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Bugs Bunny
Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies character
Bugs Bunny.svg
First appearance Porky’s Hare Hunt
(preliminary version)[1]
April 30, 1938
A Wild Hare (official)[1]
July 27, 1940
Created by Ben Hardaway
Cal Dalton
Charles Thorson
Official
Tex Avery
Chuck Jones
Bob Givens
Robert McKimson
Designed by Cal Dalton
Charles Thorson (1939–1940)
Official
Bob Givens (1940–1943)
Robert McKimson (1943–)
Voiced by Mel Blanc (1938–1989)
Jeff Bergman (1990–1993, 1997–1998, 2002–2004, 2007, 2011–present)
Greg Burson (1990–2000)
Billy West (1996–2006)
Joe Alaskey (1997–2011)
Sam Vincent (Baby Looney Tunes; 2001–2006)
Eric Bauza (2018–present)
(see below)
In-universe information
Alias Bun-Bun
Rabbit
Species Hare/Rabbit[2][3]
Gender Male
Significant other Lola Bunny (girlfriend)
Relatives Clyde Bunny (nephew)

Bugs Bunny is an animated cartoon character created in the late 1930s at Warner Bros. Cartoons (originally Leon Schlesinger Productions) and voiced originally by Mel Blanc.[4] Bugs is best known for his featured roles in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated short films, produced by Warner Bros. Earlier iterations of the character first appeared in Ben Hardaway’s Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938) and subsequent shorts before Bugs’s definitive characterization debuted in Tex Avery’s A Wild Hare (1940).[1] Bob Givens and Robert McKimson are credited for defining Bugs’s design.[1]

Bugs is an anthropomorphic gray and white rabbit or hare who is characterized by his flippant, insouciant personality. He is also characterized by a Brooklyn accent, his portrayal as a trickster, and his catch phrase «Eh…What’s up, doc?». Through his popularity during the golden age of American animation, Bugs became an American cultural icon and Warner Bros.’ official mascot.[5]

Bugs starred in more than 160 short films produced between 1940 and 1964.[6] He has since appeared in feature films, television shows, comics, and other media. He has appeared in more films than any other cartoon character, is the ninth most-portrayed film personality in the world[7] and has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[8]

Development

Bugs’ preliminary debut (as an unnamed little white rabbit) in Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938).

According to Chase Craig, who wrote and drew the first Bugs Bunny comic Sunday pages and the first Bugs comic book, «Bugs was not the creation of any one man; however, he rather represented the creative talents of perhaps five or six directors and many cartoon writers including Charlie Thorson.[9] In those days, the stories were often the work of a group who suggested various gags, bounced them around and finalized them in a joint story conference.»[10] A Bugs-like rabbit with some of the personality of a finalized Bugs, though looking very different, was originally featured in the film Porky’s Hare Hunt, released on April 30, 1938. It was co-directed by Ben «Bugs» Hardaway and an uncredited director Cal Dalton (who was responsible for the initial design of the rabbit). This cartoon has an almost identical plot to Avery’s Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937), which had introduced Daffy Duck. Porky Pig is again cast as a hunter tracking a silly prey who is more interested in driving his pursuer insane and less interested in escaping. Hare Hunt replaces the little black duck with a small white rabbit. According to Friz Freleng, Hardaway and Dalton had decided to «dress the duck in a rabbit suit».[11] The white rabbit had an oval head and a shapeless body. In characterization, he was «a rural buffoon». Mel Blanc gave the character a voice and laugh much like those he later used for Woody Woodpecker. He was loud, zany with a goofy, guttural laugh.[12] The rabbit character was popular enough with audiences that the Termite Terrace staff decided to use it again.[13]

The rabbit comes back in Prest-O Change-O (1939), directed by Chuck Jones, where he is the pet rabbit of unseen character Sham-Fu the Magician. Two dogs, fleeing the local dogcatcher, enter the rabbit’s absent master’s house. The rabbit harasses them but is ultimately bested by the bigger of the two dogs. This version of the rabbit was cool, graceful, and controlled. He retained the guttural laugh but was otherwise silent.[12]

The rabbit’s third appearance comes in Hare-um Scare-um (1939), directed again by Dalton and Hardaway. This cartoon—the first in which he is depicted as a gray bunny instead of a white one—is also notable as the rabbit’s first singing role. Charlie Thorson, lead animator on the film, gave the character a name. He had written «Bug’s Bunny» on the model sheet that he drew for Hardaway.[13][14] In promotional material for the cartoon, including a surviving 1939 presskit, the name on the model sheet was altered to become the rabbit’s own name: «Bugs» Bunny (quotation marks only used, on and off, until 1944).[15]

In his autobiography, Blanc claimed that another proposed name for the character was «Happy Rabbit.»[16] In the actual cartoons and publicity, however, the name «Happy» only seems to have been used in reference to Bugs Hardaway. In Hare-um Scare-um, a newspaper headline reads, «Happy Hardaway.»[17] Animation historian David Gerstein disputes that «Happy Rabbit» was ever used as an official name, arguing that the only usage of the term came from Mel Blanc himself in humorous and fanciful tales he told about the character’s development in the 1970s and 1980s; the name «Bugs Bunny» was used as early as August 1939, in the Motion Picture Herald, in a review for the short Hare-um Scare-um.[18]

Thorson had been approached by Tedd Pierce, head of the story department, and asked to design a better rabbit. The decision was influenced by Thorson’s experience in designing hares. He had designed Max Hare in Toby Tortoise Returns (Disney, 1936). For Hardaway, Thorson created the model sheet previously mentioned, with six different rabbit poses. Thorson’s model sheet is «a comic rendition of the stereotypical fuzzy bunny». He had a pear-shaped body with a protruding rear end. His face was flat and had large expressive eyes. He had an exaggerated long neck, gloved hands with three fingers, oversized feet, and a «smart aleck» grin. The result was influenced by Walt Disney Animation Studios’ tendency to draw animals in the style of cute infants.[11] He had an obvious Disney influence, but looked like an awkward merger of the lean and streamlined Max Hare from The Tortoise and the Hare (1935) and the round, soft bunnies from Little Hiawatha (1937).[12]

In Jones’ Elmer’s Candid Camera (1940), the rabbit first meets Elmer Fudd. This time the rabbit looks more like the present-day Bugs, taller and with a similar face—but retaining the more primitive voice. Candid Camera’s Elmer character design is also different: taller and chubbier in the face than the modern model, though Arthur Q. Bryan’s character voice is already established.

Official debut

While Porky’s Hare Hunt was the first Warner Bros. cartoon to feature what would become Bugs Bunny, A Wild Hare, directed by Tex Avery and released on July 27, 1940, is widely considered to be the first official Bugs Bunny cartoon.[1][19] It is the first film where both Elmer Fudd and Bugs, both redesigned by Bob Givens, are shown in their fully developed forms as hunter and tormentor, respectively; the first in which Mel Blanc uses what became Bugs’ standard voice; and the first in which Bugs uses his catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?»[20] A Wild Hare was a huge success in theaters and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cartoon Short Subject.[21]

For the film, Avery asked Givens to remodel the rabbit. The result had a closer resemblance to Max Hare. He had a more elongated body, stood more erect, and looked more poised. If Thorson’s rabbit looked like an infant, Givens’ version looked like an adolescent.[11] Blanc gave Bugs the voice of a city slicker. The rabbit was as audacious as he had been in Hare-um Scare-um and as cool and collected as in Prest-O Change-O.[12]

Immediately following on A Wild Hare, Bob Clampett’s Patient Porky (1940) features a cameo appearance by Bugs, announcing to the audience that 750 rabbits have been born. The gag uses Bugs’ Wild Hare visual design, but his goofier pre-Wild Hare voice characterization.

The second full-fledged role for the mature Bugs, Chuck Jones’ Elmer’s Pet Rabbit (1941), is the first to use Bugs’ name on-screen: it appears in a title card, «featuring Bugs Bunny,» at the start of the film (which was edited in following the success of A Wild Hare). However, Bugs’ voice and personality in this cartoon is noticeably different, and his design was slightly altered as well; Bugs’ visual design is based on the earlier version in Candid Camera, but with yellow gloves and no buck teeth, has a lower-pitched voice and a more aggressive, arrogant and thuggish personality instead of a fun-loving personality. After Pet Rabbit, however, subsequent Bugs appearances returned to normal: the Wild Hare visual design and personality returned, and Blanc re-used the Wild Hare voice characterization.

Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941), directed by Friz Freleng, became the second Bugs Bunny cartoon to receive an Academy Award nomination.[22] The fact that it did not win the award was later spoofed somewhat in What’s Cookin’ Doc? (1944), in which Bugs demands a recount (claiming to be a victim of «sa-bo-TAH-gee») after losing the Oscar to James Cagney and presents a clip from Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt to prove his point.[23]

World War II

Evolution of Bugs’ design over the years.

By 1942, Bugs had become the number one star of Merrie Melodies. The series was originally intended only for one-shot characters in films after several early attempts to introduce characters (Foxy, Goopy Geer, and Piggy) failed under Harman–Ising. By the mid-1930s, under Leon Schlesinger, Merrie Melodies started introducing newer characters. Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid (1942) shows a slight redesign of Bugs, with less-prominent front teeth and a rounder head. The character was reworked by Robert McKimson, then an animator in Clampett’s unit. The redesign at first was only used in the films created by Clampett’s unit, but in time it was taken up by the other directors, with Freleng and Frank Tashlin the first. For Tortoise Wins by a Hare (1943), he created yet another version, with more slanted eyes, longer teeth and a much larger mouth. He used this version until 1949 (as did Art Davis for the one Bugs Bunny film he directed, Bowery Bugs) when he started using the version he had designed for Clampett. Jones came up with his own slight modification, and the voice had slight variations between the units.[14] Bugs also made cameos in Avery’s final Warner Bros. cartoon, Crazy Cruise.[24]

Since Bugs’ debut in A Wild Hare, he appeared only in color Merrie Melodies films (making him one of the few recurring characters created for that series in the Schlesinger era prior to the full conversion to color), alongside Egghead, Inki, Sniffles, and Elmer Fudd (who actually co-existed in 1937 along with Egghead as a separate character). While Bugs made a cameo in Porky Pig’s Feat (1943), this was his only appearance in a black-and-white Looney Tunes film. He did not star in a Looney Tunes film until that series made its complete conversion to only color cartoons beginning in 1944. Buckaroo Bugs was Bugs’ first film in the Looney Tunes series and was also the last Warner Bros. cartoon to credit Schlesinger (as he had retired and sold his studio to Warner Bros. that year).[23]

Bugs’ popularity soared during World War II because of his free and easy attitude, and he began receiving special star billing in his cartoons by 1943. By that time, Warner Bros. had become the most profitable cartoon studio in the United States.[25] In company with cartoon studios such as Disney and Famous Studios, Warners pitted its characters against Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, and the Japanese. Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips (1944) features Bugs at odds with a group of Japanese soldiers. This cartoon has since been pulled from distribution due to its depiction of Japanese people.[26] One US Navy propaganda film saved from destruction features the voice of Mel Blanc in «Tokyo Woes»[27] (1945) about the propaganda radio host Tokyo Rose. He also faces off against Hermann Göring and Hitler in Herr Meets Hare (1945), which introduced his well-known reference to Albuquerque as he mistakenly winds up in the Black Forest of ‘Joimany’ instead of Las Vegas, Nevada.[28] Bugs also appeared in the 1942 two-minute U.S. war bonds commercial film Any Bonds Today?, along with Porky and Elmer.

At the end of Super-Rabbit (1943), Bugs appears wearing a United States Marine Corps dress blue uniform. As a result, the Marine Corps made Bugs an honorary Marine master sergeant.[29] From 1943 to 1946, Bugs was the official mascot of Kingman Army Airfield, Kingman, Arizona, where thousands of aerial gunners were trained during World War II. Some notable trainees included Clark Gable and Charles Bronson. Bugs also served as the mascot for 530 Squadron of the 380th Bombardment Group, 5th Air Force, U.S. Air Force, which was attached to the Royal Australian Air Force and operated out of Australia’s Northern Territory from 1943 to 1945, flying B-24 Liberator bombers.[30] Bugs riding an air delivered torpedo served as the squadron logo for Marine Torpedo/Bomber Squadron 242 in the Second World War. Additionally, Bugs appeared on the nose of B-24J #42-110157, in both the 855th Bomb Squadron of the 491st Bombardment Group (Heavy) and later in the 786th BS of the 466th BG(H), both being part of the 8th Air Force operating out of England.

In 1944, Bugs Bunny made a cameo appearance in Jasper Goes Hunting, a Puppetoons film produced by rival studio Paramount Pictures. In this cameo (animated by McKimson, with Blanc providing the usual voice), Bugs (after being threatened at gunpoint) pops out of a rabbit hole, saying his usual catchphrase; after hearing the orchestra play the wrong theme song, he realizes «Hey, I’m in the wrong picture!» and then goes back in the hole.[31] Bugs also made a cameo in the Private Snafu short Gas, in which he is found stowed away in the titular private’s belongings; his only spoken line is his usual catchphrase.

Although it was usually Porky Pig who brought the Looney Tunes films to a close with his stuttering, «That’s all, folks!», Bugs replaced him at the end of Hare Tonic and Baseball Bugs, bursting through a drum just as Porky did, but munching on a carrot and saying, in his Bronx/Brooklyn accent, «And that’s the end!»

Post-World War II era

After World War II, Bugs continued to appear in numerous Warner Bros. cartoons, making his last «Golden Age» appearance in False Hare (1964). He starred in over 167 theatrical short films, most of which were directed by Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson, and Chuck Jones. Freleng’s Knighty Knight Bugs (1958), in which a medieval Bugs trades blows with Yosemite Sam and his fire-breathing dragon (which has a cold), won an Academy Award for Best Cartoon Short Subject (becoming the first and only Bugs Bunny cartoon to win said award).[32] Three of Jones’ films—Rabbit Fire, Rabbit Seasoning and Duck! Rabbit, Duck!—compose what is often referred to as the «Rabbit Season/Duck Season» trilogy and were the origins of the rivalry between Bugs and Daffy Duck.[33] Jones’ classic What’s Opera, Doc? (1957), casts Bugs and Elmer Fudd in a parody of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen. It was deemed «culturally significant» by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1992, becoming the first cartoon short to receive this honor.[34]

In the fall of 1960, ABC debuted the prime-time television program The Bugs Bunny Show. This show packaged many of the post-1948 Warners cartoons with newly animated wraparounds. Throughout its run, the series was highly successful, and helped cement Warner Bros. Animation as a mainstay of Saturday-morning cartoons. After two seasons, it was moved from its evening slot to reruns on Saturday mornings. The Bugs Bunny Show changed format and exact title frequently but remained on network television for 40 years. The packaging was later completely different, with each cartoon simply presented on its own, title and all, though some clips from the new bridging material were sometimes used as filler.[35]

Later years

Bugs did not appear in any of the post-1964 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies films produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises or Seven Arts Productions, nor did he appear in Filmation’s Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies. He did, however, have two cameo appearances in the 1974 Joe Adamson short A Political Cartoon; one at the beginning of the short, and another in which he is interviewed at a pet store. Bugs was animated in this short by Mark Kausler.[36] He did not appear in new material on-screen again until Bugs and Daffy’s Carnival of the Animals aired in 1976.

From the late 1970s through the early 1990s, Bugs was featured in various animated specials for network television, such as Bugs Bunny’s Thanksgiving Diet, Bugs Bunny’s Easter Special, Bugs Bunny’s Looney Christmas Tales, and Bugs Bunny’s Bustin’ Out All Over. Bugs also starred in several theatrical compilation features during this time, including the United Artists distributed documentary Bugs Bunny: Superstar (1975)[37][38] and Warner Bros.’ own releases: The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie (1979), The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981), Bugs Bunny’s 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales (1982), and Daffy Duck’s Quackbusters (1988).

In the 1988 live-action/animated comedy Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Bugs appeared as one of the inhabitants of Toontown. However, since the film was being produced by Disney, Warner Bros. would only allow the use of their biggest star if he got an equal amount of screen time as Disney’s biggest star, Mickey Mouse. Because of this, both characters are always together in frame when onscreen. Roger Rabbit was also one of the final productions in which Mel Blanc voiced Bugs (as well as the other Looney Tunes characters) before his death in 1989.

Bugs later appeared in another animated production featuring numerous characters from rival studios: the 1990 drug prevention TV special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue.[39][40][41] This special is notable for being the first time that someone other than Blanc voiced Bugs and Daffy (both characters were voiced by Jeff Bergman for this). Bugs also made guest appearances in the early 1990s television series Tiny Toon Adventures, as the principal of Acme Looniversity and the mentor of Babs and Buster Bunny. He made further cameos in Warner Bros.’ subsequent animated TV shows Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, and Histeria!

Bugs returned to the silver screen in Box-Office Bunny (1991). This was the first Bugs Bunny cartoon since 1964 to be released in theaters and it was created for Bugs’ 50th anniversary celebration. It was followed by (Blooper) Bunny, a cartoon that was shelved from theaters,[42] but later premiered on Cartoon Network in 1997 and has since gained a cult following among animation fans for its edgy humor.[43][44][45]

In 1996, Bugs and the other Looney Tunes characters appeared in the live-action/animated film, Space Jam, directed by Joe Pytka and starring NBA superstar Michael Jordan. The film also introduced the character Lola Bunny, who becomes Bugs’ new love interest. Space Jam received mixed reviews from critics,[46][47] but was a box office success (grossing over $230 million worldwide).[48] The success of Space Jam led to the development of another live-action/animated film, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, released in 2003 and directed by Joe Dante. Unlike Space Jam, Back in Action was a box-office bomb,[49] though it did receive more positive reviews from critics.[50][51][52]

In 1997, Bugs appeared on a U.S. postage stamp, the first cartoon to be so honored, beating the iconic Mickey Mouse. The stamp is number seven on the list of the ten most popular U.S. stamps, as calculated by the number of stamps purchased but not used. The introduction of Bugs onto a stamp was controversial at the time, as it was seen as a step toward the ‘commercialization’ of stamp art. The postal service rejected many designs and went with a postal-themed drawing. Avery Dennison printed the Bugs Bunny stamp sheet, which featured «a special ten-stamp design and was the first self-adhesive souvenir sheet issued by the U.S. Postal Service.»[53]

More recent years

A younger version of Bugs is the main character of Baby Looney Tunes, which debuted on Kids’ WB in 2001. In the action-comedy Loonatics Unleashed, his definite descendant Ace Bunny is the leader of the Loonatics team and seems to have inherited his ancestor’s Brooklyn accent and rapier wit.[54]

In 2011, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the Looney Tunes gang returned to television in the Cartoon Network sitcom, The Looney Tunes Show. The characters feature new designs by artist Jessica Borutski. Among the changes to Bugs’ appearance were the simplification and enlargement of his feet, as well as a change to his fur from gray to a shade of mauve (though in the second season, his fur was changed back to gray).[55] In the series, Bugs and Daffy Duck are portrayed as best friends as opposed to their usual pairing as friendly rivals. At the same time, Bugs is more vocally exasperated by Daffy’s antics in the series (sometimes to the point of anger), compared to his usual level-headed personality from the original cartoons. Bugs and Daffy are friends with Porky Pig in the series, although Bugs tends to be a better friend to Porky than Daffy is. Bugs also dates Lola Bunny in the show despite the fact that he finds her to be «crazy» and a bit too talkative at first (he later learns to accept her personality quirks, similar to his tolerance for Daffy). Unlike the original cartoons, Bugs lives in a regular home which he shares with Daffy, Taz (whom he treats as a pet dog) and Speedy Gonzales, in the middle of a cul-de-sac with their neighbors Yosemite Sam, Granny, and Witch Hazel.

In 2015, Bugs starred in the direct-to-video film Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run,[56] and later returned to television yet again as the star of Cartoon Network and Boomerang’s comedy series New Looney Tunes (formerly Wabbit).[57][58]

In 2020, Bugs began appearing on the HBO Max streaming series Looney Tunes Cartoons. His design for this series primarily resembles his Bob Clampett days, complete with yellow gloves and his signature carrot. His personality is a combination of Freleng’s trickery, Clampett’s defiance, and Jones’ resilience, while also maintaining his confident, insolent, smooth-talking demeanor. Bugs is voiced by Eric Bauza, who is also the current voice of Daffy Duck and Tweety, among others.[59] Bugs made his return to movie theaters in the 2021 Space Jam sequel Space Jam: A New Legacy, this time starring NBA superstar LeBron James.[60] In 2022, a new pre-school animated series titled Bugs Bunny Builders aired on HBO Max and Cartoonito.[61]

Bugs has also appeared in numerous video games, including the Bugs Bunny’s Crazy Castle series, Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout, Bugs Bunny: Rabbit Rampage, Bugs Bunny in Double Trouble, Looney Tunes B-Ball, Looney Tunes Racing, Looney Tunes: Space Race, Bugs Bunny Lost in Time, Bugs Bunny and Taz Time Busters, Loons: The Fight for Fame, Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal, Scooby Doo and Looney Tunes: Cartoon Universe, Looney Tunes Dash, Looney Tunes World of Mayhem and MultiVersus.

Personality and catchphrases

«Some people call me cocky and brash, but actually I am just self-assured. I’m nonchalant, im­perturbable, contemplative. I play it cool, but I can get hot under the collar. And above all I’m a very ‘aware’ character. I’m well aware that I am appearing in an animated car­toon….And sometimes I chomp on my carrot for the same reason that a stand-up comic chomps on his cigar. It saves me from rushing from the last joke to the next one too fast. And I sometimes don’t act, I react. And I always treat the contest with my pursuers as ‘fun and games.’ When momentarily I appear to be cornered or in dire danger and I scream, don’t be consoined – it’s actually a big put-on. Let’s face it, Doc. I’ve read the script and I al­ready know how it turns out.»

—Bob Clampett on Bugs Bunny, written in first person.[62]

Bugs Bunny is characterized as being clever and capable of outsmarting almost anyone who antagonizes him, including Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Tasmanian Devil, Marvin the Martian, Wile E. Coyote, Gossamer, Witch Hazel, Rocky and Mugsy, The Crusher, Beaky Buzzard, Willoughby, Count Bloodcount, Daffy Duck and a host of others. The only one to consistently beat Bugs is Cecil Turtle, who defeats Bugs in three consecutive shorts based on the premise of the Aesop fable The Tortoise and the Hare. In a rare villain turn, Bugs turns to a life of crime in 1949’s Rebel Rabbit, taking on the entire United States government by vandalizing monuments in an effort to prove he is worth more than the two-cent bounty on his head; while he succeeds in raising the bounty to $1,000,000, the full force of the military ends up capturing Bugs and sending him to Alcatraz.

