Dogs in American Animation
One of the most beloved subjects for the creation of cartoon
characters in America is the dog.
Countless dogs have graced movie and television screens as
animated characters – too many to cover in one short article in
fact. There must be something special about the comical
nature of canines that makes them such ready targets to become
humorous cartoon characters, but there have been plenty to choose
from.
In the 1970’s the creative team of William Hanna and Joseph
Barbera had their heyday on television. They practically
owned Saturday mornings when nearly every cartoon show seemed to be
an HB production. The team and their company created over a
thousand animated characters over the years and a number of their
most memorable ones are dogs.
Scooby-Doo
Scooby-Doo, where are you!? Anyone who was a growing and
television watching child in the seventies remembers the lovable
Great Dane with the bottomless stomach and nerves of
aluminum. As part of the team of teenagers that trekked the
country in their psychedelic van “The Mystery Machine,” Scooby and
his pal Shaggy got more mileage out of one plotline than any
cartoon characters in history. Scooby-Doo has aired on
television in one form or another for over thirty years and, with
the success of two recent live-action motion pictures based on the
series, shows no sign of stopping anytime soon. We’d have
gotten away with it if it weren’t for those meddling kids and their
dog…
Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy
This was a pair made for cartoons if there ever was one.
Augie and his dad were two bachelors traveling around and getting
into adventures and misadventures with humorous results.
Augie was clearly the brains of the operation, but he was never
going to reveal that to his Jimmy Durante inspired “dear old
dad.” We never did find out what happened to Doggie
Mommy…
Hong Kong Phooey
Only Hanna Barbera Studious could have thought to take the
1970’s fads of “blacksploitation” and Kung Fu movies and make it
into a kids cartoon show. They pulled it off, though, with
this “number one super guy” that was voiced by the late, great
Scatman Crothers. By day he’s a mild mannered janitor working
at the police station, but whenever there’s trouble he jumps into
the filing cabinet, dons a mask and a gi, and emerges as… a dog in
a gi that knows kung fu. Good times all around.
Muttley
Appearing as the sidekick of the eternally villainous Dick
Dastardly, Muttley the dog never said a word, but his wheezy
snicker rings in the memory of anyone who ever saw an episode of
The Wacky Races, The Perils of Penelope Pitstop, or Stop That
Pigeon.
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