Show Me a Picture of Sylvester and the Skunk Again or Kissing or Arts or Something
Pepé Le Pew is a character in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series. An anthropomorphic French skunk, Pepé is in search of romance, only his smell, cocky-mirage, and his overly persistent style inhibit his efforts.
Contents
- one Concept
- ii Typicals
- 3 Role-Reversals
- iv Subversions
- 5 Production
- six Cameos
- 7 Later Appearances
- 8 Controversy
- 9 Picture
- 10 Pepé Le Pew Shorts
- 11 Voice
- 12 Comic Appearances
- 12.1 Dell/Western Publishing
- 12.ane.ane Looney Tunes
- 12.1.2 Daffy Duck
- 12.ane.3 Bugs Bunny
- 12.one.4 Golden Comics Digest
- 12.1.5 March Of Comics
- 12.i.six Tweety and Sylvester
- 12.2 DC Comics
- 12.two.1 Bugs Bunny
- 12.2.2 Looney Tunes
- 12.2.3 Space Jam
- 12.2.4 Looney Tunes (Burger King Promo)
- 12.ii.v DC/Looney Tunes
- 12.three International Comics
- 12.3.1 Rosnoc/Magazine Management (Australia)
- 12.1 Dell/Western Publishing
- 13 Memorable Quotes
- 14 Gallery
- 15 References
Concept
Chuck Jones outset introduced the character, originally named Stinky, and once called Henry, in the 1945 short "Scent-able Kitty". This differs from later entries in several areas: Pepé spends his time in pursuit of a male cat, who has disguised himself equally a skunk with a Limburger scent in order to scare off a agglomeration of characters mistreating him; in the closing gag, Pepé is revealed to be a philandering, hen-pecked American skunk named Henry with a wife and children. For the remaining cartoons Jones directed, Pepé retained his emphasis, nationality, and available condition throughout.
There have been theories that Pepé was based on Maurice Chevalier. However, in the short film Chuck Jones: Memories of Childhood, Chuck says Pepé was really based on himself, but that he was very shy with girls, and Pepé obviously was not. A prototype Pepé appears in the 1948 cartoon "Bugs Bunny Rides Again", but sounds similar to Porky Pig.
An antecedent in 1944's "I Got Plenty of Mutton" is a ram called Killer Diller that behaves very much equally Pepé later on would, pursuing a reluctant female, speaking with a French accent (Mel Blanc used the same voice as he would for Pepé), smothering the female with kisses, constantly turning up in the victim'due south hiding places, and nonchalantly bouncing later a aimlessly scrambling target.
Typicals
Pepé Le Pew cartoons typically feature the amorous polecat pursuing what he believes is a "female person skunk." Ordinarily, all the same, the supposed female skunk is really a blackness cat who runs away from Pepé because of either his putrid aroma or overly assertive fashion or both, but the skunk won't take "no" for an answer, and hops after her at a leisurely pace.
A running gag often found in the Pepe Le Pew cartoons are instances of the side characters encountering skunks (either Pepe or any cat in skunk disguises, such as Penelope Pussycat) and fleeing abroad from their putrid odor and/or skunk-like appearances in a comical fashion at the start of the cartoon. Very often, since the Pepe series are set in French republic outset with the Academy Laurels-winning "For Scent-imental Reasons", many of these side characters tend to react to this with exaggerated French accents (and very often, are given minimal dialogue, often aught more than a repulsed, "Le pew!").
A skunk often identified as Pepé appears in the Art Davis-directed cartoon "Odor of the Solar day" (1948); in this entry, the theme of romantic pursuit is missing as the skunk (in a nonspeaking role, relieve for a shared "Gesundheit!" at the finish) vies with a male dog for lodging accommodations on a bitterly cold night. This should be noted equally i of the two cartoons where the graphic symbol, if this is indeed Pepé, used his scent-spray equally a deliberate weapon: delivered from his tail in a auto gun-like mode. The other i is "Touché and Get", where he frees himself from the jaws of a shark.