Bugs almost always wins these conflicts, a plot pattern which recurs in Looney Tunes films directed by Chuck Jones. Concerned that viewers would lose sympathy for an aggressive protagonist who always won, Jones arranged for Bugs to be bullied, cheated, or threatened by the antagonists while minding his own business, justifying his subsequent antics as retaliation or self-defense. He has also been known to break the fourth wall by «communicating» with the audience, either by explaining the situation (e.g. «Be with you in a minute, folks!»), describing someone to the audience (e.g. «Feisty, ain’t they?»), clueing in on the story (e.g. «That happens to him all during the picture, folks.»), explaining that one of his antagonists’ actions have pushed him to the breaking point («Of course you realize, this means war.» — a line borrowed from Groucho Marx in Duck Soup and used again in the next Marx Brothers film A Night at the Opera (1935)[63] ), admitting his own deviousness toward his antagonists («Ain’t I a stinker?» — a line borrowed from Lou Costello[64][65][63]), etc. This style was used and established by Tex Avery.

Bugs usually tries to placate his antagonist and avoid conflict but, when an antagonist pushes him too far, Bugs may address the audience and invoke his catchphrase «Of course you realize this means war!» before he retaliates in a devastating manner. As mentioned earlier, this line was taken from Groucho Marx. Bugs paid homage to Groucho in other ways, such as occasionally adopting his stooped walk or leering eyebrow-raising (in Hair-Raising Hare, for example) or sometimes with a direct impersonation (as in Slick Hare). Other directors, such as Friz Freleng, characterized Bugs as altruistic. When Bugs meets other successful characters (such as Cecil Turtle in Tortoise Beats Hare, the Gremlin in Falling Hare, and the unnamed mouse in Rhapsody Rabbit), his overconfidence becomes a disadvantage and sometimes even leads to his undoing.

Bugs’ nonchalant carrot-chewing standing position, as explained by Freleng, Jones and Bob Clampett, originated in a scene from the film It Happened One Night (1934), in which Clark Gable’s character Peter Warne leans against a fence, eating carrots rapidly and talking with his mouth full to Claudette Colbert’s character. This scene was well known while the film was popular, and viewers at the time likely recognized Bugs Bunny’s behavior as satire. Coincidentally, the film also features a minor character, Oscar Shapely, who addresses Peter Warne as «Doc», and Warne mentions an imaginary person named «Bugs Dooley» to frighten Shapely.[66]

«‘What’s up Doc?’ is a very simple thing. It’s only funny because it’s in a situation. It was an all Bugs Bunny line. It wasn’t funny. If you put it in human terms; you come home late one night from work, you walk up to the gate in the yard, you walk through the gate and up into the front room, the door is partly open and there’s some guy shooting under your living room. So what do you do? You run if you have any sense, the least you can do is call the cops. But what if you come up and tap him on the shoulder and look over and say ‘What’s up Doc?’ You’re interested in what he’s doing. That’s ridiculous. That’s not what you say at a time like that. So that’s why it’s funny, I think. In other words it’s asking a perfectly legitimate question in a perfectly illogical situation.»

—Chuck Jones on Bugs Bunny’s catchphrase «What’s up Doc?»[67]

The carrot-chewing scenes are generally followed by Bugs’ most well-known catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?», which was written by director Tex Avery for his first Bugs Bunny film, A Wild Hare (1940). Avery explained later that it was a common expression in his native Texas and that he did not think much of the phrase. Back then «doc» meant the same as «dude» does today. When the cartoon was first screened in theaters, the «What’s up, Doc?» scene generated a tremendously positive audience reaction.[20][68] As a result, the scene became a recurring element in subsequent cartoons. The phrase was sometimes modified for a situation. For example, Bugs says «What’s up, dogs?» to the antagonists in A Hare Grows in Manhattan, «What’s up, Duke?» to the knight in Knight-mare Hare, and «What’s up, prune-face?» to the aged Elmer in The Old Grey Hare. He might also greet Daffy with «What’s up, Duck?» He used one variation, «What’s all the hub-bub, bub?» only once, in Falling Hare. Another variation is used in Looney Tunes: Back in Action when he greets a blaster-wielding Marvin the Martian saying «What’s up, Darth?»

Several Chuck Jones films in the late 1940s and 1950s depict Bugs travelling via cross-country (and, in some cases, intercontinental) tunnel-digging, ending up in places as varied as Barcelona, Spain (Bully for Bugs), the Himalayas (The Abominable Snow Rabbit), and Antarctica (Frigid Hare) all because he «knew (he) shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.» He first utters that phrase in Herr Meets Hare (1945), when he emerges in the Black Forest, a cartoon seldom seen today due to its blatantly topical subject matter. When Hermann Göring says to Bugs, «There is no Las Vegas in ‘Chermany'» and takes a potshot at Bugs, Bugs dives into his hole and says, «Joimany! Yipe!», as Bugs realizes he is behind enemy lines. The confused response to his «left toin» comment also followed a pattern. For example, when he tunnels into Scotland in My Bunny Lies over the Sea (1948), while thinking he is heading for the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, California, it provides another chance for an ethnic joke: «Therrre arrre no La Brrrea Tarrr Pits in Scotland!» (to which Bugs responds, «Scotland!? Eh…what’s up, Mac-doc?»). A couple of late-1950s/early-1960s cartoons of this ilk also featured Daffy Duck travelling with Bugs («Hey, wait a minute! Since when is Pismo Beach inside a cave?»).

Voice actors

The following are the various vocal artists who have voiced Bugs Bunny over the last 80-plus years for both Warner Bros. official productions and others:

Mel Blanc

Mel Blanc was the original voice of Bugs and voiced the character for nearly five decades.

Mel Blanc voiced the character for almost 50 years, from Bugs’ debut in the 1940 short A Wild Hare until Blanc’s death in 1989. Blanc described the voice as a combination of Bronx and Brooklyn accents; however, Tex Avery claimed that he asked Blanc to give the character not a New York accent per se, but a voice like that of actor Frank McHugh, who frequently appeared in supporting roles in the 1930s and whose voice might be described as New York Irish.[14] In Bugs’ second cartoon Elmer’s Pet Rabbit, Blanc created a completely new voice for Bugs, which sounded like a Jimmy Stewart impression, but the directors decided the previous voice was better. Though Blanc’s best known character was the carrot-chomping rabbit, munching on the carrots interrupted the dialogue. Various substitutes, such as celery, were tried, but none of them sounded like a carrot. So, for the sake of expedience, Blanc munched and then spit the carrot bits into a spittoon, rather than swallowing them, and continued with the dialogue. One often-repeated story, which dates back to the 1940s,[69] is that Blanc was allergic to carrots and had to spit them out to minimize any allergic reaction — but his autobiography makes no such claim.[16] In fact, in a 1984 interview with Tim Lawson, co-author of The Magic Behind The Voices: A Who’s Who of Voice Actors, Blanc emphatically denied being allergic to carrots.

Others

  • Ben Hardaway (as an early iteration of Bugs; one line in Porky’s Hare Hunt)[70]
  • Bob Clampett (vocal effects and additional lines in A Corny Concerto and Falling Hare)[71]
  • Gilbert Mack (Golden Records records, Bugs Bunny Songfest)[72][73]
  • Dave Barry (Golden Records records, Bugs Bunny Easter Song and Mr. Easter Rabbit, Bugs Bunny Songfest)[72][73][74]
  • Daws Butler (imitating Groucho Marx and Ed Norton in Wideo Wabbit)
  • Ricky Nelson (singing «Gee Whiz, Whilikins, Golly Gee» in an episode of The Bugs Bunny Show)[75]
  • Jerry Hausner (additional lines in Devil’s Feud Cake, The Bugs Bunny Show and some commercials)[72][71]
  • Larry Storch (1973 ABC Saturday Mornings promotion)[76]
  • Mike Sammes (Bugs Bunny Comes to London)[77]
  • Richard Andrews (Bugs Bunny Exercise and Adventure Album)[78]
  • Bob Bergen (ABC Family Fun Fair)[79][80]
  • Darrell Hammond («Wappin'»)
  • Jeff Bergman (62nd Academy Awards, Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue, The Earth Day Special, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, Tiny Toon Adventures, Box Office Bunny, Bugs Bunny’s Overtures to Disaster, (Blooper) Bunny, Bugs Bunny’s Lunar Tunes, Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers, Bugs Bunny’s Creature Features, Special Delivery Symphony,[81] Pride of the Martians, The Looney Tunes Show, Scooby Doo & Looney Tunes Cartoon Universe: Adventure, Looney Tunes Dash, Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run, Wun Wabbit Wun,[82] New Looney Tunes, Daffy Duck Dance Off,[83] Ani-Mayhem,[84] Meet Bugs (and Daffy),[85] Space Jam: A New Legacy,[86] Tiny Toons Looniversity,[87] various commercials)[88][89][90][91]
  • Noel Blanc (You Rang? answering machine messages,[92] Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400 with the Looney Tunes)
  • Keith Scott (Bugs Bunny’s 50th Anniversary bumper,[93] Bugs Bunny demonstration animatronic,[94][95] Looney Tunes Musical Revue,[96][97] Spectacular Light and Sound Show Illuminanza,[98][99] Looney Tunes: We Got the Beat!,[100][101] Looney Tunes on Ice, Looney Tunes LIVE! Classroom Capers,[102] Christmas Moments with Looney Tunes, The Looney Tunes Radio Show,[103][104] Looney Rock, Looney Tunes Christmas Carols,[105][106][107] various commercials)[88][108][109][110]
  • Greg Burson (1990 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, Bugs Bunny’s Birthday Ball, Yakety Yak, Take It Back, Looney Tunes River Ride, Tiny Toon Adventures, Yosemite Sam and the Gold River Adventure!, The Toonite Show Starring Bugs Bunny,[111] Taz-Mania, Bugs Bunny: Rabbit Rampage,[112] Animaniacs, The Bugs Bunny Wacky World Games,[113] Acme Animation Factory,[114] Have Yourself a Looney Tunes Christmas, Looney Tunes B-Ball,[115] 67th Academy Awards, Carrotblanca, Bugs ‘n’ Daffy intro, From Hare to Eternity, Warner Bros. Kids Club,[116] Bugs Bunny’s Learning Adventures, Looney Tunes: What’s Up Rock?!,[100] Looney Tunes: Back in Action animation test,[117] various commercials)[88]
  • John Blackman (Hey Hey It’s Saturday)[118]
  • John Willyard (1992 Six Flags Great Adventure commercial)[119]
  • Mendi Segal (Bugs & Friends Sing the Beatles, The Looney West)[120][121]
  • Billy West (Space Jam, Bugs & Friends Sing Elvis,[122] Histeria!, Warner Bros. Sing-Along: Quest for Camelot, Warner Bros. Sing-Along: Looney Tunes, The Looney Tunes Rockin’ Road Show,[123] The Looney Tunes Kwazy Christmas,[124][125] Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, A Looney Tunes Sing-A-Long Christmas,[126] various video games, webtoons, and commercials)[88]
  • Joe Alaskey (Chasers Anonymous, Gatorade commercial, Tweety’s High-Flying Adventure, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Looney Tunes: Back in Action (video game), Hare and Loathing in Las Vegas, Looney Tunes webtoons, Daffy Duck for President, Aflac commercial, Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal, Justice League: The New Frontier, Looney Tunes: Cartoon Conductor, Looney Tunes: Laff Riot pilot,[127] Looney Tunes Dance Off,[128] TomTom Looney Tunes GPS,[129] Looney Tunes ClickN READ Phonics)[88]
  • Samuel Vincent (Baby Looney Tunes, Baby Looney Tunes’ Eggs-traordinary Adventure)[88]
  • Robert Smigel (Saturday Night Live Season 28, Ep. 14)[130]
  • Eric Goldberg (additional lines in Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Looney Tunes: Back in Action interview)[131][132]
  • Seth MacFarlane (Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, Family Guy)[133]
  • Bill Farmer (Robot Chicken)[134]
  • James Arnold Taylor (Drawn Together)
  • Kevin Shinick (Mad)[135]
  • Gary Martin (Looney Tunes All-Stars promotions, Looney Tunes Take-Over Weekend promotion, Looney Tunes Marathon promotion)[90]
  • Eric Bauza (Looney Tunes World of Mayhem,[136] Looney Tunes Cartoons, Bugs Bunny in The Golden Carrot, Space Jam: A New Legacy (as Big Chungus),[137] Space Jam: A New Legacy live show, Bugs and Daffy’s Thanksgiving Road Trip,[138][139] MultiVersus,[140] Bugs Bunny Builders[141])[88]

Comics

Comic books

Bugs Bunny was continuously featured in comic books for more than 40 years, from 1941 to 1983, and has appeared sporadically since then. Bugs first appeared in comic books in 1941, in Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies Comics #1, published by Dell Comics. Bugs was a recurring star in that book all through its 153-issue run, which lasted until July 1954. Western Publishing (and its Dell imprint) published 245 issues of a Bugs Bunny comic book from Dec. 1952/Jan. 1953 to 1983. The company also published 81 issues of the joint title Yosemite Sam and Bugs Bunny from December 1970 to 1983. During the 1950s Dell also published a number of Bugs Bunny spinoff titles.

Creators on those series included Chase Craig, Helen Houghton,[142] Eleanor Packer,[143] Lloyd Turner,[144] Michael Maltese, John Liggera,[145] Tony Strobl, Veve Risto, Cecil Beard, Pete Alvorado, Carl Fallberg, Cal Howard, Vic Lockman, Lynn Karp, Pete Llanuza, Pete Hansen, Jack Carey, Del Connell, Kellog Adams, Jack Manning, Mark Evanier, Tom McKimson, Joe Messerli, Carlos Garzon, Donald F. Glut, Sealtiel Alatriste, Sandro Costa, and Massimo Fechi.

The German publisher Condor published a 76-issues Bugs Bunny series (translated and reprinted from the American comics) in the mid-1970s. The Danish publisher Egmont Ehapa produced a weekly reprint series in the mid-1990s.

Comic strip

The Bugs Bunny comic strip ran for almost 50 years, from January 10, 1943, to December 30, 1990, syndicated by the Newspaper Enterprise Association. It started out as a Sunday page and added a daily strip on November 1, 1948.[146]

The strip originated with Chase Craig, who did the first five weeks before leaving for military service in World War II.[147] Roger Armstrong illustrated the strip from 1942 to 1944.[148] The creators most associated with the strip are writers Albert Stoffel (1947–1979)[149] & Carl Fallberg (1950–1969),[150] and artist Ralph Heimdahl, who worked on it from 1947 to 1979.[151] Other creators associated with the Bugs Bunny strip include Jack Hamm, Carl Buettner, Phil Evans, Carl Barks (1952), Tom McKimson, Arnold Drake, Frank Hill, Brett Koth, and Shawn Keller.[152][153]

Reception and legacy

Statue evoking Bugs Bunny at Butterfly Park Bangladesh.

Like Mickey Mouse for Disney, Bugs Bunny has served as the mascot for Warner Bros. and its various divisions. According to Guinness World Records, Bugs has appeared in more films (both short and feature-length) than any other cartoon character, and is the ninth most portrayed film personality in the world.[7] On December 10, 1985, Bugs became the second cartoon character (after Mickey) to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[8]

He also has been a pitchman for companies including Kool-Aid and Nike. His Nike commercials with Michael Jordan as «Hare Jordan» for the Air Jordan VII and VIII became precursors to Space Jam. As a result, he has spent time as an honorary member of Jordan Brand, including having Jordan’s Jumpman logo done in his image. In 2015, as part of the 30th anniversary of Jordan Brand, Nike released a mid-top Bugs Bunny version of the Air Jordan I, named the «Air Jordan Mid 1 Hare», along with a women’s equivalent inspired by Lola Bunny called the «Air Jordan Mid 1 Lola», along with a commercial featuring Bugs and Ahmad Rashad.[154]

In 2002, TV Guide compiled a list of the 50 greatest cartoon characters of all time as part of the magazine’s 50th anniversary. Bugs Bunny was given the honor of number 1.[155][156] In a CNN broadcast on July 31, 2002, a TV Guide editor talked about the group that created the list. The editor also explained why Bugs pulled top billing: «His stock…has never gone down…Bugs is the best example…of the smart-aleck American comic. He not only is a great cartoon character, he’s a great comedian. He was written well. He was drawn beautifully. He has thrilled and made many generations laugh. He is tops.»[157] Some have noted that comedian Eric Andre is the nearest contemporary comedic equivalent to Bugs. They attribute this to, «their ability to constantly flip the script on their unwitting counterparts.»[158]

Notable films

  • Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938) – debut of Bugs-like character
  • A Wild Hare (1940) – official debut; Oscar nominee
  • Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941) – Oscar nominee
  • What’s Opera, Doc? (1957) – voted #1 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time and inducted into the National Film Registry
  • Knighty Knight Bugs (1958) – Oscar winner
  • False Hare (1964) – final regular cartoon
  • Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) – first, and so far, only appearance in a Disney film; appeared alongside Disney’s mascot, Mickey Mouse, for the first time – Oscar winner
  • Box-Office Bunny (1990) – first theatrically released short since 1964
  • Space Jam (1996) – appeared alongside NBA superstar, Michael Jordan
  • Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) – appeared alongside Brendan Fraser, Jenna Elfman and Steve Martin
  • Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021) – appeared alongside NBA superstar, LeBron James

Language

The American use of Nimrod to mean «idiot» is often said to have originated from Bugs’s exclamation «What a Nimrod!» to describe the inept hunter Elmer Fudd.[159] However, it is Daffy Duck who refers to Fudd as «my little Nimrod» in the 1948 short «What Makes Daffy Duck»,[160] and the Oxford English Dictionary records earlier negative uses of the term «nimrod».[161]

See also

  • Looney Tunes
  • Merrie Melodies
  • Golden age of American animation

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  140. ^ Leane, Rob (November 18, 2021). «MultiVersus: Shaggy, Batman & Arya Stark join Warner Bros crossover game». Radio Times.
  141. ^ Milligan, Mercedes (June 14, 2022). «Trailer: ‘Bugs Bunny Builders’ Breaks Ground on Cartoonito July 25». Animation Magazine.
  142. ^ Houhgton entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  143. ^ Packer entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  144. ^ Turner entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  145. ^ Liggera entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  146. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 90. ISBN 9780472117567.
  147. ^ Craig entry, Lambiek’s Comiclopedia. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  148. ^ Armstrong entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  149. ^ Stoffel entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  150. ^ Fallberg entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  151. ^ Heimdahl entry, Who’s Who of American Comics Books, 1928–1999. Accessed November 28, 2018.
  152. ^ Ron Goulart, Encyclopedia of American Comics. New York, Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 9780816025824 pp. 33-4,37,57,73-74,106,262-263.
  153. ^ John Cawley. «Back to the Rabbit Hole: Koth and Krller, the Men Behind the New and Improved Bugs Bunny Comic Strip.» Animato no.20 (Summer 1990), pp.30-31.
  154. ^ Bugs Bunny Shares the Scoop on his Latest Partnership with Michael Jordan Nike
  155. ^ «Bugs Bunny tops greatest cartoon characters list». CNN.com. July 30, 2002. Archived from the original on February 8, 2008. Retrieved February 27, 2008.
  156. ^ «List of All-time Cartoon Characters». CNN.com. CNN. July 30, 2002. Archived from the original on June 3, 2009. Retrieved April 11, 2007.
  157. ^ «CNN LIVE TODAY: ‘TV Guide’ Tipping Hat to Cartoon Characters». CNN.com. CNN. July 31, 2002. Retrieved April 11, 2007.
  158. ^ Neilan, Dan. «Eric Andre’s nearest comedic equivalent may be Bugs Bunny». The A.V. Club. Retrieved November 10, 2017.
  159. ^ Garner, Bryan A. (3rd Edition, 2009). Garner’s Modern American Usage, p. liii. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-538275-7.
  160. ^ Arthur Davis (director) (February 14, 1948). What Makes Daffy Duck (Animated short). Event occurs at 5:34. Precisely what I was wondering, my little Nimrod.
  161. ^ Oxford English Dictionary 3rd edition, updated 2020, s.v.

Bibliography

  • Adamson, Joe (1990). Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 0-8050-1855-7.
  • Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 0-8050-0894-2.
  • Jones, Chuck (1989). Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-12348-9.
  • Blanc, Mel; Bashe, Philip (1988). That’s Not All, Folks!. Clayton South, VIC, Australia: Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-39089-5.
  • Maltin, Leonard (1987). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons (Revised ed.). New York: Plume Book. ISBN 0-452-25993-2.
  • Barrier, Michael (2003). «Warner Bros., 1933-1940». Hollywood Cartoons : American Animation in Its Golden Age: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198020790.
  • Rubin, Rachel (2000). «A Gang of Little Yids». Jewish Gangsters of Modern Literature. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252025396.
  • Sandler, Kevin S. (2001), «The Wabbit We-negatiotes: Looney Tunes in a Conglomerate Age», in Pomerance, Murray (ed.), Ladies and Gentlemen, Boys and Girls: Gender in Film at the End of the Twentieth Century, State University of New York Press, ISBN 9780791448854
  • Walz, Gene (1998), «Charlie Thorson and the Temporary Disneyfication of Warner Bros. Cartoons», in Sandler, Kevin S. (ed.), Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation, Rutgers University Press, ISBN 9780813525389

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bugs Bunny.

  • Bugs Bunny on IMDb
  • Bugs Bunny at Toonopedia

  • 1
    Bugs Bunny

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Bugs Bunny

  • 2
    Bugs Bunny

    Багс Банни, кролик, персонаж популярного комикса. Обожает морковь и часто повторяет фразу: «В чём дело, док?» [‘What’s up, Doc?’]

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Bugs Bunny

  • 3
    Bugs Bunny Children’s Vitamins

    детские витамины «Багс Банни»

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Bugs Bunny Children’s Vitamins

  • 4
    Blanc, Mel

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Blanc, Mel

  • 5
    Daffy Duck

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Daffy Duck

  • 6
    Elmer Fudd

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Elmer Fudd

  • 7
    Jones, Chuck

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Jones, Chuck

  • 8
    Looney Tunes

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Looney Tunes

  • 9
    Porky Pig

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Porky Pig

  • 10
    Warner Bros.

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Warner Bros.

  • 11
    What’s up, Doc?

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > What’s up, Doc?

