height john nolan
2010

Felix the cat
Felix origins remain controversial. Australian cartoonist film entrepreneur Pat Sullivan, owner of the character Felix said during his life to its creator as well. American animator Otto Messmer, Sullivan's lead animator, has been more commonly assigned credit in recent decades. Some historians argue that Messmer ghost Sullivan. What is certain is that Felix emerged from Sullivan's studio, and cartoons with the character enjoyed success and popularity in the 1920's.
In the 1920 Felix enjoyed enormous popularity in popular culture. He had his own comic strip (drawn by Messmer) from 1923, and his image soon adorned all sorts of goods such as pottery, toys and postcards. Several manufacturers made stuffed animals Felix. jazz bands as Paul Whiteman played songs from it (1923's "Felix kept on walking" and others).
At the end of 1920 with the arrival of the drawings sound animated Felix's success was fading. New Mickey Mouse shorts Disney made an offer to silence Sullivan and Messmer, who were then willing to move sound production has become obsolete. In 1929, Sullivan decided to make the transition and began distributing Felix sound cartoons through portraits Copley. The sound Felix shorts proved a failure and the operation ended in 1930. Sullivan died in 1933. Felix saw a brief three cartoon resurrection animated in 1936 by the Van Beuren studios.
Felix cartoons began airing on U.S. television in 1953. Meanwhile, Joe Oriolo, who now Felix directs comic, introduced a new design, "long legged" Felix in a new animated series for television. Also Oriolo added new characters, and gave Felix a "bag of magic tricks," which could take an infinite variety of forms at the behest of Felix. The cat has appeared in other television programs and two feature films. Felix is being presented in a variety of goods from clothing to toys. son of Oriolo, Don Oriolo, now controls creative work on Felix movies.
Creation
Feline Follies of Pat Sullivan, silent, 1919. Duration 4min44s, 501kbps
A scene of Felix "laffing" from "Felix in Hollywood" (1923).
Pat Sullivan's work
Felix and share Charlie Chaplin on the screen in a memorable moment from "Felix in Hollywood" (1923).
The famous Felix pace "as seen in "Oceantics" (1930)
On November 9, 1919, Master Tom, a prototype of Felix, debuted in a Paramount Pictures short entitled Feline Follies. Produced the study of New York City-based animation of Pat Sullivan owned the cartoon was directed by cartoonist and animator Otto Messmer. It was a success, and the study Sullivan quickly went to work in producing another film featuring Master Tom, the cat Felix the prototype in Antigua Musical (published November 16, 1919). It is also was successful with the public. Otto Messmer gave two different versions of how his name is Felix, who is on their official website ejoining Sullivan with a great idea for a new character, Felix the Cat, and the second r. (John) King of Paramount magazine suggested the name "Felix", after the Latin words felis (Cat) and felix (luck), which was used for the third film, The Adventures of Felix (released on December 14, 1919). Pat Sullivan said after Australia named Felix Felix of Australia's history and literature. In 1924, animator Bill Nolan redesigned the young cat, making it much rounder and cuter. Felix's new looks, along with the character animation Messmer, Felix brought fame.
The question of who exactly created Felix remains controversial. Sullivan said in interviews, he created numerous newspapers and Felix made the key drawings for the character. On a visit to Australia in 1925, Sullivan told The Argus newspaper: "The idea was that gave me a vision of a cat that my wife brought to the studio one day." At other times, said Felix had Rudyard Kipling was inspired by "The cat that way by itself" or the love of his lost wife. Members of the Australian Cartoonist Association have shown that the letters used in Feline Follies matches handwriting Sullivan. Pat Sullivan also lettered in his drawings, it was a great contradiction to claims Messmer. Sullivan's claim is also supported by its March 18, 1917, publishing a short story entitled The Tail of Thomas Kat, more than two years before the crazy cats. Both a documentary Australian ABC-TV project in 2004 and the commissioners of an exhibition at the State Library of New South Wales, in 2005, suggested that Thomas Kat was a prototype or precursor of Felix. However, some details of Thomas have survived. His skin color has not been definitively established, and the copyright Survivor short synopsis indicates significant differences between Thomas and the subsequent Felix. For example, while the late Felix magically transforms his tail and other tools objects, Thomas is an anthropomorphized cat who lost its tail in a fight with a rooster, which never recovered.
Sullivan was the owner of study and as is the case with almost all film entrepreneurs owned the copyright of any creative work of its employees. Like many animators over time, Messmer was not credited. After Sullivan's death in 1933, its assets in Australia took ownership of the character.
It was not until many years after the death of Sullivan that Sullivan's personal and Hal Walker, Al Eugster, and Sullivan's lawyer, Harry Kopp, credited Messmer with Felix's creation. They claimed that Felix was based on an animated Charlie Chaplin Messmer had animated for Sullivan's studio earlier. The down and out personality and movements of the cat in Cat Follies reflect the key attributes of Chaplin, and but blockier pm Felix family black body is already there (Messmer found solid forms easier to animate). Messmer recalled version the creation of the cat in an interview with animation historian John Canemaker:
Sullivan study was very busy, and Paramount, which is falling behind of their program and they need an extra to fill in, and Sullivan, which is very busy, he said, "If you want to do on the side, you can do any little thing to satisfy them." So I thought a cat is about simpler. Make them all black, you know you should not worry about the edges. And one joke after another, you know? Lindo. And all laughs. So Paramount liked so I ordered a series.
Many animation historians (most of them American and English) again Messmer allegations. Among them are Michael Barrier, Jerry Beck, Colin and Timothy Cowles, Crafton, Donald, David Gerstein, Milt Gray Kausler, Mark Leonard Maltin, and Solomon Carlos.
Regardless of who created Felix the Cat Sullivan marketed relentlessly, while Messmer continued to produce a huge volume of drawings Felix cartoons. Messmer did the animation directly on white paper with inkers location drawings directly. The animators drew funds into pieces of celluloid, that were established then on the pictures to be photographed. Any work perspective had to be animated by hand, as studio cameras were unable to perform pans or trucks. Messmer began in 1923 a comic strip distributed by King Features Syndicate.
Popularity and distribution
Felix the Cat comic strip Daily debuted in England on August 1, 1923 draft and went into syndication in the United States on 19 August that year. This particular band was the second appear (Aug. 26). Although this was Messmer's work, he was required to sign the Sullivan name to it. The strip includes a remarkable collection of 1920's slang, as "buzz this type of employment" and "if you want a swell feed just follow me."
Click to enlarge.
Paramount Pictures distributed the first films from 1919 to 1921. Margaret J. Winkler distributed the shorts from 1922 to 1925, the year when Educational Pictures took over distribution of the shorts. Sullivan Felix promised a new short every two weeks. The combination of solid entertainment, business promotion, and distribution brought widespread popularity Felix to new heights.
References to alcoholism and prohibition also common in many of the short Felix, Felix mostly whole (1924), by whats and whys Other (1927), Felix woos Whoopee (1930) to name a few. In Felix idiots It Out (1924), Felix tries to help his friend who is homeless plagued with a red nose. At the end of the short, the cat finds the cure for the condition: "Keep drinking, and it will turn blue."
In addition, Felix was one of the first images broadcast on television when RCA chose a cardboard doll Felix mch for a 1928 experiment by New York W2XBS in Van Cortlandt Park. The doll was chosen for its tonal contrast and its ability to withstand the intense lights needed. He was placed on a phonograph turntable and photographed for about two hours each day. After a one-time payment to Sullivan, the doll remained on the plate for nearly a decade as RCA fine-tuned the definition of the image.
Felix success also spawned a host of imitators. Appearances and personalities of other feline stars as Julius 1920's Walt Disney Alice Comedies, Paul Terry Waffles Film Fables Aesop, and especially Bill Nolan 1925 adaptation of Krazy Kat (Distributed by the section of Winkler) appear to have been directly modeled after Felix.
Felix cartoons are also popular among critics. Have been cited as imaginative examples of surrealism in film.
Felix in the color caricature of the goose that lays the golden eggs (1936)
Felix is said to represent a child's sense of wonder, creating the fantastic when it is not there and take it easy when you are. His famous paceands back, head down, deep thoughtecame a brand that has been analyzed by critics around the world. Felix's expressive tail, which could be a shovel in a moment, an exclamation mark or pencil the next, serves to emphasize that anything can happen in their world. Aldous Huxley wrote that the Felix shorts proved that "what cinema can do better than literature or the spoken drama must be exceptional."
By 1923 the figure was at the peak of his career in film. Felix in Hollywood, just released this year, plays on the popularity of Felix as it meets these fellow celebrities like Douglas Fairbanks, Cecil B. DeMille, Charlie Chaplin, Ben Turpin, and even censor Will H. Hays. His image could be seen on clocks, Christmas ornaments, and never as the first giant balloon Thanksgiving Parade Macy's fact. Felix also became the subject of several popular songs of the era, such as Felix walked "by Paul Whiteman. Sullivan made an estimated $ 100,000 a year off toy alone. With the success of the character also emerged a handful of new co-star. These include master Felix, Willie Brown, a paper mouse with long names, Felix's nephews Inky, Dinky and Winky, and his girlfriend Kitty.
Most of the early Felix cartoons reflects American attitudes of the "Roaring Twenties." ethnic stereotypes appear in court as hungry as Felix (1924). Recent events such as the Russian Civil War as shown in short perplexed Félix All (1924). Flappers were caricatured was in Felix strikes Rico (also 1924). He also became involved in union organizing with Felix Revolts (1923). In some courts, even performed Felix a version of Charleston.
In 1928, he left the release of Education Felix cartoons, and many were reprinted by First National Pictures. Copley Photos distributed them from 1929 to 1930. He saw a brief resurrection of three cartoon in 1936 by the Van Beuren studios (The goose that lays the golden eggs, and King Neptune nonsense Cole in bold). Sullivan did most of the marketing for the character in the 1920's, these short boy who speaks in a high pitched voice that was provided as by Mae Questel, the voice of Betty Boop and Olivia.
Felix as mascot
U.S. Navy insignia for the squadron VF-31, 1948
Given popularity unprecedented character and the fact that his name is partially derived from the Latin word meaning "luck", some rather remarkable and organizations Felix adopted as a pet. The first was in Los Angeles Chevrolet dealer and friend of Pat Sullivan named Winslow B. Felix opened his showroom in 1921. Neon three-sided sign of Felix Chevrolet, with its giant, smiling images of the character, is today one of the most famous places of Los Angeles, standing monitor both the street Figueroa and the Harbor Freeway. Users who adopted the 1922 Felix including New York Yankees and the aviator Charles Lindbergh, who took a Felix doll with him in his historic flight across the Atlantic Ocean.
This popularity continued. In the 1920, bombings of the U.S. Navy Squadron two (VB-2B) adopted a unit insignia consisting of Felix happily carrying a bomb with a lit fuse. Logo retained through the 1930's when became a fighter squadron in the designations VF-6B and, later, VF-3, whose members John Thach Edward O'Hare and became famous naval aviators in the Second World War. After World War II a squadron of U.S. Navy combat currently designated VFA-31 replaces the winged logo of meat knife with the same logo, after Felix the original squad had been dissolved. The company, based in the night fighter squadron, nicknamed the "Tomcatters" remained active under different names continued until today and Felix still appears in the two patches of the squad jacket fabric and the aircraft, carrying his bomb with burning fuse.
Felix is also the oldest high school mascot in the state of Indiana, elected in 1926 after a Logansport High School Player Felix brought his stuffed a basketball game. When the team rallied and won that night, Felix became the mascot of all sports teams high Logansport school.
The pop punk band The Queers also use Felix as a mascot, often said to reflect the sensitivity punk and attributes, such as frowning, smoking, or playing guitar. Felix adorns the covers of both PE Surf Goddess and the Movement Back boot disk. Felix also appears in the music video for the single "Do Back Down. "In addition to appearing on the covers and notes of various albums of cat icon also appears on merchandise such as T-shirts and buttons. In an interview with bassist-B Cara says that Lookout! Records are responsible for the use of Felix as a mascot.
Felix appeared in a Japanese commercial for Daihatsu 1991 Watch as "Felix the Look."
From silent to sound
Felix and Inky and Winky in "April Maze" (1930)
With the arrival of the singer Jazz in 1927, Educational Pictures, who distributed the Felix shorts at the time, urged Pat Sullivan to make the leap to "walkie" cartoon but Sullivan refused. later conflicts led to a rupture between the Education and Sullivan. Only when Walt Disney Steamboat Willie made cinematic history as the first cartoon to speak with a soundtrack synchronized Sullivan pointed out the possibilities of sound. He managed to get a contract with First National Pictures in 1928. However, for reasons unknown, this did not last, so Sullivan sought out Jacques Kopfstein and Copley Pictures to distribute his new sound Felix cartoons. On October 16, 1929, appeared an announcement in the Felix daily Film announcing, Jolson-like, "You do not hear anything yet!"
Unfortunately, nothing good was heard from the transition Felix the sound. Sullivan did not carefully prepare for the transition of Felix the sound, and sound effects cartoon sound like a post-process animation. The results were disastrous. More than ever, it seemed as if Disney mouse approached the public away from Sullivan's silent star. Even the entries as the off-beat "Felix woos Whoopee" or the Silly Symphony-esque April Maze (both 1930) could regain the franchise's audience. Finally Kopfstein Sullivan canceled the contract. Later, he announced plans to start a new studio in California, but these ideas never materialized. Things went from bad to worse when Sullivan's wife, Marjorie, died in March 1932. After this, Sullivan completely fell apart. He dropped into an alcoholic depression, his health declined quickly, and his memory began to fade. He could not even cash checks to Messmer and his firm was reduced to a simple scribble. He died in 1933. Messmer recalled
He left everything a mess, no books, nothing. So when he died the place was closed at the height of popularity, when the whole world, RKO, and all them for years tried to take over from Felix. . . . I did not have that permission [Continue character] because I did not have legal ownership of it.
In 1935, J. Amadee Van Beuren Van Beuren studies Messmer called and asked if he could return Felix to the screen. Van Beuren even stated that Messmer would be equipped with a complete equipment and all necessary utilities. However, Messmer declined his offer and instead recommended Burt Gillett, a former employee of Sullivan that he was now in front of staff Van Beuren. In 1936, Van Beuren obtained approval from Sullivan's brother Felix leave his study with the intention of producing new pants, both color and sound. With Gillett at the helm, now heavily influenced by Disney, which ended with Felix established personality and made it just a fun character and popular type animals in the day. The new shorts were unsuccessful, and after just three starts Van Beuren discontinued the series.
Renaissance
In 1953, Official Films bought the Sullivan-Messmer shorts, added soundtracks for them, and distributed to markets in home theater and television. Messmer are pursued Sunday Felix comic strips until they were abolished in 1943, when he began eleven years of writing and books Felix monthly drawing comics for Dell Comics. In 1954, Messmer retired from the Felix daily newspaper strips, and his assistant Joe Oriolo (creator of Casper the Friendly Ghost) took over. Oriolo struck a deal with the new owner Felix, Pat Sullivan's nephew, to begin a new series of Felix cartoons on television. Oriolo went on to star Felix in 260 television cartoons Trans-Lux distributed beginning in 1958. Like the Van Beuren studio before, Oriolo gave Felix a more domesticated and pedestrian personality, more oriented toward children, and introduced the elements known as Felix Magic bag of tricks, a portfolio could take the form and characteristics of anything Felix wanted. The program is also remembered for his characteristic theme, written by Winston Sharples in 1950 and made the big band of singer Ann Bennett
Felix the cat
The wonderful cat, wonderful!
Always gets in trouble,
He reaches into his bag of tricks!
Felix the cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
You'll laugh so pain side of it
Your heart will go pitter pat
Viewing Felix the wonderful cat!
Felix the cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
You You never know what to do next
So do not even try to take a guess
Felix the cat
The cat wonderful, wonderful
It's really fun for everyone
No one can question
For he is Felix the wonderful cat!
The show ended with Felix's previous supporting cast and introduced many new characters, all of which were performed by the voice actor Jack Mercer:
The teacher, a sinister villain, mustachioed role was head of Felix
Poindexter, the Professor is intelligent but bookish nephew (who has an IQ of 222) that sometimes working with his uncle against Felix, but often presents as a friend of Felix and work against his uncle
Rock Bottom, bulldog face of the professor, awkward assistant
The Master Cylinder, an evil robot, cylindrical, self-proclaimed "King of the Moon "
Vavoom, a small, humble and friendly Inuit, whose only vocalization is a scream (literally) earth-shaking of his own name (but it was powerless if his mouth was taped shut.)
Oriolo's plots revolve around the unsuccessful attempts of the antagonists to steal Felix's magic bag, but in an unusual twist, the antagonists occasionally shown as Felix's friends as well. The cartoons proved to be popular, but critics have dismissed fence compared to the first Sullivan-Messmer work, especially since the cartoons Oriolo aimed at children. limited animation (requires story lines due to budgetary constraints) simplistic and did nothing to diminish the popularity of the series.
Today Oriolo's son, Don, still on the market the cat. In 1988, Felix starred in his first film, Felix the Cat: The Movie, in which he, the Professor and Poindexter visit an alternate reality. The film was a box office flop. Furthermore, no even released until 1991. In 1995, Felix appeared on television again, in an unconventional series called The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat. Baby Felix followed in 2000 for the Japanese market, the direct-to-video Felix the Cat Saves Christmas. Felix also co-starred with Betty Boop in "Betty Boop and Felix" comic strip (1984-1987). Oriolo has also prompted a new wave of merchandising Felix, all toys Wendy Children's food to a game for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
Felix in her first screen appearance in "crazy cat" (1919)
Since the publication of John Canemaker Felix: The Twisted Tale majority in the world famous cat in 1991, has been a renewed interest in shorts in early Sullivan-Messmer. In recent years, the movies I've seen a lot VHS and DVD of the exhibition, especially in the presentation of Felix the Cat compilations of Bosko Video, Felix! of Lumivision, Felix the Cat: The Collector's Edition Delta Entertainment, Before Mickey from Inkwell Images Ink, the recent Felix the Cat and 1920 Thunderbird Rarities animation. Messmer Felix compilations cartoons have also begun to emerge as Nine Lives to Live: A Classic Felix Celebration by David Gerstein and, more recently, The Comic Adventures of Felix Determined Productions cat.
According to Don Oriolo Felix the Cat blog in September 2008 envisaged in the development of a new television series. Don biography page also mentions a cartoon series of 52 chapters in the works.
Filmography
Main article: List of Felix the Cat cartoon
Voice actors
Mae Questel (1936)
Jack Mercer (1958-1961)
Chris Phillips (1988)
Carlos Alazraqui (current)
Thom Adcox-Hernandez & Charlie Adler (1995-1997)
Grey DeLisle (2000-2001)
Wayne Allwine (2004)
Cultural legacy
Felix makes a cameo in the Disney and Amblin Entertainment, who Framed Roger Rabbit in the final film with the Toons. First, the image appears in your hand with RK Maroon in Office RK Maroon, and after appearing as the masks of tragedy and comedy in the cornerstone of the entry of Toontown.
Felix the cat appeared in the NHL goalie Felix Potvin helmet while playing for the Boston Bruins
It is believed that looked Naoto Shima Felix the Cat as inspiration for the design of Sonic the Hedgehog.
In Japan, two commercials for 1991 Daihatsu Mira featured Felix. There was a special court-package called "Felix The Look" that offers both.
The cartoon My Life as a Teenage Robot has a restaurant called "Mezmer of" (the name of Otto Messmer), and the entrance to the restaurant is a giant head Felix the Cat.
In an episode of The Simpsons, Dean Scungio quotes from "The Encyclopedia of Cartoons" in the history of Felix: "A doll of Felix became a partner of Charles Lindbergh on his famous flight across the Atlantic. "In another episode of The Simpsons, in which the origins of the characters cartoon Itchy & Scratchy explores some of the parallels between the creation of Felix disputed history set forth above, and includes a parody film entitled Manhattan Madness, introduced as the first Itchy & Scratchy cartoon, supposedly in 1919, which is similar in style to "Felix in Hollywood" and other principles Felix animations.
Felix the Cat appeared in the 1927 Macy's Thanksgiving Parade Day, becoming the first balloon to float in the parade.
Felix appeared in the opening credits of episodes of Futurama How Hermes requisitioned his rhythm back, the lesser of two evils and war is the H-Word
See also
Animation in the United States during the era of silent films
Kit-Cat Klock
Winsor McCay
Dan Voiculescu
The golden age of animation American
Baby Felix
Notes
^ Goldenagecartoons.com
^ Solomon, 34, says the character was "not yet named Felix."
^ http://www.ottomessmer.com/
Solomon Abcde ^ 34.
^ [Dead link]
^ Ab "All media and legends … A miniature dipped in tar. "Vixenmagazine.com. Retrieved on the 28/09/2008. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.vixenmagazine.com/News.html&date=2008 -09 to 28. Retrieved on 14/09/2008.
^ Barrier 29 and Solomon 34.
^ Barrier, 30.
Solomon ^ abc 37.
^ For example, Solomon, 34, Marcel Brion appointment at these points.
^ Solomon 36.
^ Quoted in Solomon 34.
^ "The Queers – Interviews." Thequeersrock.com. Retrieved on 28/09/2008 original. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.thequeersrock.com/interviewsbface.html&date=2008-09-28. Retrieved on 14/09/2008.
^ Http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_g1epc/is_tov/ai_2419100434
^ Quoted in Solomon 37.
^ http://www.donsfelixblog.com/
^ Http://www.donsfelixblog.com/bio.html
References
Barrera, Michael (1999): Hollywood Cartoons. Oxford University Press.
Beck, Jerry (1998): The 50 best cartoons. JG Press.
Canemaker, John (1991): Felix: The Twisted Tale of the world's most famous cat. Pantheon, New York.
Crafton, Donald (1993): Before Mickey: The Animated Film, 18981928. University of Chicago Press.
Culhane, Shamus (1986): talking animals and other people. St. Martin's Press.
Gerstein, David (1996): Nine Lives to live. Fantagraphics Books.
Gifford, Denis (1990): American Animated Films: The era of silent films, 18971929. McFarland and Company.
Maltin, Leonard (1987): Of Mice and Magic: A History of American Animated Cartoons. Penguin Books.
Solomon, Charles (1994): The History of Animation: Enchanted Drawings. Output Books of the company.
Read more
Patricia Vettel Tom (1996): Felix the Cat as Modern Trickster. American Art, vol. 10, No. 1 (Spring 1996), pp 6487
External Links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Felix the Cat
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Felix the Cat
Officer Felix the Cat web site
The Classic Felix the cat on page Golden Age Cartoons
Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2004, Rewind "Felix the Cat" (Referring to the controversy over who created the character.)
State Library of New South Wales, 2005, "Reclaiming Felix the Cat" PDF (768 KB). exhibition guide, including many photos.
EV
Felix the Cat
Key People
Pat Sullivan, Otto Messmer Joe Don Oriolo Oriolo
Movies and TV
Cartoon Theatre (1919-1936) Felix the Cat (TV series) (1958-1961) Felix the Cat: The Movie (1991) Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat (1995-1997) Baby Felix (2000-2001) Felix the Cat Saves Christmas (2004)
Software
Felix the Cat (1992 video game) Felix the Cat cartoon Toolbox
EV
King Features Syndicate comics
Current
The Amazing Spider-Man Apartment 3-G Baby Blues Barney Google and Snuffy Smith Beetle Bailey The Better Half of friends Bizarro Blondie The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee Buckles Crankshaft Crock Curtis Dennis the Menace Deflocked Donald Duck Dustin Edge City Family Circus Flash Gordon Felix Cat Funky Winkerbean Grin and Bear It HGAR Horrible Hazel Henry Hi and Lois José Carioca Judge Parker Katzenjammer Kids Lockhorns Mallard Fillmore Mandrake the Magician Mark Trail Marvin Very Mary Mickey Mouse Mother Goose and Grimm Mutts My Cage On the Fastrack The Pajama Journal The Phantom Piranha Club Popeye Prince Valiant Pros and Consumer Retail Rex Morgan, MD Rhymes with Orange Safe Havens Sally Forth Sam and Silo Sherman's Lagoon Shoe Six Chix Slylock Fox and Comics for Kids Tiger Tina Groove Todd the Dinosaur Tundra Zippy the Pinhead grains
Historical
Abie the Agent Betty Boop Betty Boop and Felix Boner's Ark Bringing Up Father Buz Sawyer Franklin Philosophy Etta Kett fin Fibbs grandmother Hejji Happy Hooligan King Jungle Jim of the Royal Mounted Krazy Kat Little Annie Rooney little Iodine Little Jimmy The Little Mister Breger King Norb The Norm Peter the Tramp Radio Patrol Red Barry Redeye Reg'lar Fellers Rusty Riley Rip Kirby Sam's Strip Secret Agent X-9 Steve Roper and Mike Nomad will make you lucky Every Time Tim Tyler Triple Take Trudy Tillie the toiler Toots and Casper Tumbleweeds
Categories: Felix the Cat | 1920 | History of animation | Animated characters | Fictional characters in comics Items | All Items with dead external links: | | fictional anthropomorphic characters | 1919 Presentations | Fictional characters move | Animated film series fiction catsHidden categories with dead external links since September 2008 | Articles with weasel words November 2008 | All articles with statements without source | Items with statements without power in August 2009 About the Author
I am a professional writer from China Crafts Suppliers, which contains a great deal of information about replica rolex box , wooden toy kitchen set, welcome to visit!
John Nolan- Not To Let Go acoustic
Since you found this site, I assume you are interested in gaining a few extra inches of height. Although (if you’re a mature adult) this may sound like a pipe dream, I assure you that it is easier than you think! We’ve all been taught that height is mostly out of our control, that it’s largely determined by genetics. I’m here to tell you that there is more to the story. Of course our gene pool has a lot to do with ones height, but it is definitely not the only factor. Your state of emotion, your exercise regimen, the food you eat, and the hours you sleep are all factors in height determination. Click here to read the rest of the article: Free Height Enhancement

January 28th, 2011 at 12:43 pm
;~` I am very thankful to this topic because it really gives up to date information “”~