Role-Reversals
In a office-reversal, the Academy Award-winning curt "For Scent-imental Reasons" ends with an accidentally painted (and, at this point, terrified) Pepé beingness amorously pursued by a love-struck Penelope (who has been dunked under dirty water, leaving her with a ratty guise too every bit a developing head common cold that has completely clogged up her nose). Penelope locks him up inside a perfume shop, hides the primal downwards her breast, and gain to turn the tables on the now-imprisoned and effectively odorless Pepé.
In another brusque, "Fiddling Fellow Pepé", Pepé, attempting to find the virtually arousing cologne with which to impress Penelope, sprays a combination of perfumes and colognes upon himself. This results in something close to a honey-potion, leading Penelope to autumn madly in dearest with Pepé. Pepé is revealed to be extremely frightened of overly-affectionate women, equally Penelope apace captures him and smothers him in more love than even he could imagine.
And yet once again, in "Really Scent", Pepé removes his odour past locking himself in a deodorant plant so Penelope (or "Fabrette," as she is chosen in this cartoon) would like him (this is as well the only pic-curt in which Pepé is acutely aware of his ain odor, having checked the word "P.U." in a dictionary). However, Penelope (who in this drawing is actually trying to have a relationship with Pepé considering all the male cats of New Orleans take her to be a skunk and run like blazes, just is appalled by his olfactory property) has decided to brand her own odor match her appearance and has locked herself in a Limburger cheese mill. At present more than forceful and demanding, Penelope speedily corners the terrified Pepé, who, later on smelling her new stench, wants nothing more than than to escape the amorous female cat. Unfortunately, she will not take "no" for an answer and gain to chase Pepé off into the distance, with no intention of letting him escape. (Credited to Abe Levitow, this drawing is the simply picture show-short in the Pepé Le Pew series non directed by Chuck Jones, too the disputable "Smell of the Twenty-four hour period").
Although Pepé usually mistakes Penelope for a female skunk, in "Past Perfumance", he realizes that she is a cat when her stripe washes off. Undeterred, he proceeds to cover his white stripe with black paint, taking the appearance of a cat before resuming the hunt.
Penelope is always mute (more than precisely - does only natural true cat sounds) in these stories; only the self-deluded Pepé speaks (several non-recurring human characters are given minimal dialogue, frequently zero more a repulsed, "Le pew!").
Throughout the 90s, merchandise, including statuettes, clothes, and framed pictures, mostly from the now defunct Warner Brothers studio store, showed Pepe and Penelope as a mutually loving couple.
Subversions
Sometimes this formula is subverted. In his debut advent, "Scent-able Kitty", Pepé (technically he is a different character because he is eventually revealed to be an American-absolute family skunk named "Henry" with two sons and a wife who beats him up for his "unfaithfulness") unwittingly pursues a male true cat who disguises himself as a skunk. "Scent-imental over You" has Pepé pursuing a female dog who has donned a skunk pelt (mistaking it for a fur coat). In the stop, she removed her pelt, revealing that she's a domestic dog. Pepe and so, "revealed" himself as another dog and the 2 cover. However, he later revealed to the viewers that he's indeed a skunk. In "Wild over Y'all", Pepé attempts to woo a wildcat who has escaped from a zoo (during what is called "Le grande tour du Zoo" at the offset of the 20th century exhibition), and painted itself to look like a skunk to escape its keepers. This cartoon is notable for not only diverging from the usual Pepé/Penelope dynamic, just too rather cheekily showing that Pepé likes to be beaten upward, because the wildcat thrashes him numerous times.
Production
Chuck Jones, Pepé's creator, wrote that Pepé was based (loosely) on the personality of screenwriter Tedd Pierce, a self-styled "ladies' man" who reportedly e'er assumed that his infatuations were requited. Chuck too created Pepé because he saw Pepé as the person he wanted to exist as a beau, thinking of himself as "unattractive"[1]. Pepé'southward phonation, provided past Mel Blanc, was based on Charles Boyer'due south Pépé Le Moko from Algiers, a remake of the 1937 French film Pépé Le Moko.
Eddie Selzer, animation producer (and Chuck's bitterest foe) at Warner Bros. Cartoons then one time profanely commented that no one would laugh at those cartoons. However, this did not keep Eddie from accepting an award for i of Pepé's pictures several years later on.
