Answer: For Heckle and Jeckle, the short answer is -- you can't, at least, I've not found any "official" DVD releases from Terrytoons (Paul Terry Animation) or its current owner.

The depth and variety (literally) back then was amazing as I think about it.

It was on very early. Question: In the old Disney cartoons, there were "apologizing chipmunks."

Also it used a famous classical piece for the final scene, probably by Chopin. It was pretty popular in the 1960s, as I recall from my own childhood. You can give it a try -- the BB short is also listed on IMDB. Not a comment, but a question if I may (not sure where else to ask it): do you or anyone recall a cartoon based on a song by the Mills Brothers, that takes place in outer space? People who flew in bird clothes. There is also an animated page on a Berkley (edu) library website. Any thoughts? Good luck in your search!

We love to see the sun!"?

Also, the Library of Congress has a cartoon section for comic strips; I cannot add the link here but do a search for Library of Congress Cartoon America. Do you have any idea which cartoon it is? "Fat Stuff" was a Hawaiian character often seen in various strip panels.

I've thought about it over the years but no one seems to know or remember anything like it. but i couldn't find it . Can you help me figure out who the narrator is? They may have something in their archived files.

With his trusty sidekick Penfold, they must follow Colonel K’s orders and save the world. A little bit of everything. Answer: Within all the Sylvester & Tweety cartoons, there were a number of outside characters that made appearances. Your best bet right now is YouTube, but keep checking Amazon and IMDB for later Made On Demand possibilities. Because synchronized sound for motion pictures was a hit with movie-going audiences, film producers had to create voice-movies in order to stay competitive.

t. Hi.

I cannot accommodate your memory but I have published it here -- you never know what readers may come up with! Question: My mother is looking for a cartoon from the mid-70s, about two birds making a wedding cake on a country farm?

She called him Moz (Mos) which referred to "the ugliest pig in the world" and it stuck as his nickname.

could be from 40's-70's ,i don't know. The synopses (from IMDB) says " The Two Curious Puppies visit a model home with a panoply of modern inventions, including an annoying robot that sweeps up anything that touches the floor."

Hi, JD, I've done some searching but nothing is coming up, sorry. Thanks.

He ran one that was a multipart series featuring 7 (5?) When they exit, they look young and sexy, and strut off together. Still, we can watch and share and enjoy these wonderful cartoons with a click of the mouse (and not have to wait until Saturday mornings). That's all I can remember of it, other than the hippos trying to escape but dying and going into the clouds (at least in one scene?) All through song for the most part. Does any body know this cartoon and where I could see it ?

The Disney version of the classic Cinderella came out in 1950, followed by Alice in Wonderland (1951), Peter Pan (1953), Lady and the Tramp (1955) and Sleeping Beauty (1959).

it was an older animated video (guessing 50’s-70’s) with a male narrator that showed various optical illusions of sorts. The rooster prances around a picture and the fox pounces, but gets caught in the picture and falls in a nearby well.

(1932/Dave Fleischer). He put Disney’s animators on contract and gave Walt Disney an “either or else” ultimatum. In this seven-minute animated short, Betty Boop sings and runs against "Mr. Nobody" ... the House of Representatives is portrayed by elephants and donkeys. Question: What cartoon had a mobster fox in a pinstripe suit? She's the only character friend of Little Lulu with blonde hair (that I know of).

Awesome article!

Anybody have a recollection of this cartoon? Or who, perhaps, his sound-alike might be? There is no voice, but there is delightful music throughout. What were their names?

Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School (TV series), The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1967 TV serial), https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:1960s_British_children%27s_television_series&oldid=920179752, British children's television series by decade, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 8 October 2019, at 03:35.

There is a house floating on the flooded world. Perhaps someone can chime in, here. It seems, though, that these pieces would have been manufactured later than the 1920s.

Do you know what cartoon that was? Upon a search of your memory, I came up with something along this line: The Moomins (Finnish) are computer generated animals -- hippos; there is an episode that has a character called a "groke" that kills everything it touches.

Disney and Iwerks then created Trolley Troubles, which became very popular. So sit back and reminisce as it’s time to relive your childhood with the awesome cartoons we all watched in the 80’s.

Answer: The image you're describing does not strike a note, sorry.

There may have been a character named Black or Dark something. The Sun! I love this one, so happy to find again ... thanks! Does anyone remember a cartoon from either the 40s or 50s; it had a theme song that went "sunshine, sunshine," and one of the main characters was a happy bee. Google "Astro Boy cartoon" to see if any images strike a note. Good luck!

If you can’t remember, watch this nostalgia inducing clip before carrying on!

In the cartoon segment when Alice goes under water after a storm, there are fish dancing and other elements of a dream) but the clip I've seen has no audio at all; it may be that way when placed online.

All TV's were black and white back then, so that's how I saw it. It was about an old couple who found a bowl that would fill with ice cream and not stop.

It featured a song specifically written for it, called "Up Jumped the Devil with the White Nightgown." Teri Silver (author) from The Buckeye State on April 21, 2017: I can't think of it at the moment, but I have a memory of something like that too, and now it's "buzzing" around in my head.

They proceed to have their hair done, their skin de-wrinkled and their bodies reshaped. You might want to research Schlesinger; Leon Schlesinger studios eventually became Warner Bros, later, in the early '30s.

mind you he's 66 and his mum would be 91 now had she survived!!

Teri Silver (author) from The Buckeye State on June 29, 2019: I cannot help you, but I've published your memory in case another reader has any ideas. Give it a Google and see if it matches anything in your memory. I asked the question about the cartoon with the hunted hippos and while your suggestion wasn't quite it, while searching your suggestion in youtube I also ran through the sidebar for other hippo-related cartoons and I finally found it!

No talking. But before televisions became a part of American life, cartoons were shown to audiences in movie theaters. Give them both a Google to see if anything strikes a chord in your memory. There was an Australian-Canadian produced series (2002-2003) that featured a Yak family, perhaps you can research that, it was called Yakkity Yak.

Along with Bugs Bunny, Warner Bros. cartoons within the “Golden Age of Animation” featured the characters of Porky Pig, the Roadrunner and Wile E. Coyote, Daffy Duck, Pepé Le Pew, Elmer Fudd, Tweety Bird and Sylvester, Yosemite Sam, Foghorn Leghorn and many other favorites.

Teri Silver (author) from The Buckeye State on June 08, 2016: Hi, Ed, I cannot say that I know exactly which show you mean but there was a piece called “Space Patrol” produced in the early 1950s (through around 1955) that focused on “future solar system security in the year 3000 A.D.” The story line centered around a planet called Terra. blew my tiny mind!