The Great Gusto
Gusto was created by writer Allen Saunders ( Mary Worth, Kerry Drake ) and artist Elmer Woggon (brother of Bill Woggon, creator of Katy Keene ) ... "Snake oil" salesmen of this type were a popular species of flim-flam man in film and literature of ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/gusto.htm
Hooded Justice
Also introduced in his first adventure was his police contact, Inspector Bill Blake ... In Smash #33 (May, 1942), Invisible Whoever was replaced by The Marksman, an archer superhero much like The Spider or The Arrow, except his major schtick ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/hoodedj.htm
Mr. and Mrs. J. Evil Scientist
In fact, when asked years later (by cartoonist Scott Shaw!, co-creator of Captain Carrot ), even Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera themselves didn't remember them. — DDM ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/jevilsci.htm
Salesman Sam
Bill Holman's Smokey Stover is the best-known screwball comedy in cartoons ... This offered plenty of scope for oddball merchandise to be seen in backgrounds, and that scope was only enlarged by Swanson's tendency to have Sam's immediate surroundings ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/salesman.htm
Nov shmoz ka pop?
Its most famous example in comics was Smokey Stover, in which cartoonist Bill Holman let his imagination run loose, creating a world and a set of characters that had little to do with reality. In The Squirrel Cage, Ahern returned to the more ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/squirrlc.htm
Harvey Kurtzman
His first work associated with that company wasn't particularly notable, however — EC publisher Bill Gaines sent the young cartoonist to his uncle, David Gaines, a packager of non-newsstand educational comics ... When he also showed a flair ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/kurtzman.htm
Charlie Brown
When United Feature (which syndicated The Captain & the Kids, the cartoons of Bill Mauldin and other well-known toons) bought it, they changed the name to Peanuts (a name Schulz disliked from the start), and offered it as a filler ... ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/peanuts.htm
the small society
Brickman handled it on his own for a couple of decades, then brought in another cartoonist, Floyd Buford "Bill" Yates ( Little Iodine, Professor Phumble, Redeye ) as a partner in 1986. They signed it jointly until 1989, when Yates took over ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/smallsoc.htm
The Wuzzles
Bear ), Eleroo's by Henry Gibson (Mayor Lindt in Aaahh!!! Real Monsters ), Hoppopotamus's by Jo Anne Worley (Miss Maples in A Goofy Movie ), Moosel's by Bill Scott ( Bullwinkle ), Rhinokey's by Alan Oppenheimer ( The Watcher in 1990s Fantastic ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/wuzzles.htm
Jay Ward Productions
By the time Rocky debuted, Ward had been joined by Bill Scott as co-producer ... Jay Ward and Bill Scott are both dead now — but Jay Ward Productions is still around, selling character merchandise through its Dudley Do-Right Emporium in Los ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/jayward.htm
Ponytail
But when, in 1989, King editor Bill Yates ( the small society ) informed Holley it was getting down into the marginally-viable circulation range, the cartoonist wasn't disappointed ... Since then, Lee Holley has concerned himself with flying his own ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/ponytail.htm
Snooper and Blabber
As cartoon directors at MGM, Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera introduced the first successful series to consist almost entirely of chase scenes with a cat and a mouse. Tom & Jerry was followed by Famous Studios' Herman & Katnip, Terrytoons' Percy ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/snooperb.htm
ProJunior
Natural ), Bill Griffith ( Zippy the Pinhead ) and S ... Aside from the satire theme, it had one big thing in common with the pro publications — a distinctive ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/projnior.htm
The Pixies
This provided visual appeal in cartoon form as far back as Palmer Cox's Brownies and Bill Donahey's The Teenie Weenies and was still in use, for example in Disney's Bucky Bug ... His neighbors never suspected that when trouble was afoot, he'd ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/pixies.htm
G.I. Joe
Before long the feature was world-famous — not as famous as Bill Mauldin's Willie & Joe, who emerged as the cartoon icons of the war ... Joe became the Army's everyman, so well known that by 1945, when United Artists released The Story of ...
http://www.toonopedia.com/breger.htm