In the shorts, a kind of false French is spoken and written primarily past adding "le" to English language words (example: "le skunk de pew"), or by more creative mangling of French expressions with English ones, such as "Sacre Maroon!", "My sweet peanut of breakable", "Come up to me, my fiddling melon-baby collie!" or "Ah, my piddling darling, it is love at first sight, is it non, no?", and "It is honey at sight outset!" The screenwriter responsible for these malapropisms was Michael Maltese.
Some transcribed Maltese dialogue from the Oscar-winning 1949 brusque "For Odour-imental Reasons":
- Pepé: "Affaire d'flirtation? Affaire de coeur? Je ne sais quoi ... je vive en espoir. *Sniff.* Mmmm m mm ... un smella vous finez ... *Hum.*"
- Gendarme: "Le kittee quel terrible odeur!!"
- Proprietor: "Allais Gendarme!! Allais!! Retournez-moi!! This instonce!! Oh, pauvre moi, I am ze broke ... *Sob!*"
- Penelope: "Le mew, le purrrrrrr."
- Proprietor: "A-a-ahhh. Le pussy ferocious! Remove zot skunk! Zot cat-pole from ze bounds!! Avec!!"
- Penelope: "*Sniff, sniff, sniff-sniff, sniff-sniff.*"
- Pepé: "Quel est? *Notices Penelope.* Ahh...le belle femme skunk fatale...*clicks tongue twice.*"
Mel Blanc'south vox for the character resembles the one he used for Professor Le Blanc, the harried violin teacher in The Jack Benny Program.
Cameos
A possible cameo advent is at the end of "Fair and Worm-er" (Chuck Jones, 1946). This skunk doesn't speak, only looks identical (or is a close relation) and shares the same mode of travel and a slight variation of Pepé'due south hopping music. His function here is to hunt a string of characters who had all been chasing each other (à la "There Was an Sometime Lady Who Swallowed a Wing").
Pepé himself made a more obvious cameo in "Dog Pounded" (1954), where he was attracted to Sylvester after the latter tried to get effectually a pack of guard dogs, in his latest attempt to capture and consume Tweety, past painting a white stripe downward his dorsum (in his merely advent in a Freleng short).
Pepé peradventure makes a small advent as a baby skunk in "Mouse-Placed Kitten" (1959), where he is reluctantly adopted past a mouse couple at the cartoon cease.
Later on Appearances
Pepé makes an appearance at the beginning of the "The Oswald Awards" department of the 1981 compilation movie Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny Movie.
Pepé made several cameo appearances on the 1990 series Tiny Toon Adventures every bit a professor at Elevation Looniversity and the mentor to the female person skunk character Fifi La Smoke. He appeared briefly in "The Looney Beginning" and had a more extended cameo in "Information technology'southward a Wonderful Tiny Toons Christmas Special". The segment "Out Of Odor" from the episode "Viewer Mail 24-hour interval" saw character Elmyra disguise herself as Pepé in an attempt to lure Fifi into a trap, only to have Fifi brainstorm aggressively wooing her.
Pepé also makes cameo appearances in the Histeria! episode "When America Was Immature" and in the Goodfeathers segment, "We're No Pigeons", on Animaniacs.
In the 1995 blithe brusque "Carrotblanca", a parody/homage of the archetype moving-picture show Casablanca, both Pepé and Penelope appear: Pepé (voiced by Greg Burson) as Helm Renault and Penelope (voiced by Tress MacNeille) as "Kitty Ketty," modeled later Ingrid Bergman performance as Ilsa. Unlike the grapheme'due south other appearances in cartoons, Penelope (equally Kitty) has extensive speaking parts in Carrotblanca.
In the The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries episode "Platinum Bike of Fortune", Sylvester gets a white stripe on his back and a skunk immediately falls in love with him. This is not Pepé, but his fourth cousin, "Pitu Le Pew". He says, "What tin I say, Pepé Le Pew is my fourth cousin. Information technology runs in the family unit". Pepé would later appear in the episode "Paris is Stinking", where he pursues Sylvester who is unintentionally dressed in elevate. Pepé would appear once again in Tweety'south High-Flying Run a risk, falling in love with both Sylvester and Penelope (Sylvester had gotten a white stripe on his back from Penelope every bit they fought over Tweety), really showing a preference for Sylvester.
