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Herman and Katnip is a series of theatrical cartoons featuring Herman the Mouse and Katnip the Cat, produced by Famous Studios in the 1940s and 1950s. [1] Arnold Stang and Allen Swift were the regular voices of Herman, [ 2 ] while Sid Raymond was the regular actor for Katnip, although one or both of the characters would occasionally be voiced ...
Cat-Choo featuring Buzzy and Katnip - October 12, 1951 - Kneitel/Tendlar; The Awful Tooth featuring Buzzy and Katnip - May 2, 1952 - Kneitel/Eugster; Better Bait Than Never featuring Buzzy - June 5, 1953 - Kneitel/Tendlar; Hair Today Gone Tomorrow featuring Buzzy - April 16, 1954 - Kneitel/Tendlar (Note: Katnip's final appearance in the ...
Strip is not sectioned off, but a detail at the bottom of the panels. Strip as a whole tended to run 4 inches × 13 inches. Soon the Kat and Mouse were a five-panel 1½ inch strip at the bottom of the cartoon. [44] 1911: First brief run of Krazy and I. Mouse standalone strips (probably as a replacement to The Family Upstairs).
Mikes the Cat: Josef Lada: A talking black cat. [50] Mingus The Unwritten: Mike Carey: A winged cat who acts as the protagonist's familiar in the Tommy Taylor novels, a fictional 13-part series within the universe of The Unwritten. Mirliton Mirliton: Raymond Macherot: A gentle cat unable to hunt as he is best friends with mice and birds. [51 ...
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Krazy, as the cartoon's title implies, is a mouse exterminator, and in his office. He immediately receives a phone call about a rodent problem. The cat arrives at the home of his caller. Unable to grasp the mouse out of the hole in the wall, Krazy decides to attract the mouse out using a wind-up toy looking like a girl mouse.
Doggone Cats (1947), an Arthur Davis cartoon where Sylvester is teamed up with an orange cat (later reused as Sylvester's brother Alan in The Looney Tunes Show) to prevent Wellmington the Dog from delivering a package to Uncle Louie. Catch as Cats Can (1947), another Davis cartoon that portrays Sylvester as a simple-minded cat with a dopey voice.