См. также в других словарях:

  • Bugs Bunny — Classic Bugs Bunny First appearance Prototype: April 30, 1938 Porky s Hare Hunt …   Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny — Personnage de fiction apparaissant dans Looney Tunes …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Bugs Bunny, tal como aparece en el cortometraje Falling Hare (1943). Bugs Bunny (al principio llamado Serapio o el conejo de la suerte en algunos países hispanos) es un personaje de dibujos animados que aparece en… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bugs Bunny — ist der Name eines Trickfilm Hasen, der den Warner Bros. Zeichentrick Studios entstammt. Entwickelt wurde die Figur von Ben Hardaway, Tex Avery und Chuck Jones. Seine englische Stimme stammt von Mel Blanc, die deutsche sprach Gerd Vespermann.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny™ — [Bugs Bunny] an American rabbit ↑cartoon character. He was created in 1940 by Tex Avery for ↑Warner Brothers. Bugs likes ↑carrots (= long orange vegetables) and always tricks the ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • Bugs Bunny — ▪ cartoon character       a cartoon rabbit, perhaps the most celebrated and enduring lagomorph in worldwide popular culture.       Bugs Bunny was conceived at Leon Schlesinger s animation unit at Warner Bros. (Warner Brothers) studios. Nicknamed… …   Universalium

  • Bugs Bunny — I Australian Slang money II Cockney Rhyming Slang Money I ve got some Bugs bunny in me sky rocket and I m off down the rub a dub dub …   English dialects glossary

  • Bugs Bunny Rides Again — est un cartoon des Merrie Melodies réalisé par Friz Freleng sorti en 1948, mettant en scène Bugs Bunny et Sam le pirate. Bugs Bunny Rides Again …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips — Merrie Melodies (Bugs Bunny) series Directed by I. Freleng …   Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid — (1942) est un cartoon réalisé par Bob Clampett et mettant en scène Beaky le Buzzard et Bugs Bunny. Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage — Обложка североамериканской версии игры Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage …   Википедия

баксовая штука; бакс — gripe piece

- Bucks |ˈbəks|  — доллар, самец, олень-самец, денди, щеголь, южноамериканский индеец
- buck |bʌk|  — доллар, самец, козел, щеголь, денди, брыкание, козлы для пилки дров
- dollar |ˈdɑːlər|  — доллар, крона
- greenback |ˈɡriːnbæk|  — банкнота, банкнот

Автор элюся задал вопрос в разделе Лингвистика

извените за тупой вопрос,но как по английски баксс банни пишется (ну этот кролик их мульта) и получил лучший ответ

Ответ от TONY MAKKARONY ™[гуру]
Bugs Bunny

Ответ от Neo Andersdon[гуру]
Пишется. Bugs Bunny Через U, bUgs

Ответ от Павел[гуру]
bags banny

Ответ от ИРИНА[гуру]
bugs bunny — это точно!

Ответ от 3 ответа[гуру]

Привет! Вот подборка тем с похожими вопросами и ответами на Ваш вопрос: извените за тупой вопрос,но как по английски баксс банни пишется (ну этот кролик их мульта)

Англо-русские и русско-английские словари и энциклопедии. English-Russian and Russian-English dictionaries and translations

Meaning of BUGS BUNNY in English

ˌBugs ˈBunny BrE AmE

a ↑ cartoon rabbit who likes ↑ carrot s and often uses the phrase ‘What’s up, Doc?’


Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.

     Longman — Словарь современного английского языка.
2012


русский

арабский
немецкий
английский
испанский
французский
иврит
итальянский
японский
голландский
польский
португальский
румынский
русский
шведский
турецкий
украинский
китайский


английский

Синонимы
арабский
немецкий
английский
испанский
французский
иврит
итальянский
японский
голландский
польский
португальский
румынский
русский
шведский
турецкий
украинский
китайский
украинский


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.


Я купила ему те, что с верхушками, как у Бакса Банни.



I got him the kind with tops on them, like Bugs Bunny.

Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

Результатов: 1. Точных совпадений: 1. Затраченное время: 26 мс

  • 1
    Bugs Bunny

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Bugs Bunny

  • 2
    Bugs Bunny

    Багс Банни, кролик, персонаж популярного комикса. Обожает морковь и часто повторяет фразу: «В чём дело, док?» [‘What’s up, Doc?’]

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Bugs Bunny

  • 3
    Bugs Bunny Children’s Vitamins

    детские витамины «Багс Банни»

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Bugs Bunny Children’s Vitamins

  • 4
    Blanc, Mel

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Blanc, Mel

  • 5
    Daffy Duck

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Daffy Duck

  • 6
    Elmer Fudd

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Elmer Fudd

  • 7
    Jones, Chuck

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Jones, Chuck

  • 8
    Looney Tunes

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Looney Tunes

  • 9
    Porky Pig

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Porky Pig

  • 10
    Warner Bros.

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Warner Bros.

  • 11
    What’s up, Doc?

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > What’s up, Doc?

См. также в других словарях:

  • Bugs Bunny — Classic Bugs Bunny First appearance Prototype: April 30, 1938 Porky s Hare Hunt …   Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny — Personnage de fiction apparaissant dans Looney Tunes …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Bugs Bunny, tal como aparece en el cortometraje Falling Hare (1943). Bugs Bunny (al principio llamado Serapio o el conejo de la suerte en algunos países hispanos) es un personaje de dibujos animados que aparece en… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bugs Bunny — ist der Name eines Trickfilm Hasen, der den Warner Bros. Zeichentrick Studios entstammt. Entwickelt wurde die Figur von Ben Hardaway, Tex Avery und Chuck Jones. Seine englische Stimme stammt von Mel Blanc, die deutsche sprach Gerd Vespermann.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny™ — [Bugs Bunny] an American rabbit ↑cartoon character. He was created in 1940 by Tex Avery for ↑Warner Brothers. Bugs likes ↑carrots (= long orange vegetables) and always tricks the ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • Bugs Bunny — ▪ cartoon character       a cartoon rabbit, perhaps the most celebrated and enduring lagomorph in worldwide popular culture.       Bugs Bunny was conceived at Leon Schlesinger s animation unit at Warner Bros. (Warner Brothers) studios. Nicknamed… …   Universalium

  • Bugs Bunny — I Australian Slang money II Cockney Rhyming Slang Money I ve got some Bugs bunny in me sky rocket and I m off down the rub a dub dub …   English dialects glossary

  • Bugs Bunny Rides Again — est un cartoon des Merrie Melodies réalisé par Friz Freleng sorti en 1948, mettant en scène Bugs Bunny et Sam le pirate. Bugs Bunny Rides Again …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips — Merrie Melodies (Bugs Bunny) series Directed by I. Freleng …   Wikipedia

  • Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid — (1942) est un cartoon réalisé par Bob Clampett et mettant en scène Beaky le Buzzard et Bugs Bunny. Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage — Обложка североамериканской версии игры Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage …   Википедия

Bugs Bunny
Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies character
Bugs Bunny.svg
First appearance Porky’s Hare Hunt
(preliminary version)[1]
April 30, 1938
A Wild Hare (official)[1]
July 27, 1940
Created by Ben Hardaway
Cal Dalton
Charles Thorson
Official
Tex Avery
Chuck Jones
Bob Givens
Robert McKimson
Designed by Cal Dalton
Charles Thorson (1939–1940)
Official
Bob Givens (1940–1943)
Robert McKimson (1943–)
Voiced by Mel Blanc (1938–1989)
Jeff Bergman (1990–1993, 1997–1998, 2002–2004, 2007, 2011–present)
Greg Burson (1990–2000)
Billy West (1996–2006)
Joe Alaskey (1997–2011)
Sam Vincent (Baby Looney Tunes; 2001–2006)
Eric Bauza (2018–present)
(see below)
In-universe information
Alias Bun-Bun
Rabbit
Species Hare/Rabbit[2][3]
Gender Male
Significant other Lola Bunny (girlfriend)
Relatives Clyde Bunny (nephew)

Bugs Bunny is an animated cartoon character created in the late 1930s by Leon Schlesinger Productions (later Warner Bros. Cartoons) and voiced originally by Mel Blanc.[4] Bugs is best known for his starring roles in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of animated short films, produced by Warner Bros. Though an early iteration of the character first appeared in the WB cartoon Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938) and a few subsequent shorts, the definitive characterization of Bugs Bunny is widely credited to have debuted in Tex Avery’s Oscar-nominated film A Wild Hare (1940).[1] Bob Givens is credited for Bugs’ initial character design, though Robert McKimson is credited for what became Bugs’ definitive design just a few years later.[1]

Bugs is an anthropomorphic gray and white rabbit or hare who is famous for his flippant, insouciant personality. He is also characterized by a Brooklyn accent, his portrayal as a trickster, and his catch phrase «Eh…What’s up, doc?». Due to Bugs’ popularity during the golden age of American animation, he became not only an American cultural icon and the official mascot of Warner Bros. Entertainment, but also one of the most recognizable characters in the world. He can thus be seen in the older Warner Bros. company logos.[5]

Bugs starred in more than 160 cartoon shorts produced between 1940 and 1964.[6] He has since appeared in feature films, compilation films, TV series, music records, comics, video games, award shows, amusement park rides, and commercials. He has also appeared in more films than any other cartoon character,[7] is the 9th most-portrayed film personality in the world,[7] and has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[8]

Development

Bugs’ preliminary debut (as an unnamed little white rabbit) in Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938).

According to Chase Craig, who wrote and drew the first Bugs Bunny comic Sunday pages and the first Bugs comic book, «Bugs was not the creation of any one man; however, he rather represented the creative talents of perhaps five or six directors and many cartoon writers including Charlie Thorson.[9] In those days, the stories were often the work of a group who suggested various gags, bounced them around and finalized them in a joint story conference.»[10] A Bugs-like rabbit with some of the personality of a finalized Bugs, though looking very different, was originally featured in the film Porky’s Hare Hunt, released on April 30, 1938. It was co-directed by Ben «Bugs» Hardaway and an uncredited director Cal Dalton (who was responsible for the initial design of the rabbit). This cartoon has an almost identical plot to Avery’s Porky’s Duck Hunt (1937), which had introduced Daffy Duck. Porky Pig is again cast as a hunter tracking a silly prey who is more interested in driving his pursuer insane and less interested in escaping. Hare Hunt replaces the little black duck with a small white rabbit. According to Friz Freleng, Hardaway and Dalton had decided to «dress the duck in a rabbit suit».[11] The white rabbit had an oval head and a shapeless body. In characterization, he was «a rural buffoon». Mel Blanc gave the character a voice and laugh much like those he later used for Woody Woodpecker. He was loud, zany with a goofy, guttural laugh.[12] The rabbit character was popular enough with audiences that the Termite Terrace staff decided to use it again.[13]

The rabbit comes back in Prest-O Change-O (1939), directed by Chuck Jones, where he is the pet rabbit of unseen character Sham-Fu the Magician. Two dogs, fleeing the local dogcatcher, enter the rabbit’s absent master’s house. The rabbit harasses them but is ultimately bested by the bigger of the two dogs. This version of the rabbit was cool, graceful, and controlled. He retained the guttural laugh but was otherwise silent.[12]

The rabbit’s third appearance comes in Hare-um Scare-um (1939), directed again by Dalton and Hardaway. This cartoon—the first in which he is depicted as a gray bunny instead of a white one—is also notable as the rabbit’s first singing role. Charlie Thorson, lead animator on the film, gave the character a name. He had written «Bug’s Bunny» on the model sheet that he drew for Hardaway.[13][14] In promotional material for the cartoon, including a surviving 1939 presskit, the name on the model sheet was altered to become the rabbit’s own name: «Bugs» Bunny (quotation marks only used, on and off, until 1944).[15]

In his autobiography, Blanc claimed that another proposed name for the character was «Happy Rabbit.»[16] In the actual cartoons and publicity, however, the name «Happy» only seems to have been used in reference to Bugs Hardaway. In Hare-um Scare-um, a newspaper headline reads, «Happy Hardaway.»[17] Animation historian David Gerstein disputes that «Happy Rabbit» was ever used as an official name, arguing that the only usage of the term came from Mel Blanc himself in humorous and fanciful tales he told about the character’s development in the 1970s and 1980s; the name «Bugs Bunny» was used as early as August 1939, in the Motion Picture Herald, in a review for the short Hare-um Scare-um.[18]

Thorson had been approached by Tedd Pierce, head of the story department, and asked to design a better rabbit. The decision was influenced by Thorson’s experience in designing hares. He had designed Max Hare in Toby Tortoise Returns (Disney, 1936). For Hardaway, Thorson created the model sheet previously mentioned, with six different rabbit poses. Thorson’s model sheet is «a comic rendition of the stereotypical fuzzy bunny». He had a pear-shaped body with a protruding rear end. His face was flat and had large expressive eyes. He had an exaggerated long neck, gloved hands with three fingers, oversized feet, and a «smart aleck» grin. The end result was influenced by Walt Disney Animation Studios’ tendency to draw animals in the style of cute infants.[11] He had an obvious Disney influence, but looked like an awkward merger of the lean and streamlined Max Hare from The Tortoise and the Hare (1935) and the round, soft bunnies from Little Hiawatha (1937).[12]

In Jones’ Elmer’s Candid Camera (1940), the rabbit first meets Elmer Fudd. This time the rabbit looks more like the present-day Bugs, taller and with a similar face—but retaining the more primitive voice. Candid Camera’s Elmer character design is also different: taller and chubbier in the face than the modern model, though Arthur Q. Bryan’s character voice is already established.

Official debut

While Porky’s Hare Hunt was the first Warner Bros. cartoon to feature what would become Bugs Bunny, A Wild Hare, directed by Tex Avery and released on July 27, 1940, is widely considered to be the first official Bugs Bunny cartoon.[1][19] It is the first film where both Elmer Fudd and Bugs, both redesigned by Bob Givens, are shown in their fully developed forms as hunter and tormentor, respectively; the first in which Mel Blanc uses what became Bugs’ standard voice; and the first in which Bugs uses his catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?»[20] A Wild Hare was a huge success in theaters and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cartoon Short Subject.[21]

For the film, Avery asked Givens to remodel the rabbit. The result had a closer resemblance to Max Hare. He had a more elongated body, stood more erect, and looked more poised. If Thorson’s rabbit looked like an infant, Givens’ version looked like an adolescent.[11] Blanc gave Bugs the voice of a city slicker. The rabbit was as audacious as he had been in Hare-um Scare-um and as cool and collected as in Prest-O Change-O.[12]

Immediately following on A Wild Hare, Bob Clampett’s Patient Porky (1940) features a cameo appearance by Bugs, announcing to the audience that 750 rabbits have been born. The gag uses Bugs’ Wild Hare visual design, but his goofier pre-Wild Hare voice characterization.

The second full-fledged role for the mature Bugs, Chuck Jones’ Elmer’s Pet Rabbit (1941), is the first to use Bugs’ name on-screen: it appears in a title card, «featuring Bugs Bunny,» at the start of the film (which was edited in following the success of A Wild Hare). However, Bugs’ voice and personality in this cartoon is noticeably different, and his design was slightly altered as well; Bugs’ visual design is based on the earlier version in Candid Camera, but with yellow gloves and no buck teeth, has a lower-pitched voice and a more aggressive, arrogant and thuggish personality instead of a fun-loving personality. After Pet Rabbit, however, subsequent Bugs appearances returned to normal: the Wild Hare visual design and personality returned, and Blanc re-used the Wild Hare voice characterization.

Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941), directed by Friz Freleng, became the second Bugs Bunny cartoon to receive an Academy Award nomination.[22] The fact that it did not win the award was later spoofed somewhat in What’s Cookin’ Doc? (1944), in which Bugs demands a recount (claiming to be a victim of «sa-bo-TAH-gee») after losing the Oscar to James Cagney and presents a clip from Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt to prove his point.[23]

World War II

Evolution of Bugs’ design over the years.

By 1942, Bugs had become the number one star of Merrie Melodies. The series was originally intended only for one-shot characters in films after several early attempts to introduce characters (Foxy, Goopy Geer, and Piggy) failed under Harman–Ising. By the mid-1930s, under Leon Schlesinger, Merrie Melodies started introducing newer characters. Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid (1942) shows a slight redesign of Bugs, with less-prominent front teeth and a rounder head. The character was reworked by Robert McKimson, then an animator in Clampett’s unit. The redesign at first was only used in the films created by Clampett’s unit, but in time it was taken up by the other directors, with Freleng and Frank Tashlin the first. For Tortoise Wins by a Hare (1943), he created yet another version, with more slanted eyes, longer teeth and a much larger mouth. He used this version until 1949 (as did Art Davis for the one Bugs Bunny film he directed, Bowery Bugs) when he started using the version he had designed for Clampett. Jones came up with his own slight modification, and the voice had slight variations between the units.[14] Bugs also made cameos in Avery’s final Warner Bros. cartoon, Crazy Cruise.[24]

Since Bugs’ debut in A Wild Hare, he appeared only in color Merrie Melodies films (making him one of the few recurring characters created for that series in the Schlesinger era prior to the full conversion to color), alongside Egghead, Inki, Sniffles, and Elmer Fudd (who actually co-existed in 1937 along with Egghead as a separate character). While Bugs made a cameo in Porky Pig’s Feat (1943), this was his only appearance in a black-and-white Looney Tunes film. He did not star in a Looney Tunes film until that series made its complete conversion to only color cartoons beginning in 1944. Buckaroo Bugs was Bugs’ first film in the Looney Tunes series and was also the last Warner Bros. cartoon to credit Schlesinger (as he had retired and sold his studio to Warner Bros. that year).[23]

Bugs’ popularity soared during World War II because of his free and easy attitude, and he began receiving special star billing in his cartoons by 1943. By that time, Warner Bros. had become the most profitable cartoon studio in the United States.[25] In company with cartoon studios such as Disney and Famous Studios, Warners pitted its characters against Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, and the Japanese. Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips (1944) features Bugs at odds with a group of Japanese soldiers. This cartoon has since been pulled from distribution due to its depiction of Japanese people.[26] One US Navy propaganda film saved from destruction features the voice of Mel Blanc in «Tokyo Woes»[27] (1945) about the propaganda radio host Tokyo Rose. He also faces off against Hermann Göring and Hitler in Herr Meets Hare (1945), which introduced his well-known reference to Albuquerque as he mistakenly winds up in the Black Forest of ‘Joimany’ instead of Las Vegas, Nevada.[28] Bugs also appeared in the 1942 two-minute U.S. war bonds commercial film Any Bonds Today?, along with Porky and Elmer.

At the end of Super-Rabbit (1943), Bugs appears wearing a United States Marine Corps dress blue uniform. As a result, the Marine Corps made Bugs an honorary Marine master sergeant.[29] From 1943 to 1946, Bugs was the official mascot of Kingman Army Airfield, Kingman, Arizona, where thousands of aerial gunners were trained during World War II. Some notable trainees included Clark Gable and Charles Bronson. Bugs also served as the mascot for 530 Squadron of the 380th Bombardment Group, 5th Air Force, U.S. Air Force, which was attached to the Royal Australian Air Force and operated out of Australia’s Northern Territory from 1943 to 1945, flying B-24 Liberator bombers.[30] Bugs riding an air delivered torpedo served as the squadron logo for Marine Torpedo/Bomber Squadron 242 in the Second World War. Additionally, Bugs appeared on the nose of B-24J #42-110157, in both the 855th Bomb Squadron of the 491st Bombardment Group (Heavy) and later in the 786th BS of the 466th BG(H), both being part of the 8th Air Force operating out of England.

In 1944, Bugs Bunny made a cameo appearance in Jasper Goes Hunting, a Puppetoons film produced by rival studio Paramount Pictures. In this cameo (animated by McKimson, with Blanc providing the usual voice), Bugs (after being threatened at gunpoint) pops out of a rabbit hole, saying his usual catchphrase; after hearing the orchestra play the wrong theme song, he realizes «Hey, I’m in the wrong picture!» and then goes back in the hole.[31] Bugs also made a cameo in the Private Snafu short Gas, in which he is found stowed away in the titular private’s belongings; his only spoken line is his usual catchphrase.

Although it was usually Porky Pig who brought the Looney Tunes films to a close with his stuttering, «That’s all, folks!», Bugs replaced him at the end of Hare Tonic and Baseball Bugs, bursting through a drum just as Porky did, but munching on a carrot and saying, in his Bronx/Brooklyn accent, «And that’s the end!»

Post-World War II era

After World War II, Bugs continued to appear in numerous Warner Bros. cartoons, making his last «Golden Age» appearance in False Hare (1964). He starred in over 167 theatrical short films, most of which were directed by Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson, and Chuck Jones. Freleng’s Knighty Knight Bugs (1958), in which a medieval Bugs trades blows with Yosemite Sam and his fire-breathing dragon (which has a cold), won an Academy Award for Best Cartoon Short Subject (becoming the first and only Bugs Bunny cartoon to win said award).[32] Three of Jones’ films—Rabbit Fire, Rabbit Seasoning and Duck! Rabbit, Duck!—compose what is often referred to as the «Rabbit Season/Duck Season» trilogy and were the origins of the rivalry between Bugs and Daffy Duck.[33] Jones’ classic What’s Opera, Doc? (1957), casts Bugs and Elmer Fudd in a parody of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen. It was deemed «culturally significant» by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1992, becoming the first cartoon short to receive this honor.[34]

In the fall of 1960, ABC debuted the prime-time television program The Bugs Bunny Show. This show packaged many of the post-1948 Warners cartoons with newly animated wraparounds. Throughout its run, the series was highly successful, and helped cement Warner Bros. Animation as a mainstay of Saturday-morning cartoons. After two seasons, it was moved from its evening slot to reruns on Saturday mornings. The Bugs Bunny Show changed format and exact title frequently but remained on network television for 40 years. The packaging was later completely different, with each cartoon simply presented on its own, title and all, though some clips from the new bridging material were sometimes used as filler.[35]

Later years

Bugs did not appear in any of the post-1964 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies films produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises or Seven Arts Productions, nor did he appear in Filmation’s Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies. He did, however, have two cameo appearances in the 1974 Joe Adamson short A Political Cartoon; one at the beginning of the short, and another in which he is interviewed at a pet store. Bugs was animated in this short by Mark Kausler.[36] He did not appear in new material on-screen again until Bugs and Daffy’s Carnival of the Animals aired in 1976.

From the late 1970s through the early 1990s, Bugs was featured in various animated specials for network television, such as Bugs Bunny’s Thanksgiving Diet, Bugs Bunny’s Easter Special, Bugs Bunny’s Looney Christmas Tales, and Bugs Bunny’s Bustin’ Out All Over. Bugs also starred in several theatrical compilation features during this time, including the United Artists distributed documentary Bugs Bunny: Superstar (1975)[37][38] and Warner Bros.’ own releases: The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie (1979), The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981), Bugs Bunny’s 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales (1982), and Daffy Duck’s Quackbusters (1988).

In the 1988 live-action/animated comedy Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Bugs appeared as one of the inhabitants of Toontown. However, since the film was being produced by Disney, Warner Bros. would only allow the use of their biggest star if he got an equal amount of screen time as Disney’s biggest star, Mickey Mouse. Because of this, both characters are always together in frame when onscreen. Roger Rabbit was also one of the final productions in which Mel Blanc voiced Bugs (as well as the other Looney Tunes characters) before his death in 1989.