Pepé likewise appears in Space Jam, where his voice has curiously been inverse into an approximation of Maurice Chevalier, as opposed to more traditional vocalism.
Pepé was, at one signal, integral to the storyline for the motion-picture show Looney Tunes Back in Action. Originally, once Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, DJ, and Kate arrived in Paris, Pepé was to requite them a mission briefing within a gift store. Perhaps because of the group receiving their equipment in Surface area 52, Pepé's scene was cut, and in the final film, he plays only a fleck part, dressed similar a police officer, who tries to help DJ (played past Brendan Fraser) afterwards Kate (played past Jenna Elfman) is kidnapped.
However, some unused animation of him and Penelope appears during the finish credits, thus giving viewers a rare glimpse at his cutting scene, and his cutting scene appears in the movie'southward print adaptations.
Pepe besides appeared in Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, working in the Lucky Duck Section store, as a more than controlled but still quite amorous perfume salesman trying to sell perfume to Penelope. She'due south still put off by his odor, though afterwards Daffy's rude and aggressive sales pitch, Information technology'southward the duck she clobbers. Ultimately, Penelope is the i who pulls Pepe into a romantic embrace and nether the mistletoe.
In Loonatics Unleashed, a human being based on Pepé Le Pew named Pierre Le Pew (voiced by Maurice LaMarche) has appeared as i of the villains of the second season of the show. Additionally, Pepé and Penelope Pussycat appear equally cameos in a display of Otto the Odd, in the series. In the episode "The Globe is My Circus", Lexi Bunny complains that "this Pepé Le Pew await is definitely not me" after being mutated into a skunk-similar brute.
A 2009 Valentine's Twenty-four hours-themed AT&T commercial brings Pepé and Penelope'due south relationship upwards to engagement, depicting Penelope non as repulsed by Pepé, but madly in love with him. The commercial begins with Penelope deliberately painting a white stripe on her own back; when her cell phone rings and displays Pepé'due south picture, Penelope'southward lovestruck beating heart bulges beneath her chest in a archetype cartoon image.[ii]
Pepé Le Pew has appeared in the The Looney Tunes Show episode "Members Only" voiced past René Auberjonois. He also made a brusk cameo appearance with Penelope Pussycat in the Merrie Melodies segment "Cock of the Walk" sung by Foghorn Leghorn. He appeared in his own music video "Skunk Funk" in the 16th episode "That's My Baby". He also appeared once more in another Merrie Melodies segment "You Like/I Like" sung past Mac and Tosh. His first advent in the second season was in the 2nd episode, entitled, "You've Got Hate Mail", reading a hate-filled email accidentally sent by Daffy Duck.
Pepé Le Pew made a cameo in a MetLife commercial in 2012 titled, "Everyone". In it, he was shown hopping along in the woods and when he sees his honey interest, Penelope, atop the back of Battle Cat, he immediately hops subsequently her.
Pepé Le Pew has appeared in Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run voiced by Jeff Bergman.
In New Looney Tunes, Pepé Le Pew is a James Bail-esque spy who hits on Claudette Dupri.
Pepe made a cameo in the Looney Tunes Cartoons brusk "Happy Birthday Bugs Bunny!" The character was removed when the short was released as Warner Bros. - 60th Ceremony on the Annecy Festival'southward YouTube aqueduct.
Pepé appeared in the Animaniacs segment "Yakko Amakko", beingness placed on top of Yakko Warner's ice cream cone past an offscreen animator a la Duck Amuck and then promptly erased.
Controversy
In 2021, controversy arose over Pepé's sexually aggressive antics that have been compared to sexual harassment e'er since New York Times columnist Charles G. Blow defendant the character of promoting rape culture. This led to the 7 March announcement that Pepé Le Pew had been removed from the 2021 film Infinite Jam A New Legacy.[3] Articles report that Warner Bros. plans no future appearances of the graphic symbol in subsequent Looney Tunes media.[4] [five]. Pepé was planned to appear in Space Jam A New Legacy during the Casablanca world scene when Terence Nance was directing in 2019. He originally was planned to appear alongside Jane the Virgin actress Greice Santo in a scene where LeBron James tells Pepé about consent. As Terence Nance was replaced by Malcolm D. Lee weeks into filming, the scene was cut out of the film due to artistic differences. The scene was rewritten to feature Yosemite Sam in Casablanca world.
