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Kissyfur is an American animated children's television series which aired on NBC. [2] Created by Phil Mendez, the series was produced by NBC Productions in cooperation with DIC Animation City . The series was based on a half-hour NBC special called Kissyfur: Bear Roots and was followed by three more specials until its Saturday morning debut.
Foofur is an American animated children's television series from Kissyfur creator Phil Mendez that was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions with SEPP International S.A. [1] Airing on NBC from 1986 to 1987, the show was about the everyday misadventures of the skinny blue protagonist dog in Willowby. [2]
Liza is a 30-year-old, naïve, lonely nurse living in "Csudapest", [note 1] the capital of a fictionalized 1970s Hungary with a capitalist system. She has taken care of Márta, the widow of the former Japanese ambassador, for the last 12 years.
Kissy may refer to: . Kissy, Sierra Leone, neighborhood on the eastern end of Freetown, Sierra Leone; Kissy Suzuki, fictional character in Ian Fleming's 1964 James Bond novel, You Only Live Twice
The Hungarian word for comics is képregény (pronounced: keːprɛgeːɲ), a combined word from kép (picture) and regény (novel). [1] [2] The word was already used in the 1930s, [nb 1] but it only became the exclusive term after 1948, before that, képes történet (pictorial story) and other similar expressions described the medium [3] The words comics (referring to American comics), manga ...
Fehérlófia (lit.The Son of the White Horse or The Son of the White Mare) is a Hungarian folk tale published by László Arany [] in Eredeti Népmesék (1862). [1] Its main character is a youth named Fehérlófia, a "Hungarian folk hero".
Magyar vándor (English: The Hungarian Strayer [1] or Hungarian Vagabond [2]) is a 2004 Hungarian action comedy film directed by Gábor Herendi and starring Károly Gesztesi, János Gyuriska and Gyula Bodrogi. The plot contains elements of time travel fiction.
The film opens with a sequence of fleeting images - the stamens of a flower, drops of oil on water, glowing embers, a spider's web, a strand of blonde hair, a leaf frozen in the ice, rain dripping from a wooden roof, etc. - each of which will subsequently be linked to one of Szindbád's memories of his love affairs.