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A piece of childhood is gone

AVB

Jesus of Cool, I'm bad, I'm nationwide
Joined
Nov 14, 2003
Messages
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Location
Near York, PA.
Alex Anderson Dead: 'Rocky And Bullwinkle' Creator Dies At 90

CARMEL, Calif. — Pioneering TV cartoon artist Alexander Anderson Jr. – who created Rocky the flying squirrel, Bullwinkle the moose and Dudley Do-Right the Canadian mountie – has died at age 90.Anderson's wife, Patricia, told The Associated Press that her husband, a longtime resident of Pebble Beach, Calif., died Friday at an assisted living facility in Carmel. He was suffering from Alzheimer's disease.

With the goggle-wearing Rocky leading his somewhat slow but good-natured friend, Bullwinkle, the duo battled villains Boris and Natasha, agents of the nation of Pottsylvania, in the fictional town of Frostbite Falls, Minn. The show spawned movies and memorable phrases, such as Rocky's "Hokey smoke" and Bullwinkle's "Hey, Rocky, watch me pull a rabbit out of a hat." The inspiration for Bullwinkle came from a dream Anderson had in which he was playing poker with friends and a moose doing "silly card things" was sitting next to him, Patricia Anderson said. The character's name came from a car dealership in Berkeley called "Bullwinkel Motors," which her husband thought was funny, she said.

Anderson told the San Francisco Chronicle in 1991 that he found there was "something majestic" about a moose."They're macho, but they have a comic aspect with that schnozzola of theirs. There are few creatures begging to be caricatured," he said. As for Rocky, Anderson told the newspaper he couldn't quite understand how a mouse or Superman would be able to fly. But some squirrels, in fact, could fly. "That gave (Rocky) the mantle of superness without having to stretch the truth," he said.

Before Rocky and Bullwinkle, Anderson worked on "Mighty Mouse" while apprenticing for his uncle, Paul Terry, whose Terrytoons cartoons were distributed in movie theaters by 20th Century Fox. Anderson worked with Terry before and after World War II, when he worked as an intelligence officer with the U.S. Navy in San Francisco.

Anderson began his own company with former University of California, Berkeley fraternity brother, Jay Ward, after Terry refused his suggestion to produce cartoons specifically for television. The duo worked out of a garage behind Anderson's family's Berkeley home. There, they created Crusader Rabbit and his friend Rags the Tiger along with Dudley Do-Right of the Mounties and Rocky and Bullwinkle. "Crusader Rabbit" was among the first animated series produced for television and aired on NBC in the 1950s.

Ward would go on to produce "Rocky and His Friends" on ABC in 1959. Anderson had decided to pursue a career in advertising and was not involved in the venture. He later said he felt he had not received credit for his creations and won a lawsuit against Jay Ward Productions in 1993 that recognized him as the creator of the first versions of Rocky, Bullwinkle and Dudley Do-Right.

"When you love your work, it isn't work," Patricia Anderson recalled him saying.
 
You two guys are old!!!

Boris and Natasha were great vilians!
 
It was years after watching the Saturday episodes that I understood the difference between "lights out in the bar room or a shot in the dark". I don't they were talking to the seven year old in the audience.
Tom
 
And now, here's something we hope you'll really like.


Rocky: Bullwinkle, it says here that for you to inherit the fortune, you have to spend the weekend in the ancestral home; Abominable Manor.
Bullwinkle: That's no problem. I've been living in an abominable manner all my life.
 
I always enjoyed Rocky and Bullwinkle. Some of the humor was over my head as a youngster, but I've watched a few with my son and I can really appreciate some of what I missed.

An interesting aside: We saw Rocky and Bullwinkle's picture in the local paper every Thursday in my home town. The local gay bar was called Bullwinkle's and they used their images in the ad for the weekend drag contests and the like. Somehow, I doubt they had permission to use those images.
 
It was years after watching the Saturday episodes that I understood the difference between "lights out in the bar room or a shot in the dark". I don't they were talking to the seven year old in the audience.
Tom


Rocky: "There's no happy ending."

Bullwinkle: "This must be one of them adult cartoons"

Doc.
 
I believe Rocky and Bullwinkle was originally broadcast at 8pm (if I remember correctly). I miss those two, plus Boris and Natasha...there was another good segment on there too; something about Aesop's Fractured Fables or something like that...:laugh:

"No doubt about it, I've got to get another hat..."
 
I have all the DVD seasons of Rocky and Bullwinkle. One of my favorite cartoons growing up. Though I'm only 34, it's one of the greatest toons! Them, fractured fairytales, Aesop's Fables, and Dudley will always rule! Oh can't forget Mr. Peabody.
 
"We see no reason that if a boy can have a dog, a dog can’t have a boy."

I love Rocky and Bullwinkle. I watched reruns (obviously) as a kid, and I recently bought Season 1 to enjoy it all over again.

-Mark
 
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