Linda Jones-Clough, girl of Pepé's creator Chuck Jones, was unhappy about this claim that the Pepé Le Pew character glamorized rape culture[six] . She defended confronting those claims, claiming that Pepé did not rape any female person graphic symbol in the show, nor did he inspire rape and sexual harassment cases in real life.[7] In fact, when Chuck Jones and Michael Maltese created Pepé Le Pew back in the 1940s, it wasn't intended to glorify bad behavior or to cause outrage, but to poke fun as screenwriter Tedd Pierce'southward "ladies' man" status and his then-lack of success with romancing women at the time. "Pierce's attitude toward sex activity 'was straight and uncompromising'," Jones wrote in his 1989 memoir, Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Blithe Cartoonist, adding, "It was simply logical, of class, that Tedd would exist in on the beginnings of Pepé Le Pew. … His devotion to women was at times pathetic, at times psychological, only always enthusiastic. Tedd could not really believe that any woman could honestly refuse his honestly stated need for her."[8]
Despite this, Pepé fabricated a cameo in the Animaniacs segment "Yakko Amakko" which debunks the reports of him existence removed from future Warner Bros. projects.
Moving picture
Stamped on May 2017. This article or section does non cite any sources. Please add reliable citations to aid verify the article's content. Do not remove this template until all weather take been met. |
- Main article: Pepé Le Pew (motion picture)
In October 2010, it was reported that Mike Myers would phonation Pepé Le Pew in a feature-length live action film based on the character, although no information about this project has surfaced since. In July 2016, it was revealed at San Diego Comic-Con that Max Landis was penning a Pepé Le Pew feature film for Warner Bros.[9] There has been no new data since and so due to sexual assault allegations confronting Max Landis in 2017. On 8 March 2021, the motion-picture show was confirmed to be scrapped considering of the development of Space Jam A New Legacy.[10]
Pepé Le Pew Shorts
(Directed by Chuck Jones unless otherwise indicated)
- "Aroma-able Kitty" (1945)
- "Fair and Worm-er" (1946)
- "Scent-imental over You" (1947)
- "Odor of the Twenty-four hour period" (1948, the only cartoon in which Pepé is not a lovebird)
- "For Scent-imental Reasons" (1949), Academy Laurels winner
- "Scent-imental Romeo" (1951)
- "Little Young man Pepé" (1952)
- "Wild over You" (1953)
- "Dog Pounded" (1954) (cameo in a Sylvester and Tweety cartoon, directed past Friz Freleng)
- "The Cats Bah" (1954)
- "Past Perfumance" (1955)
- "Ii Scent'south Worth" (1955)
- "Sky Odour" (1956)
- "Touché and Go" (1957)
- "Really Olfactory property" (1959) (directed past Abe Levitow)
- "Who Scent You?" (1960)
- "A Odor of the Matterhorn" (1961)
- "Louvre Come Back to Me!" (1962)
- "Carrotblanca" (1995) (directed by Douglas McCarthy and Spike Brandt)
Voice
- Mel Blanc: 1945 - 1989
- Greg Burson: Tiny Toon Adventures, "Carrotblanca", The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries
- Maurice LaMarche: Space Jam
- Joe Alaskey: Tweety's High-Flying Adventure, Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas
- Bruce Lanoil: Looney Tunes Back in Action
- Baton West: Looney Tunes: Back in Action: The Video Game [11]
- Jeff Bennett: Dancing Pepé, A Looney Tunes Sing-A-Long Christmas
- Rene Auberjonois: The Looney Tunes Testify (Season 1)
- Jeff Bergman: The Looney Tunes Show (Season 2), Looney Tunes: Rabbits Run
- Eric Bauza: New Looney Tunes, Space Jam A New Legacy (deleted scene), Animaniacs (2020)
Comic Appearances
Dell/Western Publishing
Looney Tunes
- Bugs Bunny and Pepé Le Pew - A Boxing Of Wits - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #240 Dell October 1961