Bugs later appeared in another animated production featuring numerous characters from rival studios: the 1990 drug prevention TV special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue.[39][40][41] This special is notable for being the first time that someone other than Blanc voiced Bugs and Daffy (both characters were voiced by Jeff Bergman for this). Bugs also made guest appearances in the early 1990s television series Tiny Toon Adventures, as the principal of Acme Looniversity and the mentor of Babs and Buster Bunny. He made further cameos in Warner Bros.’ subsequent animated TV shows Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, and Histeria!

Bugs returned to the silver screen in Box-Office Bunny (1991). This was the first Bugs Bunny cartoon since 1964 to be released in theaters and it was created for Bugs’ 50th anniversary celebration. It was followed by (Blooper) Bunny, a cartoon that was shelved from theaters,[42] but later premiered on Cartoon Network in 1997 and has since gained a cult following among animation fans for its edgy humor.[43][44][45]

In 1996, Bugs and the other Looney Tunes characters appeared in the live-action/animated film, Space Jam, directed by Joe Pytka and starring NBA superstar Michael Jordan. The film also introduced the character Lola Bunny, who becomes Bugs’ new love interest. Space Jam received mixed reviews from critics,[46][47] but was a box office success (grossing over $230 million worldwide).[48] The success of Space Jam led to the development of another live-action/animated film, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, released in 2003 and directed by Joe Dante. Unlike Space Jam, Back in Action was a box-office bomb,[49] though it did receive more positive reviews from critics.[50][51][52]

In 1997, Bugs appeared on a U.S. postage stamp, the first cartoon to be so honored, beating the iconic Mickey Mouse. The stamp is number seven on the list of the ten most popular U.S. stamps, as calculated by the number of stamps purchased but not used. The introduction of Bugs onto a stamp was controversial at the time, as it was seen as a step toward the ‘commercialization’ of stamp art. The postal service rejected many designs and went with a postal-themed drawing. Avery Dennison printed the Bugs Bunny stamp sheet, which featured «a special ten-stamp design and was the first self-adhesive souvenir sheet issued by the U.S. Postal Service.»[53]

More recent years

A younger version of Bugs is the main character of Baby Looney Tunes, which debuted on Kids’ WB in 2001. In the action-comedy Loonatics Unleashed, his definite descendant Ace Bunny is the leader of the Loonatics team and seems to have inherited his ancestor’s Brooklyn accent and rapier wit.[54]

In 2011, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the Looney Tunes gang returned to television in the Cartoon Network sitcom, The Looney Tunes Show. The characters feature new designs by artist Jessica Borutski. Among the changes to Bugs’ appearance were the simplification and enlargement of his feet, as well as a change to his fur from gray to a shade of mauve (though in the second season, his fur was changed back to gray).[55] In the series, Bugs and Daffy Duck are portrayed as best friends as opposed to their usual pairing as friendly rivals. At the same time, Bugs is more vocally exasperated by Daffy’s antics in the series (sometimes to the point of anger), compared to his usual level-headed personality from the original cartoons. Bugs and Daffy are friends with Porky Pig in the series, although Bugs tends to be a better friend to Porky than Daffy is. Bugs also dates Lola Bunny in the show despite the fact that he finds her to be «crazy» and a bit too talkative at first (he later learns to accept her personality quirks, similar to his tolerance for Daffy). Unlike the original cartoons, Bugs lives in a regular home which he shares with Daffy, Taz (whom he treats as a pet dog) and Speedy Gonzales, in the middle of a cul-de-sac with their neighbors Yosemite Sam, Granny, and Witch Hazel.

In 2015, Bugs starred in the direct-to-video film Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run,[56] and later returned to television yet again as the star of Cartoon Network and Boomerang’s comedy series New Looney Tunes (formerly Wabbit).[57][58]

In 2020, Bugs began appearing on the HBO Max streaming series Looney Tunes Cartoons. His design for this series primarily resembles his Bob Clampett days, complete with yellow gloves and his signature carrot. His personality is a combination of Freleng’s trickery, Clampett’s defiance, and Jones’ resilience, while also maintaining his confident, insolent, smooth-talking demeanor. Bugs is voiced by Eric Bauza, who is also the current voice of Daffy Duck and Tweety, among others.[59] Bugs made his return to movie theaters in the 2021 Space Jam sequel Space Jam: A New Legacy, this time starring NBA superstar LeBron James.[60] In 2022, a new pre-school animated series titled Bugs Bunny Builders aired on HBO Max and Cartoonito.[61]

Bugs has also appeared in numerous video games, including the Bugs Bunny’s Crazy Castle series, Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout, Bugs Bunny: Rabbit Rampage, Bugs Bunny in Double Trouble, Looney Tunes B-Ball, Looney Tunes Racing, Looney Tunes: Space Race, Bugs Bunny Lost in Time, Bugs Bunny and Taz Time Busters, Loons: The Fight for Fame, Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal, Scooby Doo and Looney Tunes: Cartoon Universe, Looney Tunes Dash, Looney Tunes World of Mayhem and MultiVersus.

Personality and catchphrases

«Some people call me cocky and brash, but actually I am just self-assured. I’m nonchalant, im­perturbable, contemplative. I play it cool, but I can get hot under the collar. And above all I’m a very ‘aware’ character. I’m well aware that I am appearing in an animated car­toon….And sometimes I chomp on my carrot for the same reason that a stand-up comic chomps on his cigar. It saves me from rushing from the last joke to the next one too fast. And I sometimes don’t act, I react. And I always treat the contest with my pursuers as ‘fun and games.’ When momentarily I appear to be cornered or in dire danger and I scream, don’t be consoined – it’s actually a big put-on. Let’s face it, Doc. I’ve read the script and I al­ready know how it turns out.»

—Bob Clampett on Bugs Bunny, written in first person.[62]

Bugs Bunny is characterized as being clever and capable of outsmarting almost anyone who antagonizes him, including Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Tasmanian Devil, Marvin the Martian, Wile E. Coyote, Gossamer, Witch Hazel, Rocky and Mugsy, The Crusher, Beaky Buzzard, Willoughby, Count Bloodcount, Daffy Duck and a host of others. The only one to consistently beat Bugs is Cecil Turtle, who defeats Bugs in three consecutive shorts based on the premise of the Aesop fable The Tortoise and the Hare. In a rare villain turn, Bugs turns to a life of crime in 1949’s Rebel Rabbit, taking on the entire United States government by vandalizing monuments in an effort to prove he is worth more than the two-cent bounty on his head; while he succeeds in raising the bounty to $1,000,000, the full force of the military ends up capturing Bugs and sending him to Alcatraz.

Bugs almost always wins these conflicts, a plot pattern which recurs in Looney Tunes films directed by Chuck Jones. Concerned that viewers would lose sympathy for an aggressive protagonist who always won, Jones arranged for Bugs to be bullied, cheated, or threatened by the antagonists while minding his own business, justifying his subsequent antics as retaliation or self-defense. He has also been known to break the fourth wall by «communicating» with the audience, either by explaining the situation (e.g. «Be with you in a minute, folks!»), describing someone to the audience (e.g. «Feisty, ain’t they?»), clueing in on the story (e.g. «That happens to him all during the picture, folks.»), explaining that one of his antagonists’ actions have pushed him to the breaking point («Of course you realize, this means war.» — a line borrowed from Groucho Marx in Duck Soup and used again in the next Marx Brothers film A Night at the Opera (1935)[63] ), admitting his own deviousness toward his antagonists («Ain’t I a stinker?» — a line borrowed from Lou Costello[64][65][63]), etc. This style was used and established by Tex Avery.

Bugs usually tries to placate his antagonist and avoid conflict but, when an antagonist pushes him too far, Bugs may address the audience and invoke his catchphrase «Of course you realize this means war!» before he retaliates in a devastating manner. As mentioned earlier, this line was taken from Groucho Marx. Bugs paid homage to Groucho in other ways, such as occasionally adopting his stooped walk or leering eyebrow-raising (in Hair-Raising Hare, for example) or sometimes with a direct impersonation (as in Slick Hare). Other directors, such as Friz Freleng, characterized Bugs as altruistic. When Bugs meets other successful characters (such as Cecil Turtle in Tortoise Beats Hare, the Gremlin in Falling Hare, and the unnamed mouse in Rhapsody Rabbit), his overconfidence becomes a disadvantage and sometimes even leads to his undoing.

Bugs’ nonchalant carrot-chewing standing position, as explained by Freleng, Jones and Bob Clampett, originated in a scene from the film It Happened One Night (1934), in which Clark Gable’s character Peter Warne leans against a fence, eating carrots rapidly and talking with his mouth full to Claudette Colbert’s character. This scene was well known while the film was popular, and viewers at the time likely recognized Bugs Bunny’s behavior as satire. Coincidentally, the film also features a minor character, Oscar Shapely, who addresses Peter Warne as «Doc», and Warne mentions an imaginary person named «Bugs Dooley» to frighten Shapely.[66]

«‘What’s up Doc?’ is a very simple thing. It’s only funny because it’s in a situation. It was an all Bugs Bunny line. It wasn’t funny. If you put it in human terms; you come home late one night from work, you walk up to the gate in the yard, you walk through the gate and up into the front room, the door is partly open and there’s some guy shooting under your living room. So what do you do? You run if you have any sense, the least you can do is call the cops. But what if you come up and tap him on the shoulder and look over and say ‘What’s up Doc?’ You’re interested in what he’s doing. That’s ridiculous. That’s not what you say at a time like that. So that’s why it’s funny, I think. In other words it’s asking a perfectly legitimate question in a perfectly illogical situation.»

—Chuck Jones on Bugs Bunny’s catchphrase «What’s up Doc?»[67]

The carrot-chewing scenes are generally followed by Bugs’ most well-known catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?», which was written by director Tex Avery for his first Bugs Bunny film, A Wild Hare (1940). Avery explained later that it was a common expression in his native Texas and that he did not think much of the phrase. Back then «doc» meant the same as «dude» does today. When the cartoon was first screened in theaters, the «What’s up, Doc?» scene generated a tremendously positive audience reaction.[20][68] As a result, the scene became a recurring element in subsequent cartoons. The phrase was sometimes modified for a situation. For example, Bugs says «What’s up, dogs?» to the antagonists in A Hare Grows in Manhattan, «What’s up, Duke?» to the knight in Knight-mare Hare, and «What’s up, prune-face?» to the aged Elmer in The Old Grey Hare. He might also greet Daffy with «What’s up, Duck?» He used one variation, «What’s all the hub-bub, bub?» only once, in Falling Hare. Another variation is used in Looney Tunes: Back in Action when he greets a blaster-wielding Marvin the Martian saying «What’s up, Darth?»

Several Chuck Jones films in the late 1940s and 1950s depict Bugs travelling via cross-country (and, in some cases, intercontinental) tunnel-digging, ending up in places as varied as Barcelona, Spain (Bully for Bugs), the Himalayas (The Abominable Snow Rabbit), and Antarctica (Frigid Hare) all because he «knew (he) shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.» He first utters that phrase in Herr Meets Hare (1945), when he emerges in the Black Forest, a cartoon seldom seen today due to its blatantly topical subject matter. When Hermann Göring says to Bugs, «There is no Las Vegas in ‘Chermany’» and takes a potshot at Bugs, Bugs dives into his hole and says, «Joimany! Yipe!», as Bugs realizes he is behind enemy lines. The confused response to his «left toin» comment also followed a pattern. For example, when he tunnels into Scotland in My Bunny Lies over the Sea (1948), while thinking he is heading for the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, California, it provides another chance for an ethnic joke: «Therrre arrre no La Brrrea Tarrr Pits in Scotland!» (to which Bugs responds, «Scotland!? Eh…what’s up, Mac-doc?»). A couple of late-1950s/early-1960s cartoons of this ilk also featured Daffy Duck travelling with Bugs («Hey, wait a minute! Since when is Pismo Beach inside a cave?»).

Voice actors

The following are the various vocal artists who have voiced Bugs Bunny over the last 80-plus years for both Warner Bros. official productions and others:

Mel Blanc

Mel Blanc was the original voice of Bugs and voiced the character for nearly five decades.

Mel Blanc voiced the character for almost 50 years, from Bugs’ debut in the 1940 short A Wild Hare until Blanc’s death in 1989. Blanc described the voice as a combination of Bronx and Brooklyn accents; however, Tex Avery claimed that he asked Blanc to give the character not a New York accent per se, but a voice like that of actor Frank McHugh, who frequently appeared in supporting roles in the 1930s and whose voice might be described as New York Irish.[14] In Bugs’ second cartoon Elmer’s Pet Rabbit, Blanc created a completely new voice for Bugs, which sounded like a Jimmy Stewart impression, but the directors decided the previous voice was better. Though Blanc’s best known character was the carrot-chomping rabbit, munching on the carrots interrupted the dialogue. Various substitutes, such as celery, were tried, but none of them sounded like a carrot. So, for the sake of expedience, Blanc munched and then spit the carrot bits into a spittoon, rather than swallowing them, and continued with the dialogue. One often-repeated story, which dates back to the 1940s,[69] is that Blanc was allergic to carrots and had to spit them out to minimize any allergic reaction — but his autobiography makes no such claim.[16] In fact, in a 1984 interview with Tim Lawson, co-author of The Magic Behind The Voices: A Who’s Who of Voice Actors, Blanc emphatically denied being allergic to carrots.

Others

  • Ben Hardaway (as an early iteration of Bugs; one line in Porky’s Hare Hunt)[70]
  • Bob Clampett (vocal effects and additional lines in A Corny Concerto and Falling Hare)[71]
  • Gilbert Mack (Golden Records records, Bugs Bunny Songfest)[72][73]
  • Dave Barry (Golden Records records, Bugs Bunny Easter Song and Mr. Easter Rabbit, Bugs Bunny Songfest)[72][73][74]
  • Daws Butler (imitating Groucho Marx and Ed Norton in Wideo Wabbit)
  • Ricky Nelson (singing «Gee Whiz, Whilikins, Golly Gee» in an episode of The Bugs Bunny Show)[75]
  • Jerry Hausner (additional lines in Devil’s Feud Cake, The Bugs Bunny Show and some commercials)[72][71]
  • Larry Storch (1973 ABC Saturday Mornings promotion)[76]
  • Mike Sammes (Bugs Bunny Comes to London)[77]
  • Richard Andrews (Bugs Bunny Exercise and Adventure Album)[78]
  • Bob Bergen (ABC Family Fun Fair)[79][80]
  • Darrell Hammond («Wappin’»)
  • Jeff Bergman (62nd Academy Awards, Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue, The Earth Day Special, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, Tiny Toon Adventures, Box Office Bunny, Bugs Bunny’s Overtures to Disaster, (Blooper) Bunny, Bugs Bunny’s Lunar Tunes, Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers, Bugs Bunny’s Creature Features, Special Delivery Symphony,[81] Pride of the Martians, The Looney Tunes Show, Scooby Doo & Looney Tunes Cartoon Universe: Adventure, Looney Tunes Dash, Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run, Wun Wabbit Wun,[82] New Looney Tunes, Daffy Duck Dance Off,[83] Ani-Mayhem,[84] Meet Bugs (and Daffy),[85] Space Jam: A New Legacy,[86] Tiny Toons Looniversity,[87] various commercials)[88][89][90][91]
  • Noel Blanc (You Rang? answering machine messages,[92] Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400 with the Looney Tunes)
  • Keith Scott (Bugs Bunny’s 50th Anniversary bumper,[93] Bugs Bunny demonstration animatronic,[94][95] Looney Tunes Musical Revue,[96][97] Spectacular Light and Sound Show Illuminanza,[98][99] Looney Tunes: We Got the Beat!,[100][101] Looney Tunes on Ice, Looney Tunes LIVE! Classroom Capers,[102] Christmas Moments with Looney Tunes, The Looney Tunes Radio Show,[103][104] Looney Rock, Looney Tunes Christmas Carols,[105][106][107] various commercials)[88][108][109][110]
  • Greg Burson (1990 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, Bugs Bunny’s Birthday Ball, Yakety Yak, Take It Back, Looney Tunes River Ride, Tiny Toon Adventures, Yosemite Sam and the Gold River Adventure!, The Toonite Show Starring Bugs Bunny,[111] Taz-Mania, Bugs Bunny: Rabbit Rampage,[112] Animaniacs, The Bugs Bunny Wacky World Games,[113] Acme Animation Factory,[114] Have Yourself a Looney Tunes Christmas, Looney Tunes B-Ball,[115] 67th Academy Awards, Carrotblanca, Bugs ‘n’ Daffy intro, From Hare to Eternity, Warner Bros. Kids Club,[116] Bugs Bunny’s Learning Adventures, Looney Tunes: What’s Up Rock?!,[100] Looney Tunes: Back in Action animation test,[117] various commercials)[88]
  • John Blackman (Hey Hey It’s Saturday)[118]
  • John Willyard (1992 Six Flags Great Adventure commercial)[119]
  • Mendi Segal (Bugs & Friends Sing the Beatles, The Looney West)[120][121]
  • Billy West (Space Jam, Bugs & Friends Sing Elvis,[122] Histeria!, Warner Bros. Sing-Along: Quest for Camelot, Warner Bros. Sing-Along: Looney Tunes, The Looney Tunes Rockin’ Road Show,[123] The Looney Tunes Kwazy Christmas,[124][125] Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, A Looney Tunes Sing-A-Long Christmas,[126] various video games, webtoons, and commercials)[88]
  • Joe Alaskey (Chasers Anonymous, Gatorade commercial, Tweety’s High-Flying Adventure, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Looney Tunes: Back in Action (video game), Hare and Loathing in Las Vegas, Looney Tunes webtoons, Daffy Duck for President, Aflac commercial, Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal, Justice League: The New Frontier, Looney Tunes: Cartoon Conductor, Looney Tunes: Laff Riot pilot,[127] Looney Tunes Dance Off,[128] TomTom Looney Tunes GPS,[129] Looney Tunes ClickN READ Phonics)[88]
  • Samuel Vincent (Baby Looney Tunes, Baby Looney Tunes’ Eggs-traordinary Adventure)[88]
  • Robert Smigel (Saturday Night Live Season 28, Ep. 14)[130]
  • Eric Goldberg (additional lines in Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Looney Tunes: Back in Action interview)[131][132]
  • Seth MacFarlane (Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story, Family Guy)[133]
  • Bill Farmer (Robot Chicken)[134]
  • James Arnold Taylor (Drawn Together)
  • Kevin Shinick (Mad)[135]
  • Gary Martin (Looney Tunes All-Stars promotions, Looney Tunes Take-Over Weekend promotion, Looney Tunes Marathon promotion)[90]
  • Eric Bauza (Looney Tunes World of Mayhem,[136] Looney Tunes Cartoons, Bugs Bunny in The Golden Carrot, Space Jam: A New Legacy (as Big Chungus),[137] Space Jam: A New Legacy live show, Bugs and Daffy’s Thanksgiving Road Trip,[138][139] MultiVersus,[140] Bugs Bunny Builders[141])[88]

Comics

Comic books

Bugs Bunny was continuously featured in comic books for more than 40 years, from 1941 to 1983, and has appeared sporadically since then. Bugs first appeared in comic books in 1941, in Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies Comics #1, published by Dell Comics. Bugs was a recurring star in that book all through its 153-issue run, which lasted until July 1954. Western Publishing (and its Dell imprint) published 245 issues of a Bugs Bunny comic book from Dec. 1952/Jan. 1953 to 1983. The company also published 81 issues of the joint title Yosemite Sam and Bugs Bunny from December 1970 to 1983. During the 1950s Dell also published a number of Bugs Bunny spinoff titles.

Creators on those series included Chase Craig, Helen Houghton,[142] Eleanor Packer,[143] Lloyd Turner,[144] Michael Maltese, John Liggera,[145] Tony Strobl, Veve Risto, Cecil Beard, Pete Alvorado, Carl Fallberg, Cal Howard, Vic Lockman, Lynn Karp, Pete Llanuza, Pete Hansen, Jack Carey, Del Connell, Kellog Adams, Jack Manning, Mark Evanier, Tom McKimson, Joe Messerli, Carlos Garzon, Donald F. Glut, Sealtiel Alatriste, Sandro Costa, and Massimo Fechi.

The German publisher Condor published a 76-issues Bugs Bunny series (translated and reprinted from the American comics) in the mid-1970s. The Danish publisher Egmont Ehapa produced a weekly reprint series in the mid-1990s.

Comic strip

The Bugs Bunny comic strip ran for almost 50 years, from January 10, 1943 to December 30, 1990, syndicated by the Newspaper Enterprise Association. It started out as a Sunday page and added a daily strip on November 1, 1948.[146]

The strip originated with Chase Craig, who did the first five weeks before leaving for military service in World War II.[147] Roger Armstrong illustrated the strip from 1942 to 1944.[148] The creators most associated with the strip are writers Albert Stoffel (1947–1979)[149] & Carl Fallberg (1950–1969),[150] and artist Ralph Heimdahl, who worked on it from 1947 to 1979.[151] Other creators associated with the Bugs Bunny strip include Jack Hamm, Carl Buettner, Phil Evans, Carl Barks (1952), Tom McKimson, Arnold Drake, Frank Hill, Brett Koth, and Shawn Keller.[152][153]

Reception and legacy

Statue evoking Bugs Bunny at Butterfly Park Bangladesh.

