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Bugs Bunny's Overtures to Disaster is a Looney Tunes television special directed by Greg Ford and Terry Lennon. [1] In new animation, Jeff Bergman voiced Bugs, Daffy, Porky, Elmer and Sylvester. The special first aired on April 17, 1991 on CBS.
In a plotline reminiscent of Stage Door Cartoon, Rabbit of Seville features Bugs Bunny being chased by Elmer Fudd into the stage door of the Hollywood Bowl, whereupon Bugs tricks Elmer into going onstage, and participating in a break-neck operatic production of their chase punctuated with gags and accompanied by musical arrangements by Carl Stalling, focusing on Rossini's overture to the 1816 ...
Underscored by a high-energy version of "Cheyenne", a constant hail of bullets flies around the Western town of Rising Gorge.A stream of them sail one way along the main street; a traffic light (an Acme Regulator, in keeping with Looney Tunes tradition) turns red and those bullets hover in mid-air while another torrent of them shoot by on the cross street, though they hesitate to resume when ...
The Bugs Bunny Show was a long-running American animated anthology television series hosted by Bugs Bunny that was mainly composed of theatrical Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons released by Warner Bros. between 1948 and 1969.
The Lone Ranger ("William Tell Overture") – Gioachino Rossini; Looney Tunes ("The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down") – Carl W. Stalling; Lost in Space – John Williams (two themes) Lottery! ("Turn of the Cards") – Alan Graham; Lou Grant – Patrick Williams; The Loud House – Michelle Lewis, Doug Rockwell and Chris Savino
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Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies were so named as a reference to Disney's Silly Symphonies and were initially developed to showcase tracks from Warner Bros.' extensive music library; the title of the first Looney Tunes short, Sinkin' in the Bathtub (1930), is a pun on Singin' in the Bathtub. [9]
An a cappella version of the song can be heard in Crash Twinsanity. Heard in the 1943 film The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. The overture is used in a 1949 CSIRO video "Division of radiophysics" . [15] Can be heard in the 1954 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes animated cartoon short From A to Z-Z-Z-Z.