Daffy Duck
- Daffy Duck and Pepé Le Pew - The Mannerly Doormat - 6 pages - Daffy Duck #27 Dell Oct 1961
- Daffy Duck - The Large Charge - 5 pages - Daffy Duck #30 Dell July 1962
- Daffy Duck and Pepé Le Pew - The Mannerly Chump - 6 pages - Daffy Duck #62 Western March 1970
Bugs Bunny
- Pepé Le Pew - Boat Bungle - viii pages - Bugs Bunny #86 Western Oct 1962
- Henerey Hawk - Helpful Hawking - 6 pages - Bugs Bunny #86 Western Oct 1962
- Bugs Bunny - Start - 12 pages - Bugs Bunny #86 Western October 1962
- Pepé Le Pew - The Wise Disguise - half dozen pages - Bugs Bunny #87 Western Dec 1962
- Pepé Le Pew - King Of The Hill - 6 pages - Bugs Bunny #88 Western March 1963
- Bugs Bunny Showtime - Cover - Bugs Bunny #88 Western March 1963
- Pepé Le Pew - Sweets For The Sweet - 6 pages - Bugs Bunny #138 Western October 1971
- Bugs Bunny - The Bored Boarders - 7 pages - Bugs Bunny #146 Western Dec 1972
- Bugs Bunny - Young man Fudd - 12 pages - Bugs Bunny #162 Western March 1975
Gold Comics Digest
- Pepé Le Pew - The Wise Disguise - eight pages - Golden Comics Digest #26 Western
March Of Comics
- Road Runner - Problem Doubled - 14 pages - March Of Comics #353 Western 1971
- Road Runner - Trouble Doubled - 14 pages - March Of Comics #416 Western Apr 1976
Tweety and Sylvester
- Tweety and Sylvester - Pills and Spills! - 5 pages - Tweety and Sylvester #111 Sep 1981
DC Comics
Bugs Bunny
- Bugs Bunny - Broken Cathay - 22 pages - Bugs Bunny #2 July 1990
- Bugs Bunny - Cover - Bugs Bunny #2 July 1990
Looney Tunes
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #1 DC Apr 1994
- Marvin Martian - Earthstruck - 10 pages - Looney Tunes #1 DC April 1994
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #3 DC June 1994
- Pepé Le Pew - Half Broiled Romance - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #3 DC June 1994
- Bugs Bunny - Take Me Out To The Ball Game - 12 pages - Looney Tunes #3 DC June 1994
- Tasmanian Devil - Happy 40th Birthday, Taz - eight pages - Looney Tunes #half-dozen DC Sep 1994
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #9 DC December 1994
- Pepé Le Pew - If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Dear - 12 pages - Looney Tunes #9 DC Dec 1994
- Bugs Bunny - How The Wabbit Saved Christmas - 18 pages - Looney Tunes #10 DC January 1995
- Looney Tunes - Star Player - 3 pages - Looney Tunes #xiv DC May 1995
- Porky Hog - Love Disconnection - viii pages - Looney Tunes #27 DC Jan 1997
- Daffy Duck - Side Kicked - x pages - Looney Tunes #34 DC Nov 1997
- Pepé Le Pew - The Skunk Who Loved Me - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #37 DC February 1998
- Bugs Bunny - Hare-Allel Universe - 12 pages - Looney Tunes #39 DC April 1998
- Pepé Le Pew - The Invisible Skunk - 9 pages - Looney Tunes #42 DC July 1998
- Pepé Le Pew - La Cage Aux Pew - 5 pages - Looney Tunes #46 DC Nov 1998
- Mac & Tosh: Listen Your Manners - Polite Pre-Reek-Quisites - 1 page - Looney Tunes #47 DC Dec 1998
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #66 DC July 2000
- Pepé Le Pew - The Painted Pussy Cat - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #66 DC July 2000
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #75 DC April 2001
- Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck - Hare Gone Conclusion - 24 pages - Looney Tunes #75 DC Apr 2001
- Pepé Le Pew - The Aroma Of Victory - four pages - Looney Tunes #95 DC Dec 2002
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #100 DC May 2003
- Looney Tunes - P Is For Pepé - 1 page - Looney Tunes #100 DC May 2003
- Looney Tunes - Embrace - Looney Tunes #105 DC Oct 2003
- Looney Tunes - Fume Service - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #105 DC Oct 2003