Like Mickey Mouse for Disney, Bugs Bunny has served as the mascot for Warner Bros. and its various divisions. According to Guinness World Records, Bugs has appeared in more films (both short and feature-length) than any other cartoon character, and is the ninth most portrayed film personality in the world.[7] On December 10, 1985, Bugs became the second cartoon character (after Mickey) to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[8]

He also has been a pitchman for companies including Kool-Aid and Nike. His Nike commercials with Michael Jordan as «Hare Jordan» for the Air Jordan VII and VIII became precursors to Space Jam. As a result, he has spent time as an honorary member of Jordan Brand, including having Jordan’s Jumpman logo done in his image. In 2015, as part of the 30th anniversary of Jordan Brand, Nike released a mid-top Bugs Bunny version of the Air Jordan I, named the «Air Jordan Mid 1 Hare», along with a women’s equivalent inspired by Lola Bunny called the «Air Jordan Mid 1 Lola», along with a commercial featuring Bugs and Ahmad Rashad.[154]

In 2002, TV Guide compiled a list of the 50 greatest cartoon characters of all time as part of the magazine’s 50th anniversary. Bugs Bunny was given the honor of number 1.[155][156] In a CNN broadcast on July 31, 2002, a TV Guide editor talked about the group that created the list. The editor also explained why Bugs pulled top billing: «His stock…has never gone down…Bugs is the best example…of the smart-aleck American comic. He not only is a great cartoon character, he’s a great comedian. He was written well. He was drawn beautifully. He has thrilled and made many generations laugh. He is tops.»[157] Some have noted that comedian Eric Andre is the nearest contemporary comedic equivalent to Bugs. They attribute this to, «their ability to constantly flip the script on their unwitting counterparts.»[158]

Notable films

  • Porky’s Hare Hunt (1938) – debut of Bugs-like character
  • A Wild Hare (1940) – official debut; Oscar nominee
  • Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941) – Oscar nominee
  • What’s Opera, Doc? (1957) – voted #1 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time and inducted into the National Film Registry
  • Knighty Knight Bugs (1958) – Oscar winner
  • False Hare (1964) – final regular cartoon
  • Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) – first, and so far, only appearance in a Disney film; appeared alongside Disney’s mascot, Mickey Mouse, for the first time – Oscar winner
  • Box-Office Bunny (1990) – first theatrically released short since 1964
  • Space Jam (1996) – appeared alongside NBA superstar, Michael Jordan
  • Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) – appeared alongside Brendan Fraser, Jenna Elfman and Steve Martin
  • Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021) – appeared alongside NBA superstar, LeBron James

Language

The American use of Nimrod to mean «idiot» is often said to have originated from Bugs’s exclamation «What a Nimrod!» to describe the inept hunter Elmer Fudd.[159] However, it is Daffy Duck who refers to Fudd as «my little Nimrod» in the 1948 short «What Makes Daffy Duck»,[160] and the Oxford English Dictionary records earlier negative uses of the term «nimrod».[161]

See also

  • Looney Tunes
  • Merrie Melodies
  • Golden age of American animation

References

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Bibliography

  • Adamson, Joe (1990). Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 0-8050-1855-7.
  • Beck, Jerry; Friedwald, Will (1989). Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies. New York: Henry Holt. ISBN 0-8050-0894-2.
  • Jones, Chuck (1989). Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-12348-9.
  • Blanc, Mel; Bashe, Philip (1988). That’s Not All, Folks!. Clayton South, VIC, Australia: Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-39089-5.
  • Maltin, Leonard (1987). Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons (Revised ed.). New York: Plume Book. ISBN 0-452-25993-2.
  • Barrier, Michael (2003). «Warner Bros., 1933-1940». Hollywood Cartoons : American Animation in Its Golden Age: American Animation in Its Golden Age. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198020790.
  • Rubin, Rachel (2000). «A Gang of Little Yids». Jewish Gangsters of Modern Literature. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252025396.
  • Sandler, Kevin S. (2001), «The Wabbit We-negatiotes: Looney Tunes in a Conglomerate Age», in Pomerance, Murray (ed.), Ladies and Gentlemen, Boys and Girls: Gender in Film at the End of the Twentieth Century, State University of New York Press, ISBN 9780791448854
  • Walz, Gene (1998), «Charlie Thorson and the Temporary Disneyfication of Warner Bros. Cartoons», in Sandler, Kevin S. (ed.), Reading the Rabbit: Explorations in Warner Bros. Animation, Rutgers University Press, ISBN 9780813525389

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bugs Bunny.

  • Bugs Bunny on IMDb
  • Bugs Bunny at Toonopedia

Bugs Bunny is an animated cartoon character. He is best known for his starring roles in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of theatrical short films produced by Warner Bros. during the Golden Age of American Animation. His popularity during this era led to his becoming an American cultural icon, as well as a corporate mascot of the Warner Bros. company.[2] He was originally voiced by Mel Blanc, but is now voiced by a variety of voice actors.[3]

Bugs is an anthropomorphic gray hare famous for his relaxed, passive personality, his pronounced Mid-Atlantic accent which Blanc described as being a mixture of Brooklyn and Bronx accents,[4] his depiction as a mischievous trickster, and his catchphrase «Eh, what’s up, doc?» usually said while chewing a carrot.

Since his official debut in 1940’s «A Wild Hare»,[5] Bugs has appeared in various short films, feature films, compilations, television series, music records, comic books, video games, award shows, amusement park rides, and commercials. He has also appeared in more films, short and feature length, than any other cartoon character,[6] is the ninth most-portrayed film personality in the world,[6] and has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[7]

When TV Guide compiled a list of the fifty greatest cartoon characters of all time as part of the magazine’s 50th anniversary in 2002, Bugs Bunny was given the honor of Number One.[8][9] In a CNN broadcast, a TV Guide editor talked about the group that created the list. The editor also explained why Bugs pulled top billing: «His stock…has never gone down…Bugs is the best example…of the smart-aleck American comic. He not only is a great cartoon character, he’s a great comedian. He was written well. He was drawn beautifully. He has thrilled and made many generations laugh. He is tops.»[10]

History

Bugs’ Precursor

Bugs’ evolution from Happy Rabbit to the present

According to Chase Craig, who was a member of Tex Avery’s cartoon unit and later wrote and drew the first Bugs Bunny comic Sunday pages and Bugs’ first comic book; «Bugs was not the creation of any one man but rather represented the creative talents of perhaps five or six directors and many cartoon writers. In those days, the stories were often the work of a group who suggested various gags, bounced them around and finalized them in a joint story conference.»[11]
Happy Rabbit, a hare with some of the personality of Bugs (though looking very different), made his first appearance in the cartoon short «Porky’s Hare Hunt», released 30 April 1938. Co-directed by Ben Hardaway and an uncredited Cal Dalton (who was responsible for the initial design of the rabbit), this short has an almost identical plot to Tex Avery’s «Porky’s Duck Hunt», which had introduced Daffy Duck. «Hare Hunt» replaced the little black duck with a small white rabbit. Porky Pig was again cast as a hunter tracking a silly prey who is more interested in driving his pursuer insane and less interested in escaping. Happy introduced himself with the odd expression «Jiggers, fellers,» and Mel Blanc gave the character a voice and laugh much like those he would later use for Woody Woodpecker. «Hare Hunt» also gave Happy the famous Groucho Marx line, «Of course you realize, this means war!» The rabbit character was popular enough with audiences that the Termite Terrace staff decided to use it again.[12][13] According to Friz Freleng, Hardaway and Dalton had decided to dress the duck in a rabbit suit. The white rabbit had an oval head and a shapeless body. In characterization, he was «a rural buffoon». He was loud, zany with a goofy, guttural laugh. Blanc provided him with a hayseed voice.[14]

Happy returned in the short «Prest-O Change-O», directed by Chuck Jones, where he is the pet rabbit of unseen character Sham-Fu The Magician. Two dogs, fleeing the local dogcatcher, enter his absent master’s house. Happy harasses them but is ultimately bested by the bigger of the two dogs.

Happy’s third appearance came in «Hare-um Scare-um», once again directed by Hardaway and Dalton. This short (the first in which he is depicted as a gray bunny instead of a white one) is also notable as Happy’s first singing role. Charlie Thorson, lead animator on the short, gave the character a different name. He had written «Bugs’ Bunny» on the model sheet that he drew for Hardaway. In promotional material for the short, including a surviving 1939 press kit, the name on the model sheet was altered to become the rabbit’s own name: «Bugs» Bunny (quotation marks only used, on and off, until 1944).[15]

In Chuck Jones’ «Elmer’s Candid Camera», Happy met Elmer Fudd for the first time. In this cartoon, Happy looked more like the present-day Bugs, taller and with a similar face—-but retaining the more primitive voice. Elmer’s character design was also different: fatter and taller than the modern model, although Arthur Q. Bryan’s character voice was already established.

In recent years, many animation historians identify these Happy Rabbit cartoons as Bugs Bunny’s early cartoons before he reaches his fame in «A Wild Hare», as evident in documentaries such as The Wabbit Turns 50 from WWOR in 1990. [16] Even Cartoon Network’s June Bugs marathons over the years acknlowledges this by airing the Happy Rabbit cartoons alongside all the other Bugs Bunny cartoons, possibly indicating that both Bugs Bunny and Happy Rabbit are one of the same rabbit. [17][18][19]

Bugs’ Official Debut

Bugs emerges (literally) for the first time in «A Wild Hare».

«A Wild Hare», directed by Tex Avery and released 27 July 1940, is widely considered to be the first official Bugs Bunny cartoon.[20] It is the first film where both Elmer Fudd and Bugs, both redesigned by Bob Givens, are shown in their fully developed forms as hunter and tormentor, respectively; the first in which Mel Blanc uses what would become Bugs’ standard voice; and the first in which Bugs uses his catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?»[21] A Wild Hare was a huge success in theaters and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cartoon Short Subject.[22]

Immediately following «A Wild Hare», Bob Clampett’s «Patient Porky» featured a cameo appearance by Bugs, announcing to the audience that 750 rabbits have been born. The gag uses Bugs’ «Wild Hare» visual design, but his goofier pre-«Wild Hare» voice characterization.

The second full-fledged role for the mature Bugs, Chuck Jones’ «Elmer’s Pet Rabbit», was the first to use the name Bugs Bunny on-screen: it appears in a title card, «featuring Bugs Bunny,» at the start of the short (which was edited in following the success of «A Wild Hare»). However, Bugs’ voice in this cartoon is significantly different, and his design was slightly altered as well. After «Pet Rabbit», however, subsequent Bugs appearances returned to normal: the «Wild Hare» visual design and personality returned, and Blanc reused the «Wild Hare» voice characterization.

The name «Bugs» or «Bugsy» as an old-fashioned nickname means «crazy» (or «loopy»). Several famous people from the first half of the twentieth century had that nickname, like famous gangster, Benjamin «Bugsy» Siegel, who disliked the nickname. It is now out of fashion as a nickname, but survives in 1950’s–1960’s expressions like «you’re bugging me», as in «you’re driving me crazy».

«Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt», directed by Friz Freleng, became the second Bugs Bunny cartoon to receive an Academy Award nomination.[23] The fact that it didn’t win the award was later spoofed somewhat in «What’s Cookin’ Doc?», in which Bugs demands a recount after losing the Oscar to James Cagney and presents a clip from «Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt» to prove his point.[24]

World War II

By 1942, Bugs had become the number one star of Merrie Melodies. The series was originally intended only for one-shot characters in films after several early attempts to introduce characters (Foxy, Goopy Geer, and Piggy) failed under Harman–Ising. By the mid-1930s, under Leon Schlesinger, Merrie Melodies started introducing newer characters. «Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid» shows a slight redesign of Bugs, with less-prominent front teeth and a rounder head. The character was reworked by Robert McKimson, then an animator in Bob Clampett’s unit. The redesign at first was only used in the films created by Clampett’s unit, but in time it would be taken up by the other directors, with Friz Freleng and Frank Tashlin the first. When McKimson was himself promoted to director, he created yet another version, with more slanted eyes, longer teeth and a much larger mouth. He used this version until 1949 (as did Art Davis for the one Bugs Bunny film he directed) when he started using the version he had designed for Clampett. Chuck Jones would come up with his own slight modification, and the voice had slight variations between the units. Bugs also made cameos in Tex Avery’s final Warner Bros. cartoon, «Crazy Cruise».[25]

Since Bugs’ debut in «A Wild Hare», he appeared only in color Merrie Melodies films (making him one of the few recurring characters created for that series in the Schlesinger era prior to the full conversion to color), alongside Elmer predecessor Egghead, Inki, Sniffles, and Elmer himself. While Bugs made a cameo in «Porky Pig’s Feat», this was his only appearance in a black-and-white Looney Tunes film. He did not star in a Looney Tunes film until that series made its complete conversion to only color cartoons beginning in 1944. «Buckaroo Bugs» was Bugs’ first film in the Looney Tunes series and was also the last Warner Bros. cartoon to credit Schlesinger (as he had retired and sold his studio to Warner Bros. that year).[26]

Bugs’ popularity soared during World War II because of his free and easy attitude, and he began receiving special star billing in his cartoons by 1943. By that time, Warner Bros. had become the most profitable cartoon studio in the United States.[27] In company with cartoon studios such as Disney and Famous Studios, Warners pitted its characters against Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, and the Japanese. «Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips» features Bugs at odds with a group of Japanese soldiers. This cartoon has since been pulled from distribution due to its depiction of Japanese people.[28] He also faces off against Hermann Göring and Hitler in «Herr Meets Hare», which introduced his well-known reference to Albuquerque as he mistakenly winds up in the Black Forest of ‘Joimany’ instead of Las Vegas.[29] Bugs also appeared in the 1942 two-minute U.S. war bonds commercial film «Any Bonds Today?», along with Porky and Elmer.

Bugs, Porky and Elmer in Any Bonds Today?

At the end of «Super-Rabbit», Bugs appears wearing a United States Marine Corps dress blue uniform. As a result, the Marine Corps made Bugs an honorary Marine Master Sergeant.[30] From 1943 to 1946, Bugs was the official mascot of Kingman Army Airfield, Kingman, Arizona, where thousands of aerial gunners were trained during World War II. Some notable trainees included Clark Gable and Charles Bronson. Bugs also served as the mascot for 530 Squadron of the 380th Bombardment Group, 5th Air Force, U.S. Air Force, which was attached to the Royal Australian Air Force and operated out of Australia’s Northern Territory from 1943 to 1945, flying B-24 Liberator bombers.[31] Bugs riding an air delivered torpedo served as the squadron logo for Marine Torpedo/Bomber Squadron 242 in the Second World War. Additionally, Bugs appeared on the nose of B-24J #42-110157, in both the 855th Bomb Squadron of the 491st Bombardment Group (Heavy) and later in the 786th BS of the 466th BG(H), both being part of the 8th Air Force operating out of England.

In 1944, Bugs Bunny made a cameo appearance in «Jasper Goes Hunting», a Puppetoons film produced by rival studio Paramount Pictures. In this cameo, Bugs, after being threatened at gunpoint, pops out of a rabbit hole, saying his usual catchphrase; after hearing the orchestra play the wrong theme song, he realizes «Hey, I’m in the wrong picture!» and then goes back in the hole.[32] Bugs also made a cameo in the Private Snafu short «Gas», in which he is found stowed away in the titular private’s belongings; his only spoken line is his usual catchphrase.

The Postwar Era

After World War II, Bugs continued to appear in numerous Warner Bros. cartoons, making his last «Golden Age» appearance in 1964’s «False Hare». He starred in over 167 theatrical short films, most of which were directed by Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson and Chuck Jones. Freleng’s «Knighty Knight Bugs», in which a medieval Bugs trades blows with Yosemite Sam and his fire-breathing dragon (which has a cold), won an Oscar (becoming the first Bugs Bunny cartoon to win said award).[33] Three of Jones’ films — «Rabbit Fire», «Rabbit Seasoning», and «Duck! Rabbit, Duck!» — compose what is often referred to as the «Rabbit Season/Duck Season» trilogy and are famous for originating the «historic» rivalry between Bugs and Daffy Duck.[34] Jones’ classic «What’s Opera, Doc?», casts Bugs and Elmer Fudd in a parody of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen. It was deemed «culturally significant» by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1992, becoming the first cartoon short to receive this honor.[35]

Bugs and Daffy in the intro to The Bugs Bunny Show

In the fall of 1960, ABC debuted the prime-time television program The Bugs Bunny Show. This show packaged many of the post-1948 Looney Tunes shorts with newly animated wraparounds. After two seasons, it was moved from its evening slot to reruns on Saturday mornings. The Bugs Bunny Show changed format and exact title frequently but remained on network television for 40 years. The packaging was later completely different, with each short simply presented on its own, title and all, though some clips from the new bridging material were sometimes used as filler.[36]

After the Classic Cartoon Era

Bugs did not appear in any of the post-1964 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises or Seven Arts Productions, nor did he appear in the lone Looney Tunes TV special produced by Filmation Associates. He would not appear in new material on-screen again until Bugs and Daffy’s Carnival of the Animals aired in 1976.[37]

From the late 1970s through the 1980s, Bugs was featured in various animated specials for network TV, such as Bugs Bunny’s Howl-oween Special, Bugs Bunny’s Looney Christmas Tales and Bugs Bunny’s Bustin’ Out All Over. Bugs also starred in the independently-produced documentary Bugs Bunny: Superstar during this time, as well as Warner Bros.’ various compilation films: The Bugs Bunny Road-Runner Movie, Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie, Bugs Bunny’s 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales and Daffy Duck’s Quackbusters.[38][39]

Bugs with his Disney rival Mickey Mouse in Who Framed Roger Rabbit

In the 1988 live-action/animated movie Who Framed Roger Rabbit (from executive producer Steven Spielberg), Bugs appeared as one of the inhabitants of Toontown. However, since the film was being produced by Disney, Warner Bros. would only allow the use of their biggest star if he got an equal amount of screen time as Disney’s biggest star, Mickey Mouse. Because of this, both characters are always together in frame when onscreen.

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Bugs Bunny’s dancing in the final shot when all the toons are singing «Smile, Darn Ya, Smile» was inspired by that in «Slick Hare». Roger Rabbit also featured one of Mel Blanc’s final performances as the voice of Bugs (as well as the other Looney Tunes characters) before his death in 1989.

Bugs later appeared in another animated production featuring numerous characters from rival studios: the 1990 drug prevention TV special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue.[40][41][42] This special is notable for being the first time that someone other than Blanc voiced Bugs and Daffy (both characters were voiced by Jeff Bergman for this). Bugs also made guest appearances in the early 1990s television series Tiny Toon Adventures, as the principal of Acme Looniversity and the mentor of Buster Bunny. He made further cameos in Warner Bros.’ subsequent animated TV shows Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, and Histeria!

Bugs returned to the silver screen in 1990’s «Box Office Bunny». This was the first Bugs Bunny cartoon since 1964 to be released in theaters and it was created for Bugs’ 50th-anniversary celebration. It was followed by «(Blooper) Bunny», a cartoon that was shelved from theaters,[43] but later premiered on Cartoon Network in 1997 and has since gained a cult following among animation fans for its edgy humor.[44][45][46]

In 1996, Bugs and the other Looney Tunes characters appeared in the live-action/animated film, Space Jam, directed by Joe Pytka and starring NBA superstar Michael Jordan. The film also introduced the character Lola Bunny, who becomes Bugs’ new love interest. Space Jam received mixed reviews from critics,[47][48] but was a box office success (grossing over $230 million worldwide).[49] The success of Space Jam led to the development of another live-action/animated film, Looney Tunes Back in Action, released in 2003 and directed by Joe Dante. Unlike Space Jam, Back in Action was a box-office bomb,[50] though it did receive more positive reviews from critics.[51][52][53]

In 1997, Bugs appeared on a U.S. postage stamp, the first cartoon to be so honored, beating the iconic Mickey Mouse. The stamp is number seven on the list of the ten most popular U.S. stamps, as calculated by the number of stamps purchased but not used. The introduction of Bugs onto a stamp was controversial at the time, as it was seen as a step toward the ‘commercialization’ of stamp art. The postal service rejected many designs and went with a postal-themed drawing. Avery Dennison printed the Bugs Bunny stamp sheet, which featured «a special ten-stamp design and was the first self-adhesive souvenir sheet issued by the U.S. Postal Service.»[54]

More Recent Years

A younger version of Bugs was the main character of Baby Looney Tunes, which debuted on Kids’ WB in 2002. In the action-comedy Loonatics Unleashed, his definite descendant Ace Bunny was the leader of the Loonatics team and seemed to have inherited his ancestor’s Brooklyn accent and comic wit.[55]

Bugs as he appears in The Looney Tunes Show

In 2011, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the Looney Tunes gang returned to television in the Cartoon Network sitcom, The Looney Tunes Show, with Jeff Bergman returning to voice both Bugs and Daffy Duck regularly for the first time since 1992’s «Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers». The characters feature new designs by artist Jessica Borutski. Among the changes to Bugs’ appearance were the simplification and enlargement of his feet, as well as a change to his fur from gray to a shade of mauve (though in the second season, his fur was changed back to gray).[56] In the series, Bugs and Daffy are portrayed as best friends as opposed to their usual pairing as rivals or frenemies. At the same time, Bugs is more openly annoyed at Daffy’s antics in the series (sometimes to the point of aggression), compared to his usual carefree personality from the original cartoons. Bugs and Daffy are close friends with Porky Pig in the series, although Bugs tends to be a more reliable friend to Porky than Daffy is. Bugs also dates Lola Bunny in the show, although at first, he finds her to be «crazy» and a bit too talkative (he later learns to accept her personality quirks, similar to his tolerance for Daffy). Unlike the original cartoons, Bugs lives in an upper-middle-class house, which he shares with Daffy, Taz (whom he treats as a pet dog) and Speedy Gonzales, in the middle of a cul-de-sac with their neighbors Yosemite Sam, Granny and Witch Lezah. According to the episode «Peel of Fortune», Bugs’ financial success comes from his invention of the carrot peeler.

In 2015, Bugs starred in the direct-to-video film Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run,[57] and later returned to television yet again as the star of Cartoon Network and Boomerang’s new comedy series New Looney Tunes, where he returned to his original trickster personality from the original shorts.[58][59]

In 2020, he began appearing in Looney Tunes Cartoons on HBO Max. In this series, he gives his name as Bugsworth, and his design primarily resembles his Bob Clampett days, complete with yellow gloves and his signature carrot and his personality is a combination of Freleng’s trickery, Clampett’s defiance, and Jones’ resilience while also maintaining his cool, self-assured, calm demeanor. Unlike most of his recent appearances where he is voiced by Bergman, he is voiced by Eric Bauza for the series.

It was announced 17 February 2021 that Bugs Bunny will star in Bugs Bunny Builders, a pre-school series that will air on Cartoon Network’s upcoming preschool block Cartoonito.[60]

Big Chungus

In December 2018, 77 years after the film’s release, a still from the 1941 short «Wabbit Twouble» depicting Bugs mocking Elmer by imitating his likeness became an Internet meme. The meme originated from fictitious cover art for a video game titled Big Chungus, with «chungus» being a neologism coined by video game journalist James Stephanie Sterling in 2012.

In April 2021, the character was added to the mobile game Looney Tunes World of Mayhem. “Big Chungus” was briefly featured in the 2021 film Space Jam A New Legacy; animator Matt Williames, who worked on the scene, was unaware of the meme until the film’s animation director Spike Brandt explained it to him.

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3D

Big-Chungus-Space-Jam-2

Appearances

Main article: List of Bugs Bunny cartoons

Personality & Catchphrases

«Some people call me cocky and brash, but actually I am just self-assured. I’m nonchalant, imperturbable, contemplative. I play it cool, but I can get hot under the collar. And above all I’m a very ‘aware’ character. I’m well aware that I am appearing in an animated cartoon… And sometimes I chomp on my carrot for the same reason that a stand-up comic chomps on his cigar. It saves me from rushing from the last joke to the next one too fast. And I sometimes don’t act, I react. And I always treat the contest with my pursuers as ‘fun and games.’ When momentarily I appear to be cornered or in dire danger, and I scream, don’t be consoined – it’s actually a big put-on. Let’s face it Doc. I’ve read the script, and I already know how it turns out. «

Bugs outsmarts Daffy and Elmer in «Rabbit Seasoning».

He is a tricky, charismatic, and shrewd rabbit. These personality traits are what gives him an advantage over his enemies, rivals, and opponents. He is also known for his famous catchphrase; «Eh, what’s up, doc?», which he typically uses as a greeting to anyone he encounters (usually while munching a carrot).
Bugs is characterized as being clever and capable of outsmarting anyone who antagonizes him, including Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Willoughby, Marvin the Martian, Beaky Buzzard, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, the Tasmanian Devil, Cecil Turtle, Witch Hazel, Rocky and Mugsy, Wile E. Coyote, The Crusher, The Gremlin, Count Bloodcount, and a whole bunch of others. Bugs almost always wins these contentions, a story pattern which recurs in Looney Tunes cartoons directed by Chuck Jones. Concerned that viewers would lose sympathy for an aggressive protagonist who always won, Jones arranged for Bugs to be bullied, cheated, or threatened by the antagonists while minding his own business, justifying his subsequent antics as retaliation or self-defense. As such, Jones’ «Hold the Lion, Please» was the first Bugs cartoon where Jones establishes said rule where Bugs must always be provoked as a justified reason to torment his antagonists. [61]

He’s also been known to break The 4th Wall by «communicating» with the audience, either by explaining the situation (e.g. «Be with you in a minute, folks.»), describing someone to the audience (e.g. «Feisty, ain’t they?»), clueing in on the story (e.g. «That happens to him all during the picture, folks.»), explaining that one of his antagonists’ actions have pushed him to the breaking point («Of course you know, this means war.»), admitting his own deviousness toward his antagonists («Gee, ain’t I a stinker?»), etc.

When Bugs made his appearance, he promptly replaced Daffy Duck as the most popular Warner Bros. character. Daffy, jealous of his cartoon counterpart’s ascension to fame, has on many occasions attempted to dethrone the rabbit. But he has never truly succeeded, always being outsmarted by the clever hare.

However, as time passed on, Bugs and Daffy’s rivalry has turned friendlier in nature as the two usually hang out together in most cartoons and Bugs considers Daffy his best friend despite his faults, to which Daffy says the same thing.

Bugs will usually try to placate the antagonist and avoid contention, but when a villain pushes him too far, Bugs may address the audience and invoke his catchphrase «Of course you realize this means war!» before he retaliates, and the retaliation will be devastating. This line was taken from Groucho Marx and others in the 1933 film Duck Soup and was also used in the 1935 Marx film A Night at the Opera.[62] Bugs would pay homage to Groucho in other ways, such as occasionally adopting his stooped walk or leering eyebrow-raising (in «Hair-Raising Hare», for example) or sometimes with a direct impersonation (as in «Slick Hare»).

Bugs about to give Yosemite Sam the shaft (in more ways than one) in «Bugs Bunny Rides Again»

Other directors, such as Friz Freleng, characterized Bugs as altruistic. When Bugs meets other successful characters (such as Cecil Turtle in «Tortoise Beats Hare», or, in World War II, the Gremlin of «Falling Hare»), his overconfidence becomes a disadvantage. Most of Bugs’ adversaries are extremely dim-witted, and Bugs is easily able to outwit and torment them, although on occasion they will manage to get the best of Bugs. Daffy Duck, who is arguably more intelligent but less clever, is unaffected by Bugs’ usual schemes, which usually results in the two trying to outsmart the other with Bugs always triumphing in the end. However, there are only four antagonists that successfully defeats Bugs in the end of the cartoon, Cecil Turtle, the Gremlin from Falling Hare, the unnamed mouse from «Rhapsody Rabbit», and the fly from «Baton Bunny».

During the 1940s, Bugs started off childish and wild (similar to Daffy), but by the 1950s his personality matured and his attitude became more refined and less frenetic. Although often shown as highly ingenious, Bugs is never actually malicious, and only acts as such in self-defense against his aggressors.

The only exceptions where Bugs ever serves as an antagonist are the following: «Elmer’s Pet Rabbit», «Wabbit Twouble», «The Wacky Wabbit», «Buckaroo Bugs», and «Duck Amuck»; Elmer’s Pet Rabbit depicts him completely out-of-character with a more unfriendly, ungenerous, cocky, almost thuggish personality. «Wabbit Twouble» and «The Wacky Wabbit» depict him as a prankster harassing Elmer Fudd in the vein of early Daffy Duck/Porky Pig cartoons featuring the screwball Daffy as the tormentor. «Buckaroo Bugs» depicts him as a true villain, while «Duck Amuck» depicts him as far more sadistic than usual, as he becomes an animator and uses his newfound powers to torment Daffy.

Bugs Bunny’s nonchalant carrot-chewing standing position, as explained by Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, and Bob Clampett, originated in a scene in the 1934 film It Happened One Night, in which Clark Gable’s character leans against a fence, eating carrots quickly and impolitely talking with his mouth full to Claudette Colbert’s character. This scene was well known while the film was popular, and viewers at the time likely recognized Bugs Bunny’s behavior as irony.

«‘What’s up Doc?’ is a very simple thing. It’s only funny because it’s in a situation. It was an all Bugs Bunny line. It wasn’t funny. If you put it in human terms; you come home late one night from work, you walk up to the gate in the yard, you walk through the gate and up into the front room, the door is partly open and there’s some guy shooting under your living room. So what do you do? You run if you have any sense, the least you can do is call the cops. But what if you come up and tap him on the shoulder and look over and say ‘What’s up Doc?’ You’re interested in what he’s doing. That’s ridiculous. That’s not what you say at a time like that. So that’s why it’s funny, I think. In other words, it’s asking a perfectly legitimate question in a perfectly illogical situation.»«

The carrot-chewing scenes are generally followed by Bugs Bunny’s most well-known catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?», which was written by director Tex Avery for his first Bugs Bunny short, 1940’s «A Wild Hare». Avery explained later that it was a common expression in his native Texas and that he did not think much of the phrase. When the short was first screened in theaters, the «What’s up, Doc?» scene generated a tremendously positive audience reaction. As a result, the scene became a recurring element in subsequent films and cartoons. The phrase was sometimes modified for a situation. For example, Bugs says «What’s up, dogs?» to the antagonists in A Hare Grows in Manhattan, «What’s up, Duke?» to the knight in «Knight-Mare Hare» and «What’s up, prune-face?» to the aged Elmer in «The Old Grey Hare». He might also greet Daffy with «What’s up, Duck?» He used one variation, «What’s all the hub-bub, bub?» only once, in Falling Hare. Another variation is used in Looney Tunes Back in Action when he greets a bubble gun-yielding Marvin The Martian saying «What’s up, Darth?» (a reference to Darth Vader from the Star Wars film series).

Bugs faces off with Toro in «Bully for Bugs».

Several Chuck Jones shorts in the late 1940s and 1950s depict Bugs traveling via cross-country (and, in some cases, intercontinental) tunnel-digging, ending up in places as varied as Mexico («Bully for Bugs»), The Himalayas («The Abominable Snow Rabbit») and Antarctica («Frigid Hare») all because he «shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.» He first utters that phrase in 1945’s «Herr Meets Hare», when he emerges in the Black Forest, a cartoon seldom seen today due to its blatantly topical subject matter. When Hermann Göring says to Bugs, «Zair is no Las Vegas in Chermany» and takes a potshot at Bugs, Bugs dives into his hole and says, «Joimany? YIPE!», as Bugs realizes he’s behind enemy lines. The confused response to his «left toin» comment also followed a pattern. For example, when he tunnels into Scotland in «My Bunny Lies over the Sea», while thinking he’s heading for the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, California, it provides another chance for an ethnic stereotype: «Therrre’s no La Brrrea Tarrr Pits in Scotland!» (to which Bugs responds, «Uh…what’s up, Mac-doc?»). A couple of late-1950s/early 1960s shorts of this ilk also featured Daffy Duck travelling with Bugs («Since when is Pismo Beach inside a cave?!»).

Bugs revealed as the unseen animator in «Duck Amuck»

Bugs Bunny has some similarities to figures from mythology and folklore, such as Br’er Rabbit, Nanabozho, or Anansi, and might be seen as a modern trickster (for example, he repeatedly uses cross-dressing mischievously). Unlike most cartoon characters, however, Bugs Bunny is rarely defeated in his own games of trickery. One exception to this is the short «Hare Brush», in which Elmer Fudd ultimately carries the day at the end; however, critics note that in this short, Elmer and Bugs assume each other’s personalities—through mental illness and hypnosis, respectively—and it is only by becoming Bugs that Elmer can win. However, Bugs was beaten at his own game. In the short «Duck Amuck» he torments Daffy Duck as the unseen animator, ending with his line, «Ain’t I a stinker?» Bugs feels the same wrath of an unseen animator in the short «Rabbit Rampage» where he is in turn tormented by Elmer Fudd. At the end of the clip Elmer gleefully exclaims, ‘Well, I finally got even with that scwewy wabbit!»

Bugs wears white gloves, which he is rarely seen without, although he may remove one and use it for slapping an opponent to predicate a duel. Another glove-less example is «Long-Haired Hare», where Bugs pretends to be the famed conductor Leopold Stokowski and instructs opera star «Giovanni Jones» to sing and to hold a high note. As Giovanni Jones is turning red with the strain, Bugs slips his left hand out of its glove, leaving the glove hovering in the air in order to command Jones to continue to hold the high note. Bugs then nips down to the mail drop to order, and then to receive, a pair of ear defenders. Bugs puts on the ear defenders and then zips back into the amphitheater and reinserts his hand into his glove as singer Jones is writhing on the stage, still holding that same high note.

Bugs uses disguise to fool Elmer in «What’s Opera, Doc?»

Bugs Bunny is also a master of disguise: he can wear any disguise that he wants to confuse his enemies: in «Bowery Bugs» he uses diverse disguises: fakir, gentleman, woman, baker and finally policeman. This ability of disguise makes Bugs famous because we can recognize him while at the same time realizing that his enemies are stumped. Bugs has a certain preference for the female disguise: Taz, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam were fooled by this sexy bunny (woman) and in «Hare Trimmed», Sam discovers the real face of «Granny» (Bugs’s disguise) in the church where they attempt to get married. Bugs dressed as a female hunter, a temptress, the beautiful Brunhlide, a sexy lady and many others to fool Elmer Fudd and he also kissed him in his nose twice (Bugs and Elmer also happily got married in the end of «Rabbit of Seville» [Elmer as the bride and Bugs as the groom], as well as in «Bugs’ Bonnets»). For all the gullible victims off all these disguises, however, for some reason, Daffy Duck and Cecil Turtle were among those who are never fooled.

Bugs Bunny may also have some mystical potential. In «Knight-Mare Hare» he was able to return to his bunny form (after being transformed into a donkey) by removing his donkey form as if it were a suit. Merlin of Monroe (the wizard) was unable to do the same thing. In «Transylvania 6-5000», Bugs Bunny defeated the Count Blood Count in a magical spell duel. However, the Merlin story was a dream and Bugs’ victory over Count Blood Count was a result of his intellect, not innate magical power.

Rabbit or Hare?

The animators throughout Bugs’ history have treated the terms rabbit and hare as synonymous. Taxonomically, they are not synonymous, being somewhat similar but observably different types of lagomorphs. Hares have much longer ears than rabbits, so Bugs might seem to be of the hare family, yet rabbits live in burrows, as Bugs is seen to do. Many more of the cartoon titles include the word «hare» rather than «rabbit,» as «hare» lends itself easily to puns («hair,» «air,» etc.).

Within the cartoons, although the term «hare» comes up sometimes, again typically as a pun—-for example, Bugs drinking «hare tonic» to «stop falling hare» or being doused with «hare restorer» to bring him back from invisibility—-Bugs as well as his antagonists most often refer to the character as a «rabbit.» The word «bunny» is of no help in answering this question, as it is a synonym for both young hares and young rabbits. Coney is yet another term for rabbit, explaining Bugs’ frequent fondness for Coney Island.

In Nike commercials with Michael Jordan, Bugs is referred to as «Hare Jordan.»

Openings & Closings of Shorts

Bugs (standing in for Porky) in the closing to «Hare Tonic» and «Baseball Bugs»

In the opening of many of the Bugs Bunny cartoons, the Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes irises contain Bugs Bunny’s head after the Warner Bros. shield (generally from 1944 to 1945 and 1949 onward). Others have Bugs Bunny relaxing on top of the Warner Bros. shield: He chews on his carrot, looks angrily at the camera and pulls down the next logo (Merrie Melodies or Looney Tunes) like a window shade (generally on cartoons between 1945 until early 1949). Then he lifts it back up, to now be seen lying on his own name, which then fades into the title of the specific short. In some other cases, the title card sometimes fades to him, already on his name and chewing his carrot then fade to the name of the short.

At the finish of «Hare Tonic» and «Baseball Bugs», Bugs breaks out of a drum (like Porky Pig) and says, «And dat’s de end». Also, at the end of «Box Office Bunny», right after Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd run out through the «That’s All Folks!» sequence, Bugs later comes in through the rings and says, «And that’s all, folks!». He did the ending for the last time at the end of Space Jam, but this time saying «Well, that’s all, folks!».

Some old, damaged TV prints of pre-1948 shorts such as «The Up-Standing Sitter» had a print where Bugs Bunny came out of the drum, with the 1937-38 Merrie Melodies closing music, he didn’t say anything albeit his mouth still moves (due to the dubbing over of the audio) and the music did not even finish.

Voice Actors

  • Mel Blanc — 1938 («Porky’s Hare Hunt») – 1989 (Bugs Bunny’s Wild World of Sports)
  • Jeff Bergman — Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue, Tiny Toon Adventures (Season 1-2), «Box Office Bunny», «(Blooper) Bunny», «Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers», «Pride of the Martians» (CN commercial), Satuday Night Live (Season 28, Ep. 14), The Looney Tunes Show, Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run, New Looney Tunes, Space Jam A New Legacy[63], video games
  • Greg Burson — Tiny Toon Adventures (Season 2-3), Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, «Carrotblanca», «From Hare to Eternity»
  • Billy West — Space Jam, Histeria!, Looney Tunes: Reality Check, Looney Tunes: Stranger Than Fiction, Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, video games
  • Joe Alaskey — «Chasers Anonymous» (CN commercial), Tweety’s High-Flying Adventure, Looney Tunes Back in Action, «Hare and Loathing in Las Vegas», «Daffy Duck for President», Looney Tunes ClickN Read Phonics, video games
  • Samuel Vincent — Baby Looney Tunes
  • Eric Bauza — Looney Tunes World of Mayhem, Looney Tunes Cartoons
  • Daws Butler — «Wideo Wabbit» (celebrity impressions)
  • Mendi SegalBugs & Friends Sing The Beatles[64]
  • Keith Scott — Australian Looney Tunes commercials[65]
  • Eric Goldberg — Looney Tunes Back in Action (one line)[66]

The BIGGEST LOONEY TUNES COMPILATION Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and more! Cartoons for Children — HD

See Also

  • Looney Tunes
  • Merrie Melodies
  • List of Bugs Bunny cartoons

Gallery

Main article: Bugs Bunny/Gallery

References

  1. https://mobile.twitter.com/bauzilla/status/1006414336435376128
  2. Bugs Bunny: The Trickster, American Style. Weekend Edition Sunday. NPR (6 January 2008). Retrieved on 2011-04-10.
  3. Mel Blanc. Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved on 2013-02-05.
  4. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeAM1vwEcFg
  5. Joe Adamson (1990), Bugs Bunny: 50 Years and Only One Grey Hare, Henry Holt & Co. ISBN 0805011900
  6. 6.0 6.1 Most Portrayed Character in Film (May 2011). Archived from the original on February 4, 2012.
  7. Bugs Bunny. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved on 28 June 2012.
  8. «Bugs Bunny tops greatest cartoon characters list», CNN.com, 2002-07-30. Retrieved on 2008-02-27. 
  9. «List of All-time Cartoon Characters», CNN.com, CNN, July 30, 2002. Retrieved on April 11, 2007. 
  10. «CNN LIVE TODAY: ‘TV Guide’ Tipping Hat to Cartoon Characters», CNN.com, CNN, July 31, 2002. Retrieved on April 11, 2007. 
  11. Chase Craig recollections of «Michael Maltese,» Chase Craig Collection, CSUN
  12. bp2.blogger.com
  13. Bugs Bunny. Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica.com. Retrieved on 2009-09-20.
  14. Barrier (2003), p. 359-362
  15. Leading the Animation Conversation » Rare 1939 Looney Tunes Book found!. Cartoon Brew (2008-04-03). Retrieved on 2009-09-20.
  16. http://mfoxweb-001-site22.mysitepanel.net/viewtopic.php?t=2673
  17. https://archive.org/details/junebugs632001/4.+June+Bugs+(6-3-2001%2C+3%3B00AM).mp4
  18. https://archive.org/details/june-bugs-marathon-06-21-1998-part-2
  19. http://chomikuj.pl/bartnicki2/Dla+dzieci/Kr*c3*b3lik+Bugs+*5bBugs+Bunny*5d/1939/Bugs+Bunny+-+Prest-O+Change-O,373008129.mpg(video)
  20. Michael Barrier (2003), Hollywood Cartoons: American Animation in Its Golden Age, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516729-0
  21. Adamson, Joe (1975). Tex Avery: King of Cartoons. New York City: De Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80248-1. 
  22. 1940 academy awards. Retrieved on 2007-09-20.
  23. 1941 academy awards. Retrieved on 2013-02-10.
  24. Globat Login.
  25. Lehman, Christopher P. (2008). The Colored Cartoon: Black Representation in American Animated Short Films, 1907–1954. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press, page 73. ISBN 978-1-55849-613-2. Retrieved on 2009-02-25. 
  26. Globat Login.
  27. «Warner Bros. Studio biography». AnimationUSA.com. Retrieved July 22, 2008.
  28. Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips at BCDB
  29. «Herr Meets Hare», BCDB, 2013-01-10. 
  30. Audio commentary by Paul Dini for «Super-Rabbit» on the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 3 (2005).
  31. History of the 380th Bomb Group. 380th.org. Retrieved on 2010-01-07.
  32. Jasper Goes Hunting information. Bcdb.com. Retrieved on 2009-09-20.
  33. 1958 academy awards. Retrieved on 2007-09-20.
  34. Michael Barrier’s commentary for Disc One of Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 1 (2005).
  35. Complete National Film Registry Listing — National Film Preservation Board.
  36. «Archived copy. Archived from the original on 2010-12-02. Retrieved on 2010-11-12.» Looney Tunes on Television. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  37. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074283
  38. You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story (2008), p. 255.
  39. WB retained a pair of features from 1949 that they merely distributed, and all short subjects released on or after September 1, 1948; in addition to all cartoons released in August 1948.
  40. «Cartoon special: Congressmen treated to preview of program to air on network, independent and cable outlets.», The Los Angeles Times, 1990-04-19. Retrieved on 2010-08-24. 
  41. Bernstein, Sharon. «Children’s TV: On Saturday, networks will simulcast ‘Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue,’ an animated feature on drug abuse.», The Los Angeles Times, 1990-04-20. Retrieved on 2010-08-24. 
  42. «Hollywood and Networks Fight Drugs With Cartoon», New York Times, 1990-04-21. Retrieved on 2010-08-29. 
  43. Karmatoons — What I have Done.
  44. Knight, Richard. Consider the Source. Chicagoreader.com. Retrieved on 2009-09-20.
  45. IMDB article on (Blooper) Bunny
  46. Ford, Greg. Audio commentary for (Blooper) Bunny on Disc One of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volume 1.
  47. Space Jam. Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved on 2011-12-02.
  48. McCarthy, Todd (1996-11-17). Space Jam. Variety. Reed Business Information. Retrieved on 2011-12-02.
  49. Space Jam (1996). Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2011-12-02.
  50. Beck, Jerry (2005). The Animated Movie Guide. 
  51. Looney Tunes: Back in Action. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2008-01-29.
  52. Looney Tunes: Back in Action Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More. Metacritic. Retrieved on 2008-01-29.
  53. «Looney Tunes: Back in Action :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews», Rogerebert.suntimes.com, 2003-11-14. Retrieved on October 29, 2012. 
  54. Looney Tunes: Bugs Bunny stamp. National Postal Museum Smithsonian.
  55. George Gene Gustines. «It’s 2772. Who Loves Ya, Tech E. Coyote?», The New York Times, 2005-06-06. Retrieved on 2010-10-30. 
  56. Yes!! I can finally Blog about my Redesign of «The Looney Tunes Show» — Jessica Borutski
  57. Bugs Bunny to Return in Direct-to-Video ‘Rabbits Run’. Cartoon Brew (May 5, 2015). Retrieved on May 5, 2015.
  58. Steinberg, Brian. «Cartoon Network To Launch First Mini-Series, New Takes on Tom & Jerry, Bugs Bunny», Variety.com, Variety Media, LLC, March 10, 2014. Retrieved on March 13, 2014. 
  59. Steinberg, Brian (29 June 2015). Bugs Bunny, Scooby-Doo Return in New Shows to Boost Boomerang.
  60. https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/warnermedia-cartoonito-preschool-viewers-kids-advertising-1234909447/
  61. https://archive.org/details/junebugs632001/4.+June+Bugs+(6-3-2001%2C+3%3B00AM).mp4
  62. Transcript of Duck Soup. Script-o-rama.com. Retrieved on 2009-09-20.
  63. https://www.seventeen.com/celebrity/movies-tv/a36029424/zendaya-voicing-lola-bunny-space-jam-a-new-legacy/
  64. https://www.discogs.com/Bugs-Friends-Sing-The-Beatles/release/1883442
  65. http://www.keithscott.com/bio.html
  66. http://mfoxweb-001-site22.mysitepanel.net/viewtopic.php?t=12101
Characters
Major Characters
Barnyard Dawg • Beaky Buzzard • Bosko • Bugs Bunny • Cecil Turtle • Charlie Dog • Claude Cat • Daffy Duck • Elmer Fudd • Foghorn Leghorn • Gossamer • Granny • Hector the Bulldog • Henery Hawk • Hippety Hopper • Hubie and Bertie • Lola Bunny • Goofy Gophers • Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot • Marvin the Martian • Michigan J. Frog • Miss Prissy • Penelope Pussycat • Pepé Le Pew • Pete Puma • Porky Pig • Ralph Wolf • Road Runner • Sam Sheepdog •. Sniffles • Speedy Gonzales • Sylvester • Sylvester Jr. • Taz • Tweety • Wile E. Coyote • Witch Hazel • Yosemite Sam
Secondary Characters
Blacque Jacque Shellacque • The Crusher • Carl the Grim Rabbit • Giovanni Jones • Yoyo Dodo • Tasmanian She-Devil • Melissa Duck • Hugo the Abominable Snowman • Spike and Chester • Nasty Canasta • The Gremlin • Private Snafu • Petunia Pig • Playboy Penguin • Shropshire Slasher • Count Bloodcount • Mama Buzzard • Colonel Shuffle • Egghead Jr. • Owl Jolson • Toro the Bull • Rocky and Mugsy • Minah Bird • Inki • Beans • Little Kitty • Ham and Ex • Oliver Owl • Piggy • Gabby Goat • Buddy • Honey • Slowpoke Rodriguez • The Three Bears • Foxy • K-9 • A. Flea • Construction Worker • Frisky Puppy • Ralph Mouse • Honey Bunny • Roxy • The Martin Brothers • Ralph Phillips • Clyde Bunny • Fauntleroy Flip • Dr. I.Q. Hi • Gruesome Gorilla • Sloppy Moe • Hatta Mari • The Weasel • Wiloughby • The Two Curious Puppies • Cool Cat • Babbit and Catstello • Instant Martians • Bobo the Elephant • Colonel Rimfire • Smokey the Genie • Jose and Manuel • Merlin the Magic Mouse • Conrad the Cat • Angus MacRory • Banty Rooster • Thes • Shameless O’Scanty • Three Little Pigs • Tom Turkey • Goopy Geer • Nelly the Giraffe • Ala Bahma • Dr. Lorre • Cottontail Smith • Bunny and Claude • Claude Hopper • The Hep Cat • The Drunk Stork

48 параллельный перевод

And you’re Bugs Bunny.

