Difference between revisions of "1950s"

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* ''Tom and Jerry''
* ''Tom and Jerry''
** ''[[Royal Cat Nap]]'' - March 7
** ''[[Royal Cat Nap]]'' - March 7
* ''The Ruff and Reddy Show''
** "[[Ship-Shape Sheep]]" - March 8
** "[[Rootin' Tootin' Shootin']]" - March 8
** "[[Hot Lead for a Hot-Head]]" - March 8
** "[[The Treasure of Doubloon]]" - March 15
** "[[Blunder Down Under]]" - March 15
** "[[The Metal Monster Mystery]]" - March 15
** "[[The Late, Late Pieces of Eight]]" - March 22
** "[[The Goon of Doubloon Lagoon]]" - March 22
** "[[Two Dubs in a Sub]]" - March 22
** "[[Big Deal with a Small Seal]]" - March 29
** "[[A Real Keen Submarine]]" - March 29
** "[[No Hope for a Dope on a Periscope]]" - March 29
* ''Droopy''
* ''Droopy''
** ''[[Mutts About Racing]]'' - April 4
** ''[[Mutts About Racing]]'' - April 4
* ''The Ruff and Reddy Show''
** "[[Rescue in the Deep Blue]]" - April 5
** "[[A Whale of a Tale of a Tail of a Whale]]" - April 5
** "[[Welcome Guest in a Treasure Chest]]" - April 5
** "[[Pot Shot Puts Hot Shot on a Hot Spot]]" - April 5
* ''Tom and Jerry''
* ''Tom and Jerry''
** ''[[The Vanishing Duck]]'' - May 2
** ''[[The Vanishing Duck]]'' - May 2

Revision as of 11:05, 18 October 2020

The 1950s is the decade William Hanna and Joseph Barbera founded Hanna-Barbera.

At the beginning of the decade, they continued to direct (and later also produce) Tom and Jerry theatrical shorts for MGM Animation, while also producing their Droopy shorts in 1956. Both series ended ceased production in 1957 when MGM shut down its animation studio. Hanna and Barbera, wasting no time, set up their own studio and created their first cartoon series, The Ruff and Reddy Show, debuting straight to television in 1957. But their first successful cartoon was The Huckleberry Hound Show in 1958.

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