- Looney Tunes - Encompass - Looney Tunes #109 DC Feb 2004
- Pepé Le Pew - Hysterical History: Carrying A Torch - one page - Looney Tunes #109 DC February 2004
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #110 DC March 2004
- Pepé Le Pew - The Skunk Smelled Round The World - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #110 DC March 2004
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #116 DC Sep 2004
- Pepé Le Pew - The Devil May Care - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #116 DC Sep 2004
- Pepé Le Pew - Fast Women - 1 page - Looney Tunes #120 DC January 2005
- Looney Tunes - Comprehend - Looney Tunes #121 DC Feb 2005
- Pepé Le Pew - The Right Stink - 4 pages - Looney Tunes #121 DC Feb 2005
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #125 DC June 2005
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #127 DC Aug 2005
- Pepé Le Pew - Paparazzi Pew - two pages - Looney Tunes #127 DC Aug 2005
- Pepé Le Pew - A Star Is Smelled - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #127 DC Aug 2005
- Looney Tunes - Encompass - Looney Tunes #150 DC July 2007
- Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck - Accept Manhattan and Run - 2 pages - Looney Tunes #150 DC July 2007
- Daffy Duck - Moulin Stooge - 2 pages - Looney Tunes #150 DC July 2007
- Sari, Long (Musical) Numbers - 3 pages - Looney Tunes #150 DC July 2007
- Daffy Duck - Daffy Duck Backside the Cartoons - vii pages - Looney Tunes #150 DC July 2007
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #153 DC Oct 2007
- Pepé Le Pew - Seeing Blood-red - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #153 DC Oct 2007
- Pepé Le Pew - The Non Then Sweet Odour Of Success - 4 pages - Looney Tunes #153 DC October 2007
- Pepé Le Pew - Prancing With The Stars - vi pages - Looney Tunes #157 DC Feb 2008
- Pepé Le Pew - The Smell of Victory - iv pages - Looney Tunes #174 DC July 2009
- Pepé Le Pew - Vous Tube - 4 pages - Looney Tunes #175 DC Aug 2009
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #183 DC Aug 2010
- Pepé Le Pew - Pepe and Delilah - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #183 DC Aug 2010
- Pepé Le Pew - Fume Service - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #195 DC April 2011
- Pepé Le Pew - The Odour of Victory - iv pages - Looney Tunes #195 DC April 2011
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes #197 DC June 2011
- Pepé Le Pew - The Devil May Care - 6 pages - Looney Tunes #197 DC June 2011
- Looney Tunes - Comprehend - Looney Tunes #200 DC Sep 2011
- Pepé Le Pew - Amour de France - half-dozen pages - Looney Tunes #202 DC Nov 2011
- Pepé Le Pew - Paparazzi Pew - 2 pages - Looney Tunes #217 DC Apr 2014
- Bugs Bunny - Will-Phone call Wabbit - viii pages - Looney Tunes #217 DC Apr 2014
- Looney Tunes - What's [Space] Opera, Doc? - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #239 DC Nov 2017
- Looney Tunes - Bigger, Faster, Boom! - 8 pages - Looney Tunes #255 DC July 2020
Space Jam
- Infinite Jam - 47 pages - Infinite Jam DC 1996
Looney Tunes (Burger Male monarch Promo)
- Looney Tunes - Cover - Looney Tunes (Burger Male monarch Promo) #2 DC 2004
DC/Looney Tunes
- Starfire - Cover - Starfire #6 DC Jan 2016
- Batman/Elmer Fudd - Pway For Me - xxx pages - Batman / Elmer Fudd Special #1 DC Aug 2017
International Comics
Rosnoc/Mag Management (Australia)
- Bugs Bunny - The Bored Boarders - 7 pages - Bugs Bunny #26016 Rosnock 1976
- Daffy Duck - The Big Charge - 5 pages - Daffy Duck #R2233 Rosnock
Memorable Quotes
(From the Pepé Le Pew Shorts)
- "Touching, is information technology not?"
- "I'm the locksmith of love, no?"
- "How impetuous can you go?!"
- "I am Pepé Le Pew, your lover!"
- "Ah, I know! The jealous lover! Monsieur, I salute you!"
