Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The title segment, George of the Jungle, is a parody of the Tarzan stories of Edgar Rice Burroughs. George (voiced by Bill Scott) is a dim-witted but big-hearted "ape man" who is always called upon by District Commissioner Alistair (voiced by Paul Frees) to save inhabitants of the jungle territory of Mbwebwe Province in Africa from various threats.
"Dela" is the fourth song from the 1989 album Cruel, Crazy, Beautiful World by South African band Savuka. [2] It is a "straightforward love song", featuring Johnny Clegg singing of waiting for his love, and of being content in her presence. [3]
Super Chicken was designed as a parody of the affluent WASP archetype of the 1950s—complete with martini drinking and a sense of social obligation. [citation needed] The character’s civilian name, Henry Cabot Henhouse III, is a nod to politician Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. [2] The character of Super Chicken is an exaggerated play on these traits, much like the crime-fighting millionaire Bruce ...
In the 1997 film George of the Jungle the song plays as the title character swings on jungle vines. There is also a short sequence in the 2013 film The Lone Ranger, where the song is played as background music when the heroes of the movie go to a traveling carnival with a brothel.
Brendan Fraser opened up about the drastic measures he took to remain in shape while filming George of the Jungle — and how it affected him physically. Brendan Fraser Through the Years. Read article
Brendan Fraser is delivering an apology for a stunt gone wrong while filming "George of the Jungle" 25 years ago.
Tom Slick is the cartoon star of a series of shorts that aired within the half-hour animated television series George of the Jungle (ABC, 1967). It was the work of Jay Ward Productions, the creators of Rocky & Bullwinkle and other satiric animated characters. [1] Seventeen six-minute episodes were made.
1965: The Shangaans, on the Jungle Drums album; 1966: The Townsmen, Canada No. 70 [26] 1967: The Hounds; 1968: The Tremeloes, on the Silence Is Golden album; 1971: Eric Donaldson; 1972: Robert John, US No. 3, gold record / Canada No. 15 [27] 1972: Dave Newman, UK No. 34; 1974: Ras Michael and the Sons of Negus, as "Rise Jah Jah Children (The ...