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"I Wouldn't Take That Mare to the Fair on a Dare/Merry Madness at the Mardi Gras/No Fuel Like an Old Fuel [c] " TBD () 40: 6 "Olive Goes Dallas/Pappy Fails in Love/Peask and Quiet" TBD () 41: 7 "Popeye's Perilous Pursuit of a Pearl/Popeye's Self Defense/Popeye of Sherwood Forest" TBD () 42: 8 "Popeye of the Jungle/Popeye the Lone Legionnaire ...
Popeye the Sailor is an American animated television series produced for King Features Syndicate TV starring Popeye that was released between 1960 and 1963 with 220 episodes produced. [1] The episodes were produced by multiple animation studios and aired in broadcast syndication until the 1990s.
Final black-and-white cartoon in the Popeye film series [5] The booing gag was reused by Popeye in Popeye's Premiere. The redrawn print incorrectly uses the "Max Fleischer" title card of Popeye The Sailor Man. Final entry of the 1942-43 film season. 123 Her Honor the Mare: November 5 Jim Tyer Ben Solomon TBA Jack Mercer Jack Ward Izzy Sparber [6]
Popeye's first color appearance; In the public domain in the United States; Final cartoon where Popeye sings his full theme song whenever he first appears. Only Popeye cartoon nominated for an Academy Award for Short Subjects. 42 I'm in the Army Now: December 25 [3] Various Gus Wickie voices Bluto [80] [81] Mae Questel [80] voices Olive Oyl [81]
Popeye tells Olive to "Make a fist" so the attendant Attendant can measure it. ("A hand like a foot and a half," he mutters, deftly wrapping a skate about the Lady's great clenched hand.) Popeye hammers the long, slender skates with his fists to the bottom of Olive's shoes; she falls over a couple of times as Popeye delicately slips on his own.
4. Bayou Buffalo Sauce. Tasting notes: cayenne pepper, celery Pair with: Cajun fries, coleslaw Popeyes’ Buffalo sauce offers two sauces for the price of one, in my opinion. You’ve got classic ...
The Popeye Show (Originally titled I'm Popeye) [3] [4] is an American cartoon anthology series that premiered on November 12, 2001, [1] [2] on Cartoon Network. Each episode includes three Popeye theatrical shorts from Fleischer Studios and/or Famous Studios . [ 5 ]
Popeye is the spitting image of Poopdeck Pappy, though Pappy has a white beard. Pappy is far less principled than his son, stealing from Popeye's bank account and trying to sell water for $5,000 in Death Valley (to which Popeye, while pouring water for the parched traveler, tells Poopdeck, "I yam disgustipated wit' ya!"). There is no love lost ...