- "Nearly men would be discouraged by at present. Fortunately for her, I am not nigh men!"
- (After a faked suicide attempt) "I missed! Fortunately for y'all! And now Ma Cheri, we can start anew!"
Gallery
- Main article: Pepé Le Pew/Gallery
References
- ↑ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrD0aog7Kts
- ↑ AT&T Telephone Company Valentine'southward Day With Pepe Le Pew Valentine Television Commercial HD
- ↑ https://borderline.com/2021/03/pepe-le-pew-space-jam-2-new-york-times-rape-culture-controversy-1234708688/
- ↑ https://www.indiewire.com/2021/03/pepe-le-pew-not-announced-time to come-warner-bros-tv-1234622197/
- ↑ https://www.animationmagazine.net/features/adieu-le-pew-problematic-skunk-cut-from-space-jam-ii-and-may-never-return/
- ↑ https://comicbook.com/tv-shows/news/pepe-le-pew-canceled-looney-tunes-creator-daughter-reaction/
- ↑ https://world wide web.tmz.com/2021/03/09/daughter-pepe-le-pew-creator-did-non-contribute-rape-culture/In
- ↑ https://world wide web.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2021/03/09/pepe-le-pew/
- ↑ Max Landis Writing 'Pepe Le Pew' Pic, He Tells Comic-Con
- ↑ https://www.indiewire.com/2021/03/pepe-le-pew-not-appear-future-warner-bros-tv-1234622197/
- ↑ https://world wide web.behindthevoiceactors.com/characters/Looney-Tunes/Pepe-Le-Pew/
Characters | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Major Characters | ||||
Undiscriminating Dawg • Beaky Buzzard • Bugs Bunny • Cecil Turtle • Charlie Canis familiaris • Claude Cat • Daffy Duck • Elmer Fudd • Foghorn Leghorn • Gossamer • Granny • Hector the Bulldog • Henery Militarist • Hippety Hopper • Hubie and Bertie • Lola Bunny • Goofy Gophers • Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot • Marvin the Martian • Michigan J. Frog • Miss Prissy • Penelope Pussycat • Pepé Le Pew • Pete Puma • Porky Squealer • Ralph Wolf • Road Runner • Sam Sheepdog •. Sniffles • Speedy Gonzales • Sylvester • Sylvester Jr. • Taz • Tweety • Wile E. Coyote • Witch Hazel • Yosemite Sam | ||||
Secondary Characters | ||||
Blacque Jacque Shellacque • Bosko • The Crusher • Carl the Grim Rabbit • Giovanni Jones • Yoyo Dodo • Tasmanian She-Devil • Melissa Duck • Hugo the Abominable Snowman • Spike and Chester • Nasty Canasta • The Gremlin • Private Snafu • Petunia Pig • Playboy Penguin • Shropshire Slasher • Count Bloodcount • Mama Buzzard • Colonel Shuffle • Egghead Jr. • Owl Jolson • Toro the Bull • Rocky and Mugsy • Minah Bird • Inki • Beans • Petty Kitty • Ham and Ex • Oliver Owl • Piggy • Gabby Goat • Buddy • Honey • Slowpoke Rodriguez • The Iii Bears • Foxy • K-ix • A. Flea • Construction Worker • Frisky Puppy • Ralph Mouse • Honey Bunny • Roxy • The Martin Brothers • Ralph Phillips • Clyde Bunny • Fauntleroy Flip • Dr. I.Q. Howdy • Gruesome Gorilla • Sloppy Moe • Hatta Mari • The Weasel • Wiloughby • The 2 Curious Puppies • Cool Cat • Babbit and Catstello • Instant Martians • Bobo the Elephant • Colonel Rimfire • Smokey the Genie • Jose and Manuel • Merlin the Magic Mouse • Conrad the Cat • Angus MacRory • Banty Rooster • Thes • Shameless O'Scanty • 3 Little Pigs • Tom Turkey • Goopy Geer • Nelly the Giraffe • Ala Bahma • Dr. Lorre • Cottontail Smith • Bunny and Claude • Claude Hopper • The Hep True cat • The Drunk Stork |
wetzelplousee1943.blogspot.com
Source: https://looneytunes.fandom.com/wiki/Pep%C3%A9_Le_Pew
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