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William Danby Hanna and Joseph Roland Barbera joined the MGM cartoon unit in 1937. Their partnership began in 1939 on “Puss Gets the Boot,” the cartoon that propelled Tom the cat and Je… ...
In 1939 Hanna and Barbera collaborated again, this time on “Puss Gets the Boot,” the cartoon that would propel Tom, the cat, and Jerry, the mouse, to cartoon stardom.
After MGM's animation department folded in the mid-1950s, Hanna and Barbera went into business for themselves and more stunning cartoon characters were born, including Scooby Doo.
Walt Peregoy, the influential animation artist who was the color stylist of Disney’s “One Hundred and One Dalmatians” and headed up Hanna-Barbera’s background department for a time during ...
Mexican Animated Film ‘Top Cat’ Breaks Record at Box Office Based on the Hanna-Barbera cartoon series, the film version grossed nearly $3.2 million.
Another Hanna-Barbera spoof, Hong Kong Phooey was the cartoon studios answer to the kung fu craze of the 1970s. A vigilante kung fu superhero posing as the janitor of a police station, Hong Kong ...
Hanna Barbera's cartoons include some of television's most iconic and beloved characters, but these stand out as the cream of the crop.
Scooby-Doo, arguably the most well-known of Hanna-Barbera's output, is lined up for a reboot in 2018 with S.C.O.O.B and will take the form of an animated comedy.
Even with Hanna-Barbera's colossal impact, the Looney Tunes series from Warner Bros. is usually credited as being the catalyst for the massive wave of cartoons that were usually featured in the ...
The Flintstones is celebrating its 50th anniversary. Here is a round-up of other classic Hanna-Barbera cartoons.
The Smurfs was created by a Belgian artist called Peyo - his real name - Pierre Culliford. As the cartoon gained popularity it expanded into TV and films catching the attention of Hanna-Barbera ...
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