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The first appearance of Goofy's son was in the 1951 theatrical short Fathers Are People.He is referred to as Goofy Junior or simply Junior. He later appeared in a few other shorts such as Father's Lion (1952), Father's Day Off (in which Goofy refers to his son as "George" at one point), Father's Week-end (1953), and Aquamania (1961).
Farmer was born 20 years after Goofy’s first appearance in the Disney animated short, “Mickey’s Revue.”As a child, he remembers watching his future alter ego — who was originally voiced ...
Bill Farmer (born November 14, 1952) [1] [3] is an American voice actor, comedian, and impressionist. He has performed the voice of the Disney character Goofy since 1987, and has also been the voice of Pluto and Horace Horsecollar since 1990.
Maximilian "Max" Goof (voiced by Dana Hill), is Goofy's son and an only child. He is 11½ years old, [13] [14] and is in the same grade as his best friend P.J. at their junior high school. [15] [16] He likes skateboarding, video games, rock music, girls, and outwitting bullies. While he is generally friendly, he, like Pete, can be cunning and ...
Max is a playable character on the Super NES video game Goof Troop (1993), the PlayStation 2 video game Disney Golf (2002), and the PC video game Disney's Extremely Goofy Skateboarding (2001). Max is one of the few Disney characters aside from his best friend P.J. and Huey, Dewey, and Louie , child or otherwise, who has actually aged in ...
A woman has sued Disneyland and an unnamed employee in a Goofy costume, claiming the character actor hurt her in a fall. Goofy is sued for negligence, inflicting trauma, in Disneyland collision ...
The Anaheim Police Department is investigating after a violent brawl broke out at California's Disneyland Park on Saturday.. Footage of the fight, which went viral on YouTube with nearly 1 million ...
He provided the singing voice for Max Goof in A Goofy Movie (filling in for Jason Marsden). [2] In 2000, he starred as Micky Dolenz in the VH1 television film Daydream Believers: The Monkees' Story. [3] He appeared in the 2005 film adaptation of the Tony and Pulitzer Prize winning Broadway musical Rent, [4] directed by Chris Columbus.