'Isadore "Friz" Freleng' (
August 21,
1906[1] –
May 26,
1995) was an
animator,
cartoonist,
director, and
producer best known for his work on the ''
Looney Tunes'' and ''
Merrie Melodies'' series of
cartoons from
Warner Bros. He introduced and/or developed several of the studio's biggest stars, including
Bugs Bunny,
Porky Pig,
Tweety Bird,
Sylvester the cat,
Yosemite Sam (to whom he was said to bear more than a passing resemblance) and
Speedy Gonzales. The senior director at Warners'
Termite Terrace studio, Freleng is also the most honored of the Warner directors, having won four
Academy Awards. After Warners shut down the animation studio in 1963, Freleng and business partner
David DePatie founded
DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, which produced cartoons (notably ''
The Pink Panther Show''), feature film title sequences, and
Saturday morning cartoons through the early
1980s.
Early career
Freleng was born in
Kansas City,
Missouri, where he began his career in animation at United Film Ad Service. There, he made the acquaintance of fellow animators
Hugh Harman and
Ub Iwerks. In 1923, Iwerks' friend
Walt Disney moved to
Hollywood, put out a call for his Kansas City colleagues to join him. Freleng, however, held out until 1927, when he finally moved to California and join
the Disney studio. He worked alongside other former Kansas City animators, including Iwerks, Harman,
Carmen Maxwell, and
Rudolph Ising. While at Disney's Freleng worked on the
Alice Comedies and
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit cartoons for producers
Margaret Winkler and
Charles Mintz.
Freleng soon teamed up with Harman and Ising to try to create their own studio. The trio produced a pilot film starring a new
Mickey Mouse-like character named
Bosko. Looking at unemployment if the cartoon failed to generate interest, Freleng moved to
New York City to work on Mintz'
Krazy Kat cartoons, all the while still trying to sell the Harman-Ising Bosko picture. The cartoon finally sold to
Leon Schlesinger, who soon secured Harman and Ising to star Bosko in the ''
Looney Tunes'' series he was producing for
Warner Bros. Freleng soon moved back to California to work with Harman and Ising once again.
Freleng as director
Harman and Ising left Schlesinger's studio over disputes about budgets in 1933. Schlesinger was left with no experienced directors, and therefore promoted Freleng. The young animator would prove an able director, and he introduced the studio's first post-Bosko star,
Porky Pig, in the 1935 film ''
I Haven't Got a Hat''. The film is notable for being one of the earliest examples of characterization in a cartoon. Porky was a distinctive character, unlike Bosko or his replacement,
Buddy.
MGM
In 1937, Freleng left Schlesinger's after accepting an increase in salary to direct for the new
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon studio headed by
Fred Quimby. To Freleng's chagrin, he found he would be working on ''
The Captain and the Kids'', adapted from the popular
comic strip ''
The Katzenjammer Kids''. The series failed to achieve much success, much as Freleng had predicted—though skillfully animated, the characters could not compete with the "
funny animals" that prevailed at the time.
Freleng happily returned to Warner Bros. when his contract ended in 1940. One of the first ''Looney Tunes'' directed by Freleng during his second tenure at the studio was ''
You Ought to Be in Pictures '', a short which blended animation with live-action footage of the Warner Bros. studio (and of Schlesinger veterans such as story man
Michael Maltese and even "Leon" himself). The plot, which centers around Porky Pig being tricked by Daffy Duck into terminating his contract with Schlesinger to attempt a career in features, echoes Freleng's experience in moving to MGM.
Directorial achievements
Schlesinger's hands-off attitude toward his animators allowed Freleng and his fellow directors almost complete creative control and room to experiment with cartoon comedy styles, which allowed the studio to kept pace with the Disney studio's technical superiority. Freleng's style quickly matured, and he became a master of
comic timing. He also introduced or redesigned a number of famous Warner characters, including
Yosemite Sam in 1945, the cat-and-bird duo,
Sylvester and
Tweety in 1947, and
Speedy Gonzales in 1955.
