Friz Freleng
Animator
One of the most prolific and successful animators of the 20th century, Isadore "Friz" Freleng was the director of Merry Melodies and Looney Tunes for Warner Brothers cartoons, and the guy behind the popular TV cartoon The Pink Panther. Freleng started in the cartoon business when he was just out of high school. He followed fellow animator Walt Disney to Hollywood in the late 1920s, but in 1930 he went to work for Warner Brothers. Freleng may not be as famous as Chuck Jones, but for three decades he was responsible for some of Warner's most popular cartoons, including Tweety Pie (1946) and Speedy Gonzalez (1955). When the studio stopped making cartoons in 1963, Freleng teamed with David H. DePatie to form DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, an animation studio that had great success with the Pink Panther television cartoon. The studio also produced several other cartoons for TV, including a number of specials based on the work of Dr. Seuss.Extra credit: Freleng created the Warner Brothers character Yosemite Sam, and once told the Associated Press that he felt some kinship to the hotheaded bandit: "I have the same temperament. I'm small, and I used to have a red mustache."
Four Good Links
Friz Freleng
Career background from his hometown library
DePatie-Freleng Enterprises Information
Terrific reference for devotees, from the Big Cartoon Database
The Tweety Antidote
Bloggers reminisce and analyze Freleng's style
The Friz and The Diz
Nifty 2006 piece about his work with Walt Disney
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
Best Known As
The animator who did The Pink Panther cartoons