А ты как Багс Банни.

She learned life from Bugs Bunny.

Её учил жить Багс Банни.

We call him Doc sometimes, like in the Bugs Bunny cartoons.

Иногда мы называем его «Док», как в мультиках про Багза Банни.

All your knowledge of high culture comes from Bugs Bunny cartoons.

Все твои познания о высокой культуре исходят из мультиков о кролике Багзе Банни.

I remember… when I was about five or six I was sexually attracted to Bugs Bunny.

Помню лет в пять или шесть… у меня было сексуальное влечение к Багзу Банни.

I cut out this Bugs Bunny off the cover of a comic book… and carried it around with me in my pocket… and took it out and looked at it periodically.

Я вырезал его из обложки комикса… и носил с собой в кармане… периодически доставал и смотрел на него.

What was it about Bugs Bunny that you found exciting?

А что вас так возбуждало в Багзе Банни?

Like the cartoon where Bugs Bunny plays every position.

Как в мультике про Багс Баннн, где он играл за всех игроков сразу.

A crazy person will beat nine people to death with a steel dildo but he’ll be wearing a Bugs Bunny suit at the time.

Сумасшедший забьёт насмерть 9 человек с помощью стального дилдо но он будет в костюме Багза Банни в этот момент.

They played Bugs Bunny cartoons before the movie started.

Перед фильмом был мультик про Багса Банни.

We’re obviously looking for a psycho Bugs Bunny!

Ясно, что мы ищем сумасшедшего кролика Банни Багза!

That type of thing, like Tweety Bird or Bugs Bunny or something like that.

Сверху рисуешь Микки Мауса или Багса Банни какого-нибудь. — Или Югио.

Do I look like fucking Bugs Bunny?

Я что, блядь, похож на Багса Банни?

And the same could be said of Bugs Bunny and Superman and Harry Potter.

И то же самое можно сказать и о Bugs Bunny и Супермене и Гарри Поттере.

Ray, get rid of Bugs Bunny and roll your sleeve down.

Рей, оставь в покое Кролика и опусти рукава.

You’re always quick to judge us as you strut around in your goddamn Bugs Bunny ties!

Вечно читаете ваши наставления… А сами дрожите над вашими вонючими красными галстуками с Багз Банни…

I’ll be the guy wearing the Bugs Bunny tie. — Ha!

Я завтра буду в галстуке с Багсом Банни

Believe it or not, bugs bunny.

Хочешь, верь, хочешь — нет, Кролик Банни.

It was like Bugs Bunny getting shot in the face funny.

Это было также смешно как Багз Банни получает пулю в его фейс. Только в твоей версии

Only in your version, Bugs Bunny tries to have a dialogue with the shotgun.

Багз Банни пытался сначала разговаривать с дробовиком.

It was hysterical when Bugs Bunny did it.

Когда так говорил Баггз Банни, это была умора.

I grew up on Bugs Bunny, and I’ve survived relatively intact.

Я вырос на «Багз Банни» и ничуть не пострадал.

I got him the kind with tops on them, like Bugs Bunny.

Я купила ему те, что с верхушками, как у Бакса Банни.

Bugs Bunny status, like I know you like.

Багзу Банни нравится, и тебе должно нравиться.

Because Bugs Bunny hasn’t RSVP’d yet.

Потому что Багз Банни еще пока не принял приглашение.

I mean, the whole heart jumping out of the guy’s chest, the — — the — — the delayed fall — — that’s straight-up Bugs Bunny.

Я имею в виду, у парня выскочило сердце, задержка падения, это больше похоже на Бакса Банни.

You know, Bugs Bunny, Yosemite Sam.

Ну там, Багз Банни, Йосемити Сэм.

Nice kid, but she can’t draw for crap. I mean, she just traced Bugs Bunny.

Она милая, но совсем не умеет рисовать вот и обвела Багз Банни по контуру.

I know this music. It was a Bugs Bunny!

я знаю эту песню это был багз банни!

Then I guess we’ll have to sit down, watch Bugs Bunny, and order a pizza.

Тогда нам лучше сесть, посмотреть Багз Банни и заказать пиццу.

Like some big, hairless, albino Bugs Bunny.

На такого большого, лысого альбиноса Баггса Банни.

Bugs Bunny’s the bomb.

Баггс Банни рулит.

That would really confuse Bugs Bunny.

Это бы очень смутило Багза Банни.

That is so Bugs Bunny.

Да ты блять Багз Банни.

To me, this was all just a bit, like when bugs bunny [beep] with the opera singer for 20 minutes.

Для меня это как мультфильм, в котором Багс Банни трахает оперную певицу.

Cam, I’m an attorney, not Bugs Bunny trying to hide on a train.

Кэм, я адвокат, а не Багс Банни, пытающийся спрятаться в поезде.

Bugs bunny should have taken a left turn there.

Багз Банни должен был свернуть здесь налево.

You know, like, uh, Bugs Bunny and the Road Runner, you know?

Ну знаешь, там где Багз Банни и Роуд Раннер?

♪ To Bugs Bunny by Elmer Fudd.

С Багзом Банни проделать охотник…

And risk these boys falling down the Bugs Bunny rabbit hole when they’re supposed to be getting their reading minutes?

Зачем, чтобы мальчики залипли перед ним, когда им полагается собираться в школу?

Early Bugs Bunny cartoons were just garish displays of anti-Japanese hysteria, and now he’s the face of Warner Bros.

Первые серии «Багз Бани» были антияпонским пропагандистским китчем, а сейчас это лицо «Уорнер Бразерз».

Bugs Bunny holding a stick of dynamite.

Багс Банни с динамитной шашкой.

— Hey, you know, I’m making a movie with Bugs Bunny…

— Эй, а знаешь, меня взяли в фильм с Багсом Банни…

— very sly. — It’s a little trick I picked up from the original bad boy… a Mr. Bugs bunny.

– Этой уловке я научился у самого известного плохого парня… мистера Багза Банни.

You prefer bugs the badge bunny?

Ты предпочитаешь «Киска Банни»?

Do you remember Bugs, the bunny mom and dad got me to make me stop whooping?

Помнишь Багза, кролика, которого мама с папой подарили мне, чтобы я перестал выкрикивать?

If you put water in Bugs Bunny’s hole, it’s gonna shoot out some other hole where Elmer Fudd least expects it. Is this other hole friendship? Exactly.

Эта другая нора — дружба? поэтому нужно воспользоваться норкойдружбы.

  • перевод на «bugs bunny» турецкий

Bugs Bunny is an animated cartoon character. He is best known for his starring roles in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of theatrical short films produced by Warner Bros. during the Golden Age of American Animation. His popularity during this era led to his becoming an American cultural icon, as well as a corporate mascot of the Warner Bros. company.[2] He was originally voiced by Mel Blanc, but is now voiced by a variety of voice actors.[3]

Bugs is an anthropomorphic gray hare famous for his relaxed, passive personality, his pronounced Mid-Atlantic accent which Blanc described as being a mixture of Brooklyn and Bronx accents,[4] his depiction as a mischievous trickster, and his catchphrase «Eh, what’s up, doc?» usually said while chewing a carrot.

Since his official debut in 1940’s «A Wild Hare»,[5] Bugs has appeared in various short films, feature films, compilations, television series, music records, comic books, video games, award shows, amusement park rides, and commercials. He has also appeared in more films, short and feature length, than any other cartoon character,[6] is the ninth most-portrayed film personality in the world,[6] and has his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[7]

When TV Guide compiled a list of the fifty greatest cartoon characters of all time as part of the magazine’s 50th anniversary in 2002, Bugs Bunny was given the honor of Number One.[8][9] In a CNN broadcast, a TV Guide editor talked about the group that created the list. The editor also explained why Bugs pulled top billing: «His stock…has never gone down…Bugs is the best example…of the smart-aleck American comic. He not only is a great cartoon character, he’s a great comedian. He was written well. He was drawn beautifully. He has thrilled and made many generations laugh. He is tops.»[10]

History

Bugs’ Precursor

Bugs’ evolution from Happy Rabbit to the present

According to Chase Craig, who was a member of Tex Avery’s cartoon unit and later wrote and drew the first Bugs Bunny comic Sunday pages and Bugs’ first comic book; «Bugs was not the creation of any one man but rather represented the creative talents of perhaps five or six directors and many cartoon writers. In those days, the stories were often the work of a group who suggested various gags, bounced them around and finalized them in a joint story conference.»[11]
Happy Rabbit, a hare with some of the personality of Bugs (though looking very different), made his first appearance in the cartoon short «Porky’s Hare Hunt», released 30 April 1938. Co-directed by Ben Hardaway and an uncredited Cal Dalton (who was responsible for the initial design of the rabbit), this short has an almost identical plot to Tex Avery’s «Porky’s Duck Hunt», which had introduced Daffy Duck. «Hare Hunt» replaced the little black duck with a small white rabbit. Porky Pig was again cast as a hunter tracking a silly prey who is more interested in driving his pursuer insane and less interested in escaping. Happy introduced himself with the odd expression «Jiggers, fellers,» and Mel Blanc gave the character a voice and laugh much like those he would later use for Woody Woodpecker. «Hare Hunt» also gave Happy the famous Groucho Marx line, «Of course you realize, this means war!» The rabbit character was popular enough with audiences that the Termite Terrace staff decided to use it again.[12][13] According to Friz Freleng, Hardaway and Dalton had decided to dress the duck in a rabbit suit. The white rabbit had an oval head and a shapeless body. In characterization, he was «a rural buffoon». He was loud, zany with a goofy, guttural laugh. Blanc provided him with a hayseed voice.[14]

Happy returned in the short «Prest-O Change-O», directed by Chuck Jones, where he is the pet rabbit of unseen character Sham-Fu The Magician. Two dogs, fleeing the local dogcatcher, enter his absent master’s house. Happy harasses them but is ultimately bested by the bigger of the two dogs.

Happy’s third appearance came in «Hare-um Scare-um», once again directed by Hardaway and Dalton. This short (the first in which he is depicted as a gray bunny instead of a white one) is also notable as Happy’s first singing role. Charlie Thorson, lead animator on the short, gave the character a different name. He had written «Bugs’ Bunny» on the model sheet that he drew for Hardaway. In promotional material for the short, including a surviving 1939 press kit, the name on the model sheet was altered to become the rabbit’s own name: «Bugs» Bunny (quotation marks only used, on and off, until 1944).[15]

In Chuck Jones’ «Elmer’s Candid Camera», Happy met Elmer Fudd for the first time. In this cartoon, Happy looked more like the present-day Bugs, taller and with a similar face—-but retaining the more primitive voice. Elmer’s character design was also different: fatter and taller than the modern model, although Arthur Q. Bryan’s character voice was already established.

In recent years, many animation historians identify these Happy Rabbit cartoons as Bugs Bunny’s early cartoons before he reaches his fame in «A Wild Hare», as evident in documentaries such as The Wabbit Turns 50 from WWOR in 1990. [16] Even Cartoon Network’s June Bugs marathons over the years acknlowledges this by airing the Happy Rabbit cartoons alongside all the other Bugs Bunny cartoons, possibly indicating that both Bugs Bunny and Happy Rabbit are one of the same rabbit. [17][18][19]

Bugs’ Official Debut

Bugs emerges (literally) for the first time in «A Wild Hare».

«A Wild Hare», directed by Tex Avery and released 27 July 1940, is widely considered to be the first official Bugs Bunny cartoon.[20] It is the first film where both Elmer Fudd and Bugs, both redesigned by Bob Givens, are shown in their fully developed forms as hunter and tormentor, respectively; the first in which Mel Blanc uses what would become Bugs’ standard voice; and the first in which Bugs uses his catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?»[21] A Wild Hare was a huge success in theaters and received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cartoon Short Subject.[22]

Immediately following «A Wild Hare», Bob Clampett’s «Patient Porky» featured a cameo appearance by Bugs, announcing to the audience that 750 rabbits have been born. The gag uses Bugs’ «Wild Hare» visual design, but his goofier pre-«Wild Hare» voice characterization.

The second full-fledged role for the mature Bugs, Chuck Jones’ «Elmer’s Pet Rabbit», was the first to use the name Bugs Bunny on-screen: it appears in a title card, «featuring Bugs Bunny,» at the start of the short (which was edited in following the success of «A Wild Hare»). However, Bugs’ voice in this cartoon is significantly different, and his design was slightly altered as well. After «Pet Rabbit», however, subsequent Bugs appearances returned to normal: the «Wild Hare» visual design and personality returned, and Blanc reused the «Wild Hare» voice characterization.

The name «Bugs» or «Bugsy» as an old-fashioned nickname means «crazy» (or «loopy»). Several famous people from the first half of the twentieth century had that nickname, like famous gangster, Benjamin «Bugsy» Siegel, who disliked the nickname. It is now out of fashion as a nickname, but survives in 1950’s–1960’s expressions like «you’re bugging me», as in «you’re driving me crazy».

«Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt», directed by Friz Freleng, became the second Bugs Bunny cartoon to receive an Academy Award nomination.[23] The fact that it didn’t win the award was later spoofed somewhat in «What’s Cookin’ Doc?», in which Bugs demands a recount after losing the Oscar to James Cagney and presents a clip from «Hiawatha’s Rabbit Hunt» to prove his point.[24]

World War II

By 1942, Bugs had become the number one star of Merrie Melodies. The series was originally intended only for one-shot characters in films after several early attempts to introduce characters (Foxy, Goopy Geer, and Piggy) failed under Harman–Ising. By the mid-1930s, under Leon Schlesinger, Merrie Melodies started introducing newer characters. «Bugs Bunny Gets the Boid» shows a slight redesign of Bugs, with less-prominent front teeth and a rounder head. The character was reworked by Robert McKimson, then an animator in Bob Clampett’s unit. The redesign at first was only used in the films created by Clampett’s unit, but in time it would be taken up by the other directors, with Friz Freleng and Frank Tashlin the first. When McKimson was himself promoted to director, he created yet another version, with more slanted eyes, longer teeth and a much larger mouth. He used this version until 1949 (as did Art Davis for the one Bugs Bunny film he directed) when he started using the version he had designed for Clampett. Chuck Jones would come up with his own slight modification, and the voice had slight variations between the units. Bugs also made cameos in Tex Avery’s final Warner Bros. cartoon, «Crazy Cruise».[25]

Since Bugs’ debut in «A Wild Hare», he appeared only in color Merrie Melodies films (making him one of the few recurring characters created for that series in the Schlesinger era prior to the full conversion to color), alongside Elmer predecessor Egghead, Inki, Sniffles, and Elmer himself. While Bugs made a cameo in «Porky Pig’s Feat», this was his only appearance in a black-and-white Looney Tunes film. He did not star in a Looney Tunes film until that series made its complete conversion to only color cartoons beginning in 1944. «Buckaroo Bugs» was Bugs’ first film in the Looney Tunes series and was also the last Warner Bros. cartoon to credit Schlesinger (as he had retired and sold his studio to Warner Bros. that year).[26]

Bugs’ popularity soared during World War II because of his free and easy attitude, and he began receiving special star billing in his cartoons by 1943. By that time, Warner Bros. had become the most profitable cartoon studio in the United States.[27] In company with cartoon studios such as Disney and Famous Studios, Warners pitted its characters against Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Francisco Franco, and the Japanese. «Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips» features Bugs at odds with a group of Japanese soldiers. This cartoon has since been pulled from distribution due to its depiction of Japanese people.[28] He also faces off against Hermann Göring and Hitler in «Herr Meets Hare», which introduced his well-known reference to Albuquerque as he mistakenly winds up in the Black Forest of ‘Joimany’ instead of Las Vegas.[29] Bugs also appeared in the 1942 two-minute U.S. war bonds commercial film «Any Bonds Today?», along with Porky and Elmer.

Bugs, Porky and Elmer in Any Bonds Today?

At the end of «Super-Rabbit», Bugs appears wearing a United States Marine Corps dress blue uniform. As a result, the Marine Corps made Bugs an honorary Marine Master Sergeant.[30] From 1943 to 1946, Bugs was the official mascot of Kingman Army Airfield, Kingman, Arizona, where thousands of aerial gunners were trained during World War II. Some notable trainees included Clark Gable and Charles Bronson. Bugs also served as the mascot for 530 Squadron of the 380th Bombardment Group, 5th Air Force, U.S. Air Force, which was attached to the Royal Australian Air Force and operated out of Australia’s Northern Territory from 1943 to 1945, flying B-24 Liberator bombers.[31] Bugs riding an air delivered torpedo served as the squadron logo for Marine Torpedo/Bomber Squadron 242 in the Second World War. Additionally, Bugs appeared on the nose of B-24J #42-110157, in both the 855th Bomb Squadron of the 491st Bombardment Group (Heavy) and later in the 786th BS of the 466th BG(H), both being part of the 8th Air Force operating out of England.

In 1944, Bugs Bunny made a cameo appearance in «Jasper Goes Hunting», a Puppetoons film produced by rival studio Paramount Pictures. In this cameo, Bugs, after being threatened at gunpoint, pops out of a rabbit hole, saying his usual catchphrase; after hearing the orchestra play the wrong theme song, he realizes «Hey, I’m in the wrong picture!» and then goes back in the hole.[32] Bugs also made a cameo in the Private Snafu short «Gas», in which he is found stowed away in the titular private’s belongings; his only spoken line is his usual catchphrase.

The Postwar Era

After World War II, Bugs continued to appear in numerous Warner Bros. cartoons, making his last «Golden Age» appearance in 1964’s «False Hare». He starred in over 167 theatrical short films, most of which were directed by Friz Freleng, Robert McKimson and Chuck Jones. Freleng’s «Knighty Knight Bugs», in which a medieval Bugs trades blows with Yosemite Sam and his fire-breathing dragon (which has a cold), won an Oscar (becoming the first Bugs Bunny cartoon to win said award).[33] Three of Jones’ films — «Rabbit Fire», «Rabbit Seasoning», and «Duck! Rabbit, Duck!» — compose what is often referred to as the «Rabbit Season/Duck Season» trilogy and are famous for originating the «historic» rivalry between Bugs and Daffy Duck.[34] Jones’ classic «What’s Opera, Doc?», casts Bugs and Elmer Fudd in a parody of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen. It was deemed «culturally significant» by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1992, becoming the first cartoon short to receive this honor.[35]

Bugs and Daffy in the intro to The Bugs Bunny Show

In the fall of 1960, ABC debuted the prime-time television program The Bugs Bunny Show. This show packaged many of the post-1948 Looney Tunes shorts with newly animated wraparounds. After two seasons, it was moved from its evening slot to reruns on Saturday mornings. The Bugs Bunny Show changed format and exact title frequently but remained on network television for 40 years. The packaging was later completely different, with each short simply presented on its own, title and all, though some clips from the new bridging material were sometimes used as filler.[36]

After the Classic Cartoon Era

Bugs did not appear in any of the post-1964 Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies shorts produced by DePatie-Freleng Enterprises or Seven Arts Productions, nor did he appear in the lone Looney Tunes TV special produced by Filmation Associates. He would not appear in new material on-screen again until Bugs and Daffy’s Carnival of the Animals aired in 1976.[37]

From the late 1970s through the 1980s, Bugs was featured in various animated specials for network TV, such as Bugs Bunny’s Howl-oween Special, Bugs Bunny’s Looney Christmas Tales and Bugs Bunny’s Bustin’ Out All Over. Bugs also starred in the independently-produced documentary Bugs Bunny: Superstar during this time, as well as Warner Bros.’ various compilation films: The Bugs Bunny Road-Runner Movie, Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie, Bugs Bunny’s 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales and Daffy Duck’s Quackbusters.[38][39]

Bugs with his Disney rival Mickey Mouse in Who Framed Roger Rabbit

In the 1988 live-action/animated movie Who Framed Roger Rabbit (from executive producer Steven Spielberg), Bugs appeared as one of the inhabitants of Toontown. However, since the film was being produced by Disney, Warner Bros. would only allow the use of their biggest star if he got an equal amount of screen time as Disney’s biggest star, Mickey Mouse. Because of this, both characters are always together in frame when onscreen.

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Bugs Bunny’s dancing in the final shot when all the toons are singing «Smile, Darn Ya, Smile» was inspired by that in «Slick Hare». Roger Rabbit also featured one of Mel Blanc’s final performances as the voice of Bugs (as well as the other Looney Tunes characters) before his death in 1989.

Bugs later appeared in another animated production featuring numerous characters from rival studios: the 1990 drug prevention TV special Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue.[40][41][42] This special is notable for being the first time that someone other than Blanc voiced Bugs and Daffy (both characters were voiced by Jeff Bergman for this). Bugs also made guest appearances in the early 1990s television series Tiny Toon Adventures, as the principal of Acme Looniversity and the mentor of Buster Bunny. He made further cameos in Warner Bros.’ subsequent animated TV shows Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, and Histeria!

