![]() ![]() ![]() Avery was already gone from the studio Mike Barrier reveals in his book “Hollywood Cartoons” that Avery’s unit was disbanded on March 1, 1953. He put it in a wolf character for the first time in “Three Little Pups,” released December 26, 1953. Daws used a lower-key version of his North Carolina drawl while employed at the MGM studio for the director that wasn’t named Hanna or Barbera-Tex Avery. Then when Huckleberry Hound came along, there he was!” Now, Daws Butler wouldn’t lie to you, would he?ĭaws borrowed Huck’s voice all, right. I was in the navy then, but I put him in a little separate box. We’ll talk a bit.’ I’d say, ‘Well, maybe a half an hour or an hour.’ Anyway, he kind of stuck in my head. He'd see me come panting just to see Myrtis, and he'd say (in a drawl), ‘Hi, Daws! Come on up and sit down. When I was in the navy, I’d hitchhike home on the weekend and this fella would be sitting on the front porch next door. "Myrtis was from Albemarle, North Carolina. Though Hanna-Barbera claims that Huckleberry Hound was based on Andy Griffith, the voice was actually based on William Harwood, a North Carolina man who was a veterinarian and next-door neighbor of Butler’s future wife, Myrtis. Tim Lawson and Alisa Persons, in their book The Magic Behind the Voices (2004), interviewed Daws himself on the subject: Griffith’s death at the age of 86 has provided a good opportunity to lay to rest that theory once and for all. on “The Simpsons”:Īnimation is built on plagiarism! If it weren’t for someone plagiarizing ‘The Honeymooners,’ we wouldn’t have ‘The Flintstones!’ If someone hadn’t ripped off ‘Sergeant Bilko,’ there’d be no ‘Top Cat!’ Huckleberry Hound, Chief Wiggum, Yogi Bear? Andy Griffith, Edward G. And you may recall the immortal words of son-of-a-cartoon-character-thief Roger Myers, Jr. Hanna-Barbera borrowed voices of stars for its characters-Ed Wynn, Art Carney, Bert Lahr, Jimmy Durante, Ed Gardner, Desi Arnaz, Phil Silvers, for example-so why wouldn’t the studio have Daws Butler borrow Andy Griffith’s voice and stick it in a lazy blue hound? Even John Fink in his column in the Chicago Tribune of Octonoted the resemblance, and Griffith hadn’t achieved his huge fame on television at that point. ![]()
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