)[29]
- Bruce Lanoil (Looney Tunes: Dorsum in Action)[29]
- Jeff Bennett (A Looney Tunes Sing-A-Long Christmas)[44]
- René Auberjonois (The Looney Tunes Show (flavour 1))[29]
- Kevin Shinick (Mad)[45]
- Eric Bauza (New Looney Tunes, Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem,[46] Antipodal commercials,[47] Looney Tunes Cartoons,[48] Space Jam: A New Legacy (deleted scene), Animaniacs)[29]
Filmography [edit]
- Shorts (1945–1962)
All xviii shorts directed by Chuck Jones unless otherwise indicated.
- Odor-able Kitty (1945) (merely appearance and mention of Pepé Le Pew'due south wife)
- Fair and Worm-er (1946) (A skunk who looks similar Pepé made an advent with the worm chased by the bird, chased by the cat, chased by the dog, chased by the man. The skunk in this brusk may or may not be Pepé)
- Scent-imental Over You (1947) (merely time Pepé chases a dog instead of a cat)
- Odor of the Twenty-four hours (1948) (but cartoon in was directed by Arthur Davis)
- For Scent-imental Reasons (1949) (Academy Award for Best Blithe Brusk Flick)
- Scent-imental Romeo (1951)
- Little Beau Pepé (1952)
- Wild Over You (1953)
- Domestic dog Pounded (1954) (cameo in a Sylvester and Tweety cartoon; directed by Friz Freleng)
- The Cats Bah (1954)
- By Perfumance (1955)
- Two Olfactory property's Worth (1955)
- Heaven Scent (1956)
- Touché and Become (1957)
- Really Scent (1959) (directed by Abe Levitow with Jones' animators, etc.)
- Who Scent You? (1960)
- A Smell of the Matterhorn (1961) (credited as Thousand. Charl Jones)
- Louvre Come Dorsum to Me! (1962)
Come across also [edit]
- Little 'Tinker – a grapheme with an identical premise from competitor MGM.
Notes [edit]
- ^ Credited to Abe Levitow, this drawing is the only short in the Pepé Le Pew series non directed past Chuck Jones, salvage the debatable Odor of the Day.
References [edit]
- ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 117. ISBN0-8160-3831-7 . Retrieved June 6, 2020.
- ^ a b Thompson, Kirsten Moana (1998). "Ah Dearest! Zee Grand Illusion! Pepé Le Pew, Narcissism and Cats in the Casbah". In Sandler, Kevin (ed.). Reading the Rabbit; Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers Academy Press. pp. 137–153. ISBN978-0813525389.
- ^ "For Aroma-imental Reasons (1949)". IMDb.com . Retrieved Apr 26, 2018.
- ^ a b Jones, Chuck (1989). Chuck Amuck. Avon. ISBN0-380-71214-8.
- ^ Rovin, Jeff (1991). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Cartoon Animals. Prentice Hall Press. p. 202. ISBN0-13-275561-0 . Retrieved April 8, 2020.
- ^ Arbeiter, M (June 21, 2018). "15 Things Y'all Might Not Know Almost Who Framed Roger Rabbit". Mental Floss . Retrieved January vi, 2020.
- ^ "Warner Bros - 60th Anniversary - Annecy Festival - Looney Tunes". YouTube. May 10, 2021. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. Retrieved May eleven, 2021.
- ^ "Animaniacs Revives a Canceled Looney Tunes Character - to Cancel Him Again". CBR. Nov 8, 2021. Retrieved Dec 3, 2021.
- ^ George, Amber E. (2017). The Intersectionality of Critical Animal, Disability, and Ecology Studies: Toward Eco-power, Justice, and Liberation. Lexington Books. p. 123. ISBN978-i-4985-3443-7.
- ^ Montrose, Alex (March 6, 2021). "NYT Columnist Defends Criticism That Pepe Le Pew 'Added to Rape Culture'". Complex.
- ^ Blow, Charles M. (March 4, 2021). "Six Seuss Books Bore a Bias". The New York Times.
- ^ "PEPE LE PEW CREATOR CHUCK JONES Girl REJECTS RAPE Culture VIEW ... Cites a 2022 Lens". TMZ. March 9, 2021. Retrieved March 27, 2021.
- ^ Jones, Damian (July 21, 2021). "'Space Jam: A New Legacy' star responds to axed Pepé Le Pew scene". NME . Retrieved Baronial 18, 2021.
- ^ Davis, Clayton (September 17, 2021). "A History of Blithe Violence: How the Academy Museum Is Tackling the Dark Side of the Craft". Variety . Retrieved October 16, 2021.
- ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (March vii, 2021). "Pepe Le Pew Won't Be Appearing In Warner Bros' 'Space Jam' Sequel". Deadline . Retrieved July 14, 2021.
- ^ Skunked!, by Marking Evanier, at NewsFromME.com; published March nine, 2021; retrieved March eleven, 2021
- ^ Lussier, German (October 7, 2010). "Mike Myers to Voice Pepé Le Pew In New Movie". Slashfilm. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
- ^ Patten, Dominic (July 24, 2016). "Max Landis Writing 'Pepe Le Pew' Pic, He Tells Comic-Con". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved July 25, 2016.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Hersko, Tyler (March ix, 2021). "Pepe Le Pew Will Non Appear in Future Warner Bros. TV Titles". IndieWire . Retrieved March ix, 2021.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-condition (link) - ^ pepe le pew and the decease of dash on YouTube
- ^ "Beeswax, Nirvana". Google Play Music. Archived from the original on May 28, 2017. Retrieved May 28, 2017.
- ^ Patten, Dominic (Apr iii, 2021). "'SNL' Strikes Comedy Gold As Matt Gaetz's Lap Dance Pleas Rejected By Lil Nas X & Pepe Le Pew In Cold Open". Deadline . Retrieved April 6, 2021.
- ^ "Bugs Bunny on Tape". News From ME. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ^ "Golden Records' "Bugs Bunny Songfest" (1961)". cartoonresearch.com . Retrieved October one, 2020.
- ^ "1990 - Bugs Bunny's 50th Birthday Spectacular - 6 Flags Great America". YouTube. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
- ^ "Bugs Bunny Collection". Internet Archive. Retrieved May xvi, 2021.
- ^ "Boomerang EMEA Line Rebrand". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
- ^ "Voice of Pepé Le Pew in Boomerang". Behind The Phonation Actors . Retrieved March 31, 2021.
- ^ a b c d due east f g h i j "Vocalism(southward) of Pepé Le Pew". Behind the Voice Actors . Retrieved Oct 1, 2020.
- ^ "The Toonite Show Starring Bugs Bunny".
- ^ "Bugs & Friends Sing Elvis". VGMdb . Retrieved Nov 26, 2021.
- ^ "Looney Tunes DVD and Video Guide: VHS: Misc". The Inernet Blitheness Database . Retrieved November 30, 2021.
- ^ "Bugs Bunny'due south Dizzy Seals". Behind The Vocalisation Actors . Retrieved Oct i, 2020.
- ^ "Looney Tunes: Stranger Than Fiction". Backside The Voice Actors . Retrieved April fourteen, 2020.
- ^ "Spectacular Calorie-free and Sound Show Illuminanza". Facebook. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ^ "Warner Bros. Film World Illuminanza". Behind The Voice Actors . Retrieved March 8, 2021.
- ^ "That Wascally Wabbit". Archived from the original on March 17, 2012. Retrieved Oct i, 2020.
- ^ "The Twenty-four hour period I Met Bugs Bunny". Ian Heydon. Retrieved Oct ix, 2020.
- ^ "Keith Scott: Downward Under's Voice Over Marvel". Animation Globe Network. Retrieved Oct i, 2020.
- ^ "Keith Scott". Grace Gibson Shop. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ^ "Keith Scott-"The One-Man Crowd"". Retrieved October 1, 2020.
- ^ "THE LOONEY TUNES KWAZY CHRISTMAS". VGMdb . Retrieved December 7, 2021.
- ^ Bartlett, Jeff (September 27, 2010). "Eh, what'southward upwards, Doc? TomTom offers Looney Tunes voices for GPS navigators". Consumer Reports . Retrieved September 24, 2016.
- ^ Monger, James. "A Looney Tunes Sing-A-Long Christmas". AllMusic . Retrieved November 26, 2021.
- ^ "Voice of Pepé Le Pew in Mad". Behind The Voice Actors . Retrieved October 2, 2020.
- ^ "Looney Tunes World of Mayhem". Behind The Voice Actors . Retrieved April 14, 2020.
- ^ "All Of The Looney Tunes x Converse Redubs". YouTube. October 1, 2017. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
- ^ "'Looney Tunes Cartoons': Release engagement, plot, cast, trailer and all you lot need to know about the archetype Warner Bros franchise's revival". meaww.com . Retrieved May 29, 2020.
Bibliography [edit]
- Jones, Chuck (1989). Chuck Amuck. Avon. ISBN0-380-71214-eight.
External links [edit]
- LooneyTunes.com
- All nearly Pepé Le Pew on Chuck Jones Official Website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pep%C3%A9_Le_Pew
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