Freleng and
Chuck Jones would dominate the Warner Bros. studio in the years after
World War II, Freleng largely concentrating on the above mentioned characters and
Bugs Bunny. Nearly all of the Bugs Bunny cartoons pitting the rabbit against Yosemite Sam in various historical time periods were directed by Freleng, plus some of Bugs' cartoons with Elmer Fudd and/or Daffy Duck or with gangsters Rocky and Mugsy.
Freleng also directed cartoons with the Goofy Gophers (most notably those with the polite rodents trying to retrieve their natural property in a processing factory), cartoons with Sylvester being pursued by a pair of dogs, Spike and Chester, several of the cartoons involving a drunken stork, a number of cartoons in which insects act in military unison to battle a human character, cartoons with characters Daffy Duck or Yosemite Sam marrying for money, and three cartoons, with Bugs Bunny, Sylvester, Tweety, that spoof "
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde".
Freleng also continued to produce modernized versions of the musical comedies he animated in his early career, such as ''
The Three Little Bops'' (1957) and ''
Pizzacato Pussycat'' (1955). Freleng won four Oscars during his time at Warner Bros., for the films ''
Tweetie Pie'' (1947), ''
Speedy Gonzales'' (1955), ''
Knighty Knight Bugs'' (1958) and ''
Birds Anonymous'' (1957). And other Freleng cartoons such as ''
Sandy Claws'' (1955), ''
Mexicali Shmoes'' (1959), ''
Mouse and Garden'' (1960), and ''
The Pied Piper of Guadalupe'' (1961) were Oscar nominees.
DePatie-Freleng Enterprises
After the Warner studio closed in 1963, Freleng rented the space to create cartoons with
producer Dave DePatie, forming
DePatie-Freleng Enterprises. When Warner Bros decided to reopen their cartoon studio in 1964, they did so in name only; DePatie-Freleng produced the cartoons into 1966.
While much of Freleng's post-Warner work is considered of lesser quality than his earlier achievements, the DePatie-Freleng studio's signature achievement was
The Pink Panther. DePatie-Freleng was commissioned to create the opening titles for the 1963 film ''
The Pink Panther'', for which Freleng created a suave, cool cat character. The Pink Panther cartoon character became so popular that
United Artists, distributors of ''The Pink Panther'', had Freleng produce a short cartoon starring the character, ''
The Pink Phink'' (1964).
After ''The Pink Phink'' won the 1965
Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoons), Freleng and DePatie responded by producing a whole series of Pink Panther cartoons. Other original cartoon series, among them ''
The Inspector'', ''
The Ant and the Aardvark'', and ''
Hoot Kloot'', soon followed. In 1969, ''
The Pink Panther Show'', a Saturday morning anthology program featuring DePatie-Freleng cartoons, debuted on
NBC. ''The Pink Panther'' and the other original DePatie-Freleng series would remain in production through 1980, with new cartoons produced for simultaneous Saturday morning broadcast and United Artists theatrical release.
By 1967 DePatie and Freleng had moved their operations to the
San Fernando Valley. One of their projects featured
Bing Crosby and his family called, ''
Goldilocks'' and had songs by the
Sherman Brothers. At their new facilities they continued to produce new cartoons until 1980, when they sold DePatie-Freleng to
Marvel Entertainment, who renamed it
Marvel Productions.
Later career
Freleng later served as an
executive producer on three 1980s ''Looney Tunes'' compilation features, which linked together several of the classic shorts with new animated sequences. The Freleng-produced compilation features were ''
The Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie'' (1981), '' (1982), and '' (1983).
Friz Freleng died of natural causes in 1995 at age 89. He was interred in the
Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in
Culver City, California.
Trivia
★ A caricature of Freleng can be seen in Chuck Jones' 1952 short ''
The Hasty Hare''. Freleng appears as "I. Frisby", the head of Shalomar Observatory.
Notes
1. His exact year of birth varies by source; some give 1905, others 1906. The year chosen here is that of his grave marker. See Isadore "Friz" Freleng at findagrave.com.
External links
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