Bugs returned to the silver screen in 1990’s «Box Office Bunny». This was the first Bugs Bunny cartoon since 1964 to be released in theaters and it was created for Bugs’ 50th-anniversary celebration. It was followed by «(Blooper) Bunny», a cartoon that was shelved from theaters,[43] but later premiered on Cartoon Network in 1997 and has since gained a cult following among animation fans for its edgy humor.[44][45][46]

In 1996, Bugs and the other Looney Tunes characters appeared in the live-action/animated film, Space Jam, directed by Joe Pytka and starring NBA superstar Michael Jordan. The film also introduced the character Lola Bunny, who becomes Bugs’ new love interest. Space Jam received mixed reviews from critics,[47][48] but was a box office success (grossing over $230 million worldwide).[49] The success of Space Jam led to the development of another live-action/animated film, Looney Tunes Back in Action, released in 2003 and directed by Joe Dante. Unlike Space Jam, Back in Action was a box-office bomb,[50] though it did receive more positive reviews from critics.[51][52][53]

In 1997, Bugs appeared on a U.S. postage stamp, the first cartoon to be so honored, beating the iconic Mickey Mouse. The stamp is number seven on the list of the ten most popular U.S. stamps, as calculated by the number of stamps purchased but not used. The introduction of Bugs onto a stamp was controversial at the time, as it was seen as a step toward the ‘commercialization’ of stamp art. The postal service rejected many designs and went with a postal-themed drawing. Avery Dennison printed the Bugs Bunny stamp sheet, which featured «a special ten-stamp design and was the first self-adhesive souvenir sheet issued by the U.S. Postal Service.»[54]

More Recent Years

A younger version of Bugs was the main character of Baby Looney Tunes, which debuted on Kids’ WB in 2002. In the action-comedy Loonatics Unleashed, his definite descendant Ace Bunny was the leader of the Loonatics team and seemed to have inherited his ancestor’s Brooklyn accent and comic wit.[55]

Bugs as he appears in The Looney Tunes Show

In 2011, Bugs Bunny and the rest of the Looney Tunes gang returned to television in the Cartoon Network sitcom, The Looney Tunes Show, with Jeff Bergman returning to voice both Bugs and Daffy Duck regularly for the first time since 1992’s «Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers». The characters feature new designs by artist Jessica Borutski. Among the changes to Bugs’ appearance were the simplification and enlargement of his feet, as well as a change to his fur from gray to a shade of mauve (though in the second season, his fur was changed back to gray).[56] In the series, Bugs and Daffy are portrayed as best friends as opposed to their usual pairing as rivals or frenemies. At the same time, Bugs is more openly annoyed at Daffy’s antics in the series (sometimes to the point of aggression), compared to his usual carefree personality from the original cartoons. Bugs and Daffy are close friends with Porky Pig in the series, although Bugs tends to be a more reliable friend to Porky than Daffy is. Bugs also dates Lola Bunny in the show, although at first, he finds her to be «crazy» and a bit too talkative (he later learns to accept her personality quirks, similar to his tolerance for Daffy). Unlike the original cartoons, Bugs lives in an upper-middle-class house, which he shares with Daffy, Taz (whom he treats as a pet dog) and Speedy Gonzales, in the middle of a cul-de-sac with their neighbors Yosemite Sam, Granny and Witch Lezah. According to the episode «Peel of Fortune», Bugs’ financial success comes from his invention of the carrot peeler.

In 2015, Bugs starred in the direct-to-video film Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run,[57] and later returned to television yet again as the star of Cartoon Network and Boomerang’s new comedy series New Looney Tunes, where he returned to his original trickster personality from the original shorts.[58][59]

In 2020, he began appearing in Looney Tunes Cartoons on HBO Max. In this series, he gives his name as Bugsworth, and his design primarily resembles his Bob Clampett days, complete with yellow gloves and his signature carrot and his personality is a combination of Freleng’s trickery, Clampett’s defiance, and Jones’ resilience while also maintaining his cool, self-assured, calm demeanor. Unlike most of his recent appearances where he is voiced by Bergman, he is voiced by Eric Bauza for the series.

It was announced 17 February 2021 that Bugs Bunny will star in Bugs Bunny Builders, a pre-school series that will air on Cartoon Network’s upcoming preschool block Cartoonito.[60]

Big Chungus

In December 2018, 77 years after the film’s release, a still from the 1941 short «Wabbit Twouble» depicting Bugs mocking Elmer by imitating his likeness became an Internet meme. The meme originated from fictitious cover art for a video game titled Big Chungus, with «chungus» being a neologism coined by video game journalist James Stephanie Sterling in 2012.

In April 2021, the character was added to the mobile game Looney Tunes World of Mayhem. “Big Chungus” was briefly featured in the 2021 film Space Jam A New Legacy; animator Matt Williames, who worked on the scene, was unaware of the meme until the film’s animation director Spike Brandt explained it to him.

World of mayhem chungus

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Big-Chungus-Space-Jam-2

Appearances

Main article: List of Bugs Bunny cartoons

Personality & Catchphrases

«Some people call me cocky and brash, but actually I am just self-assured. I’m nonchalant, imperturbable, contemplative. I play it cool, but I can get hot under the collar. And above all I’m a very ‘aware’ character. I’m well aware that I am appearing in an animated cartoon… And sometimes I chomp on my carrot for the same reason that a stand-up comic chomps on his cigar. It saves me from rushing from the last joke to the next one too fast. And I sometimes don’t act, I react. And I always treat the contest with my pursuers as ‘fun and games.’ When momentarily I appear to be cornered or in dire danger, and I scream, don’t be consoined – it’s actually a big put-on. Let’s face it Doc. I’ve read the script, and I already know how it turns out. «

Bugs outsmarts Daffy and Elmer in «Rabbit Seasoning».

He is a tricky, charismatic, and shrewd rabbit. These personality traits are what gives him an advantage over his enemies, rivals, and opponents. He is also known for his famous catchphrase; «Eh, what’s up, doc?», which he typically uses as a greeting to anyone he encounters (usually while munching a carrot).
Bugs is characterized as being clever and capable of outsmarting anyone who antagonizes him, including Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam, Willoughby, Marvin the Martian, Beaky Buzzard, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig, the Tasmanian Devil, Cecil Turtle, Witch Hazel, Rocky and Mugsy, Wile E. Coyote, The Crusher, The Gremlin, Count Bloodcount, and a whole bunch of others. Bugs almost always wins these contentions, a story pattern which recurs in Looney Tunes cartoons directed by Chuck Jones. Concerned that viewers would lose sympathy for an aggressive protagonist who always won, Jones arranged for Bugs to be bullied, cheated, or threatened by the antagonists while minding his own business, justifying his subsequent antics as retaliation or self-defense. As such, Jones’ «Hold the Lion, Please» was the first Bugs cartoon where Jones establishes said rule where Bugs must always be provoked as a justified reason to torment his antagonists. [61]

He’s also been known to break The 4th Wall by «communicating» with the audience, either by explaining the situation (e.g. «Be with you in a minute, folks.»), describing someone to the audience (e.g. «Feisty, ain’t they?»), clueing in on the story (e.g. «That happens to him all during the picture, folks.»), explaining that one of his antagonists’ actions have pushed him to the breaking point («Of course you know, this means war.»), admitting his own deviousness toward his antagonists («Gee, ain’t I a stinker?»), etc.

When Bugs made his appearance, he promptly replaced Daffy Duck as the most popular Warner Bros. character. Daffy, jealous of his cartoon counterpart’s ascension to fame, has on many occasions attempted to dethrone the rabbit. But he has never truly succeeded, always being outsmarted by the clever hare.

However, as time passed on, Bugs and Daffy’s rivalry has turned friendlier in nature as the two usually hang out together in most cartoons and Bugs considers Daffy his best friend despite his faults, to which Daffy says the same thing.

Bugs will usually try to placate the antagonist and avoid contention, but when a villain pushes him too far, Bugs may address the audience and invoke his catchphrase «Of course you realize this means war!» before he retaliates, and the retaliation will be devastating. This line was taken from Groucho Marx and others in the 1933 film Duck Soup and was also used in the 1935 Marx film A Night at the Opera.[62] Bugs would pay homage to Groucho in other ways, such as occasionally adopting his stooped walk or leering eyebrow-raising (in «Hair-Raising Hare», for example) or sometimes with a direct impersonation (as in «Slick Hare»).

Bugs about to give Yosemite Sam the shaft (in more ways than one) in «Bugs Bunny Rides Again»

Other directors, such as Friz Freleng, characterized Bugs as altruistic. When Bugs meets other successful characters (such as Cecil Turtle in «Tortoise Beats Hare», or, in World War II, the Gremlin of «Falling Hare»), his overconfidence becomes a disadvantage. Most of Bugs’ adversaries are extremely dim-witted, and Bugs is easily able to outwit and torment them, although on occasion they will manage to get the best of Bugs. Daffy Duck, who is arguably more intelligent but less clever, is unaffected by Bugs’ usual schemes, which usually results in the two trying to outsmart the other with Bugs always triumphing in the end. However, there are only four antagonists that successfully defeats Bugs in the end of the cartoon, Cecil Turtle, the Gremlin from Falling Hare, the unnamed mouse from «Rhapsody Rabbit», and the fly from «Baton Bunny».

During the 1940s, Bugs started off childish and wild (similar to Daffy), but by the 1950s his personality matured and his attitude became more refined and less frenetic. Although often shown as highly ingenious, Bugs is never actually malicious, and only acts as such in self-defense against his aggressors.

The only exceptions where Bugs ever serves as an antagonist are the following: «Elmer’s Pet Rabbit», «Wabbit Twouble», «The Wacky Wabbit», «Buckaroo Bugs», and «Duck Amuck»; Elmer’s Pet Rabbit depicts him completely out-of-character with a more unfriendly, ungenerous, cocky, almost thuggish personality. «Wabbit Twouble» and «The Wacky Wabbit» depict him as a prankster harassing Elmer Fudd in the vein of early Daffy Duck/Porky Pig cartoons featuring the screwball Daffy as the tormentor. «Buckaroo Bugs» depicts him as a true villain, while «Duck Amuck» depicts him as far more sadistic than usual, as he becomes an animator and uses his newfound powers to torment Daffy.

Bugs Bunny’s nonchalant carrot-chewing standing position, as explained by Chuck Jones, Friz Freleng, and Bob Clampett, originated in a scene in the 1934 film It Happened One Night, in which Clark Gable’s character leans against a fence, eating carrots quickly and impolitely talking with his mouth full to Claudette Colbert’s character. This scene was well known while the film was popular, and viewers at the time likely recognized Bugs Bunny’s behavior as irony.

«‘What’s up Doc?’ is a very simple thing. It’s only funny because it’s in a situation. It was an all Bugs Bunny line. It wasn’t funny. If you put it in human terms; you come home late one night from work, you walk up to the gate in the yard, you walk through the gate and up into the front room, the door is partly open and there’s some guy shooting under your living room. So what do you do? You run if you have any sense, the least you can do is call the cops. But what if you come up and tap him on the shoulder and look over and say ‘What’s up Doc?’ You’re interested in what he’s doing. That’s ridiculous. That’s not what you say at a time like that. So that’s why it’s funny, I think. In other words, it’s asking a perfectly legitimate question in a perfectly illogical situation.»«

The carrot-chewing scenes are generally followed by Bugs Bunny’s most well-known catchphrase, «What’s up, Doc?», which was written by director Tex Avery for his first Bugs Bunny short, 1940’s «A Wild Hare». Avery explained later that it was a common expression in his native Texas and that he did not think much of the phrase. When the short was first screened in theaters, the «What’s up, Doc?» scene generated a tremendously positive audience reaction. As a result, the scene became a recurring element in subsequent films and cartoons. The phrase was sometimes modified for a situation. For example, Bugs says «What’s up, dogs?» to the antagonists in A Hare Grows in Manhattan, «What’s up, Duke?» to the knight in «Knight-Mare Hare» and «What’s up, prune-face?» to the aged Elmer in «The Old Grey Hare». He might also greet Daffy with «What’s up, Duck?» He used one variation, «What’s all the hub-bub, bub?» only once, in Falling Hare. Another variation is used in Looney Tunes Back in Action when he greets a bubble gun-yielding Marvin The Martian saying «What’s up, Darth?» (a reference to Darth Vader from the Star Wars film series).

Bugs faces off with Toro in «Bully for Bugs».

Several Chuck Jones shorts in the late 1940s and 1950s depict Bugs traveling via cross-country (and, in some cases, intercontinental) tunnel-digging, ending up in places as varied as Mexico («Bully for Bugs»), The Himalayas («The Abominable Snow Rabbit») and Antarctica («Frigid Hare») all because he «shoulda taken that left toin at Albukoikee.» He first utters that phrase in 1945’s «Herr Meets Hare», when he emerges in the Black Forest, a cartoon seldom seen today due to its blatantly topical subject matter. When Hermann Göring says to Bugs, «Zair is no Las Vegas in Chermany» and takes a potshot at Bugs, Bugs dives into his hole and says, «Joimany? YIPE!», as Bugs realizes he’s behind enemy lines. The confused response to his «left toin» comment also followed a pattern. For example, when he tunnels into Scotland in «My Bunny Lies over the Sea», while thinking he’s heading for the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles, California, it provides another chance for an ethnic stereotype: «Therrre’s no La Brrrea Tarrr Pits in Scotland!» (to which Bugs responds, «Uh…what’s up, Mac-doc?»). A couple of late-1950s/early 1960s shorts of this ilk also featured Daffy Duck travelling with Bugs («Since when is Pismo Beach inside a cave?!»).

Bugs revealed as the unseen animator in «Duck Amuck»

Bugs Bunny has some similarities to figures from mythology and folklore, such as Br’er Rabbit, Nanabozho, or Anansi, and might be seen as a modern trickster (for example, he repeatedly uses cross-dressing mischievously). Unlike most cartoon characters, however, Bugs Bunny is rarely defeated in his own games of trickery. One exception to this is the short «Hare Brush», in which Elmer Fudd ultimately carries the day at the end; however, critics note that in this short, Elmer and Bugs assume each other’s personalities—through mental illness and hypnosis, respectively—and it is only by becoming Bugs that Elmer can win. However, Bugs was beaten at his own game. In the short «Duck Amuck» he torments Daffy Duck as the unseen animator, ending with his line, «Ain’t I a stinker?» Bugs feels the same wrath of an unseen animator in the short «Rabbit Rampage» where he is in turn tormented by Elmer Fudd. At the end of the clip Elmer gleefully exclaims, ‘Well, I finally got even with that scwewy wabbit!»

Bugs wears white gloves, which he is rarely seen without, although he may remove one and use it for slapping an opponent to predicate a duel. Another glove-less example is «Long-Haired Hare», where Bugs pretends to be the famed conductor Leopold Stokowski and instructs opera star «Giovanni Jones» to sing and to hold a high note. As Giovanni Jones is turning red with the strain, Bugs slips his left hand out of its glove, leaving the glove hovering in the air in order to command Jones to continue to hold the high note. Bugs then nips down to the mail drop to order, and then to receive, a pair of ear defenders. Bugs puts on the ear defenders and then zips back into the amphitheater and reinserts his hand into his glove as singer Jones is writhing on the stage, still holding that same high note.

Bugs uses disguise to fool Elmer in «What’s Opera, Doc?»

Bugs Bunny is also a master of disguise: he can wear any disguise that he wants to confuse his enemies: in «Bowery Bugs» he uses diverse disguises: fakir, gentleman, woman, baker and finally policeman. This ability of disguise makes Bugs famous because we can recognize him while at the same time realizing that his enemies are stumped. Bugs has a certain preference for the female disguise: Taz, Elmer Fudd, Yosemite Sam were fooled by this sexy bunny (woman) and in «Hare Trimmed», Sam discovers the real face of «Granny» (Bugs’s disguise) in the church where they attempt to get married. Bugs dressed as a female hunter, a temptress, the beautiful Brunhlide, a sexy lady and many others to fool Elmer Fudd and he also kissed him in his nose twice (Bugs and Elmer also happily got married in the end of «Rabbit of Seville» [Elmer as the bride and Bugs as the groom], as well as in «Bugs’ Bonnets»). For all the gullible victims off all these disguises, however, for some reason, Daffy Duck and Cecil Turtle were among those who are never fooled.

Bugs Bunny may also have some mystical potential. In «Knight-Mare Hare» he was able to return to his bunny form (after being transformed into a donkey) by removing his donkey form as if it were a suit. Merlin of Monroe (the wizard) was unable to do the same thing. In «Transylvania 6-5000», Bugs Bunny defeated the Count Blood Count in a magical spell duel. However, the Merlin story was a dream and Bugs’ victory over Count Blood Count was a result of his intellect, not innate magical power.

Rabbit or Hare?

The animators throughout Bugs’ history have treated the terms rabbit and hare as synonymous. Taxonomically, they are not synonymous, being somewhat similar but observably different types of lagomorphs. Hares have much longer ears than rabbits, so Bugs might seem to be of the hare family, yet rabbits live in burrows, as Bugs is seen to do. Many more of the cartoon titles include the word «hare» rather than «rabbit,» as «hare» lends itself easily to puns («hair,» «air,» etc.).

Within the cartoons, although the term «hare» comes up sometimes, again typically as a pun—-for example, Bugs drinking «hare tonic» to «stop falling hare» or being doused with «hare restorer» to bring him back from invisibility—-Bugs as well as his antagonists most often refer to the character as a «rabbit.» The word «bunny» is of no help in answering this question, as it is a synonym for both young hares and young rabbits. Coney is yet another term for rabbit, explaining Bugs’ frequent fondness for Coney Island.

In Nike commercials with Michael Jordan, Bugs is referred to as «Hare Jordan.»

Openings & Closings of Shorts

Bugs (standing in for Porky) in the closing to «Hare Tonic» and «Baseball Bugs»

In the opening of many of the Bugs Bunny cartoons, the Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes irises contain Bugs Bunny’s head after the Warner Bros. shield (generally from 1944 to 1945 and 1949 onward). Others have Bugs Bunny relaxing on top of the Warner Bros. shield: He chews on his carrot, looks angrily at the camera and pulls down the next logo (Merrie Melodies or Looney Tunes) like a window shade (generally on cartoons between 1945 until early 1949). Then he lifts it back up, to now be seen lying on his own name, which then fades into the title of the specific short. In some other cases, the title card sometimes fades to him, already on his name and chewing his carrot then fade to the name of the short.

At the finish of «Hare Tonic» and «Baseball Bugs», Bugs breaks out of a drum (like Porky Pig) and says, «And dat’s de end». Also, at the end of «Box Office Bunny», right after Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd run out through the «That’s All Folks!» sequence, Bugs later comes in through the rings and says, «And that’s all, folks!». He did the ending for the last time at the end of Space Jam, but this time saying «Well, that’s all, folks!».

Some old, damaged TV prints of pre-1948 shorts such as «The Up-Standing Sitter» had a print where Bugs Bunny came out of the drum, with the 1937-38 Merrie Melodies closing music, he didn’t say anything albeit his mouth still moves (due to the dubbing over of the audio) and the music did not even finish.

Voice Actors

  • Mel Blanc — 1938 («Porky’s Hare Hunt») – 1989 (Bugs Bunny’s Wild World of Sports)
  • Jeff Bergman — Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue, Tiny Toon Adventures (Season 1-2), «Box Office Bunny», «(Blooper) Bunny», «Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers», «Pride of the Martians» (CN commercial), Satuday Night Live (Season 28, Ep. 14), The Looney Tunes Show, Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run, New Looney Tunes, Space Jam A New Legacy[63], video games
  • Greg Burson — Tiny Toon Adventures (Season 2-3), Taz-Mania, Animaniacs, «Carrotblanca», «From Hare to Eternity»
  • Billy West — Space Jam, Histeria!, Looney Tunes: Reality Check, Looney Tunes: Stranger Than Fiction, Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, video games
  • Joe Alaskey — «Chasers Anonymous» (CN commercial), Tweety’s High-Flying Adventure, Looney Tunes Back in Action, «Hare and Loathing in Las Vegas», «Daffy Duck for President», Looney Tunes ClickN Read Phonics, video games
  • Samuel Vincent — Baby Looney Tunes
  • Eric Bauza — Looney Tunes World of Mayhem, Looney Tunes Cartoons
  • Daws Butler — «Wideo Wabbit» (celebrity impressions)
  • Mendi SegalBugs & Friends Sing The Beatles[64]
  • Keith Scott — Australian Looney Tunes commercials[65]
  • Eric Goldberg — Looney Tunes Back in Action (one line)[66]

The_BIGGEST_LOONEY_TUNES_COMPILATION_Bugs_Bunny,_Daffy_Duck_and_more!_Cartoons_for_Children_-_HD

The BIGGEST LOONEY TUNES COMPILATION Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and more! Cartoons for Children — HD

See Also

  • Looney Tunes
  • Merrie Melodies
  • List of Bugs Bunny cartoons

Gallery

Main article: Bugs Bunny/Gallery

References

  1. https://mobile.twitter.com/bauzilla/status/1006414336435376128
  2. Bugs Bunny: The Trickster, American Style. Weekend Edition Sunday. NPR (6 January 2008). Retrieved on 2011-04-10.
  3. Mel Blanc. Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved on 2013-02-05.
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Characters
Major Characters
Barnyard Dawg • Beaky Buzzard • Bosko • Bugs Bunny • Cecil Turtle • Charlie Dog • Claude Cat • Daffy Duck • Elmer Fudd • Foghorn Leghorn • Gossamer • Granny • Hector the Bulldog • Henery Hawk • Hippety Hopper • Hubie and Bertie • Lola Bunny • Goofy Gophers • Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot • Marvin the Martian • Michigan J. Frog • Miss Prissy • Penelope Pussycat • Pepé Le Pew • Pete Puma • Porky Pig • Ralph Wolf • Road Runner • Sam Sheepdog •. Sniffles • Speedy Gonzales • Sylvester • Sylvester Jr. • Taz • Tweety • Wile E. Coyote • Witch Hazel • Yosemite Sam
Secondary Characters
Blacque Jacque Shellacque • The Crusher • Carl the Grim Rabbit • Giovanni Jones • Yoyo Dodo • Tasmanian She-Devil • Melissa Duck • Hugo the Abominable Snowman • Spike and Chester • Nasty Canasta • The Gremlin • Private Snafu • Petunia Pig • Playboy Penguin • Shropshire Slasher • Count Bloodcount • Mama Buzzard • Colonel Shuffle • Egghead Jr. • Owl Jolson • Toro the Bull • Rocky and Mugsy • Minah Bird • Inki • Beans • Little Kitty • Ham and Ex • Oliver Owl • Piggy • Gabby Goat • Buddy • Honey • Slowpoke Rodriguez • The Three Bears • Foxy • K-9 • A. Flea • Construction Worker • Frisky Puppy • Ralph Mouse • Honey Bunny • Roxy • The Martin Brothers • Ralph Phillips • Clyde Bunny • Fauntleroy Flip • Dr. I.Q. Hi • Gruesome Gorilla • Sloppy Moe • Hatta Mari • The Weasel • Wiloughby • The Two Curious Puppies • Cool Cat • Babbit and Catstello • Instant Martians • Bobo the Elephant • Colonel Rimfire • Smokey the Genie • Jose and Manuel • Merlin the Magic Mouse • Conrad the Cat • Angus MacRory • Banty Rooster • Thes • Shameless O’Scanty • Three Little Pigs • Tom Turkey • Goopy Geer • Nelly the Giraffe • Ala Bahma • Dr. Lorre • Cottontail Smith • Bunny and Claude • Claude Hopper • The Hep Cat • The Drunk Stork

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