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|An orange dot (voiced by Butler) boasts about he's the smallest among his colleagues, until his little brother comes onto the scene.
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|Three balls compare sizes. An orange ball (voiced by Butler) boasts that he's the smallest, until his little brother comes onto the scene.
 
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Revision as of 23:24, 19 April 2015

Dawsbutler

Daws Butler in the 1970s

Daws Butler (1916-1988) was a prolific voice actor, puppeteer, and occasional writer; along with Mel Blanc and Paul Frees, he was one of the leading cartoon voice actors for four decades, particularly known for his work with Hanna-Barbera. Like many other prominent voice actors, he lent his talents to animated inserts on Sesame Street during the 1970s.

Butler began his vocal career as an impressionist, and after a tour of duty in the Naval Reserves during WWII, he slowly began establishing himself as an radio actor, on such series as The Whistler and Family Theater. In 1946, he auditioned for MGM director Tex Avery and landed his first cartoon role, as the country wolf in Little Rural Riding Hood. He was subsequently heard as Spike the bulldog in the Tom and Jerry entries and a Southern-accented wolf (who would eventually develop into Huckleberry Hound). In the early television era, he collaborated with Stan Freberg on Bob Clampett's puppet series Time for Beany in 1949, as the voice and puppeteer of Beany Boy, Professor X, and others. He continued to work with Freberg in radio, first on the sitcom That's Rich and then as co-star and writer of the sketch series The Stan Freberg Show in 1957, where he essayed such roles as the interpreter for a tuned sheep orchestra (predating Marvin Suggs' Muppaphone) and an over-anxious censor. Butler and Freberg's collaboration continued in several records.

Butler's cartoon voice career continued. For the Warner Brothers Looney Tunes, he was heard as The Honeymousers and in various bit roles, and for Walter Lantz, he was several of Woody Woodpecker's antagonists as well as Chilly Willy. He truly made his mark in the television era, playing most of the stars of Hanna-Barbera's animated series: Huckleberry Hound, Yogi Bear, Quickdraw McGraw, Dixie and Mr. Jinks, Elroy (on The Jetsons), Augie Doggie, Hokey Wolf, and Peter Potamus, amongst others. His other TV voice work included voicing Cap'n Crunch in cereal commercials, and Aesop Jr. and various prissy princes on Jay Ward's The Bullwinkle Show. In 1969, He was heard in Chuck Jones' feature adaptation of The Phantom Tollbooth (as the Whether Man and others).

Sesame Street Filmography

Picture Title / EKA Description
Toon.Froghater
Man Who Hated Frogs
Episode 0560
Butler voices a man, with a Southern accent, who despises frogs, and fails to understand their role in the environment.
Rhymeswithballtoon
Words That Rhyme with Ball
Episode 0796
Butler voices a man trying to warn his companion that he's nearing a cliff.
2257r
J Train
Episode 1364
A J on a train track joins words, with voice-over commentary by Butler.
F Words
Episode 1733
A mad scientist (voiced by Butler) tries to teach his Frankenstein-esque monster words that begin with F.
Noimage
Small, Smaller and Smallest Three balls compare sizes. An orange ball (voiced by Butler) boasts that he's the smallest, until his little brother comes onto the scene.

External links

Wikipedia has an article related to: