Click
to Raves (pretty much)
for Scrappy and Scrappyland: "America's favorite forgotten cartoon star...[a] spectacular homage site." "Totally fantastic. Cool, cool, cool." "Jeepers...the ungodly love-child of Mickey Mouse and Astroboy." "...This is a part of your knowledge bank that needs to be filled."
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January
2005 1.
Who is Scrappy? For way more background information about the character and the series, read this, this, and this. Then come back here--we'll wait. 2.
Who are the other characters in the cartoons? 3.
What's with the inconsistent naming? We're even inconsistent about the spellings on this site--in part because our articles come from disparate sources--but that seems in keeping with the spirit of Scrappy. 4.
Who was the voice of Scrappy? 5.
Who created Scrappy? 6.
I thought his name was spelled Dick Heumor. Or was it Huemor? "Dick was bedeviled by the fact that few people could spell his surname correctly. He tried variant spellings, none of which turned out easier to spell than Huemer. In addition to Heumor (on Scrappy title),he used Huemor on the "Good Time Guy" comic strip in the 1920's, as well as on an unsold comic about an old lady. I've encountered this problem myself. The most common error is transposition of the U and E." Here, courtesy of Mr. Huemer, is a panel from the old lady strip, with the Huemor spelling and a dog who looks like a cross between Scrappy's pal Yippy and Fitz, the dog in the Fleischer studio's Out of the Inkwell cartoons--which Dick Huemer also worked on.
7.
What was the last Scrappy cartoon?
8. Where can I see Scrappy? Last-minute note: The Voom high-definition TV channel is currently showing some Columbia cartoons, apparently culled from the Totally Tooned In package. This selection may include some color Scrappys. Or maybe not. We'll let you know if we see them there. 9.
Why is there so much Scrappy merchandise? Part of this is probably just due to his longevity--he had a decade-long career. But it may be that Columbia put more effort into it than most other studios. The 1930s was the heyday of Mickey Mouse's merchandising career, after all. And given that Charles Mintz had distributed Disney cartoons only a few years earlier, perhaps his ego was invested in the notion that he could out-market Disney. 10. Where can I find Scrappy merchandise? 11.
Are there other animated Scrappys? 12.
Who is Sparky? |
![]() Hollywood celebrates Scrappy Frequently-asked Scrappy questions The classic Animania article Why Scrappy Matters The National Scrappy Gallery The greatest Scrappy toy of them all Meet the Mintz Studio staff Scrappy edits a magazine The Cora Sue Collins mystery Other kids who loved Scrappy, or at least claimed to Rediscovering Scrappy Posters a la Scrappy Scrappy's letter to camp directors |
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