About: Little Audrey   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/8o1p8DBc7tTqR4sOpNWJXA==, within Data Space : dbkwik.org associated with source dataset(s)

Little Audrey first appeared in the 1947 Noveltoon "Santa's Surprise", in which she is the American girl who lives in New York City and most prominent member of a multicultural child cast. According to animation, her first starring role was in the short "Butterscotch and Soda".

  • #DEDEE2
  • AttributesValues
    rdf:type
    rdfs:label
    • Little Audrey
    rdfs:comment
    • Little Audrey first appeared in the 1947 Noveltoon "Santa's Surprise", in which she is the American girl who lives in New York City and most prominent member of a multicultural child cast. According to animation, her first starring role was in the short "Butterscotch and Soda".
    • Little Audrey is a main character in a series of Paramount Pictures' Famous Studios cartoons from 1947 to 1958. Little Audrey first appeared in the 1947 Noveltoon, "Santa's Surprise", in which she is the all-American girl who lives in New York City and most prominent member of a multicultural child cast. According to animation, her first starring role was in the short "Butterscotch and Soda".
    • Audrey first appeared in the Noveltoon Santa's Surprise (1947), where she was the most prominent member of a multicultural child cast working to clean Santa's workshop while he was asleep, and was briefly seen in the January 1948 Popeye cartoon Olive Oyl for President. Her first starring vehicle was the short Butterscotch and Soda, released July 16, 1948. In common with many animated shorts of the period, childlike fantasy played an important role in Audrey's early cartoons, which often used dream sequences as the basis of the storylines. In this way, Audrey could ride the clouds with Mother Goose (Goofy Goofy Gander, 1950), attend a wedding in Cakeland (Tarts and Flowers, also 1950), or face an underwater tribunal of outraged catfish (The Seapreme Court, 1954). Slapstick humor crept into
    sameAs
    Pets
    • Pal
    dcterms:subject
    Dislikes
    • Girls' stuff, dolls, rules, classical music, anything else girly
    dbkwik:crossgen-co...iPageUsesTemplate
    dbkwik:dreamworks/...iPageUsesTemplate
    dbkwik:heykidscomi...iPageUsesTemplate
    Relatives
    • Suzie
    Voice
    • Mae Questel
    Portrayer
    Likes
    • Anything else boyish, hanging out, reading boy-oriented comic books , jazz and swing music, fishing, playing pranks, made inventions, sports, eating candies, having fun, boys' stuff
    Appearance
    • Brown hair with 3 blue bows, blue eyes, wears a blue dress, white gloves, white socks, and black Mary Jane shoes.
    Name
    • Little Audrey
    Personality
    • Cute, sweet, kind, funny, tomboyish, mischievous, imaginative, kind-hearted, happy
    First
    • Santa's Surprise Noveltoon
    Alias
    • Audrey Smith
    Home
    Affiliations
    • Melvin Wisenheimer, Tiny
    Occupation
    • An All-American Girl
    Friends
    • Lucretia, Melvin
    Gender
    • Female
    Creator
    abstract
    • Little Audrey first appeared in the 1947 Noveltoon "Santa's Surprise", in which she is the American girl who lives in New York City and most prominent member of a multicultural child cast. According to animation, her first starring role was in the short "Butterscotch and Soda".
    • Little Audrey is a main character in a series of Paramount Pictures' Famous Studios cartoons from 1947 to 1958. Little Audrey first appeared in the 1947 Noveltoon, "Santa's Surprise", in which she is the all-American girl who lives in New York City and most prominent member of a multicultural child cast. According to animation, her first starring role was in the short "Butterscotch and Soda".
    • Audrey first appeared in the Noveltoon Santa's Surprise (1947), where she was the most prominent member of a multicultural child cast working to clean Santa's workshop while he was asleep, and was briefly seen in the January 1948 Popeye cartoon Olive Oyl for President. Her first starring vehicle was the short Butterscotch and Soda, released July 16, 1948. In common with many animated shorts of the period, childlike fantasy played an important role in Audrey's early cartoons, which often used dream sequences as the basis of the storylines. In this way, Audrey could ride the clouds with Mother Goose (Goofy Goofy Gander, 1950), attend a wedding in Cakeland (Tarts and Flowers, also 1950), or face an underwater tribunal of outraged catfish (The Seapreme Court, 1954). Slapstick humor crept into the series with the release of Surf Bored (1953), which pitted the precocious little girl against a hulking but ultimately brainless life guard. A total of sixteen cartoons starring Audrey were produced for theatrical release, several of which were re-packaged for television from the late 1950s on. She was the only character in the series to have their own theme song with vocals ("Little Audrey Says", by Winston Sharples and Buddy Kaye). Some other characters (and certain one-shots) in the series had their own themes, but were entirely instrumental. Two Noveltoons spin-offs, Casper the Friendly Ghost and Herman and Katnip had their own vocal themes, but only after leaving the series.
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