
Actor
Tedd Pierce was an American animated cartoon writer, animator and artist. Pierce spent the majority of his career as a writer for the Warner Bros. "Termite Terrace" animation studio, working alongside fellow luminaries such as Chuck Jones and Michael Maltese. Pierce also worked as a writer at Fleischer Studios from 1939 to 1941. Jones credited Pierce in his 1989 autobiography Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist as being the inspiration for the character Pepé Le Pew, the haplessly romantic French skunk due to Pierce's self-proclamation that he was a ladies' man.
Născut
12 august 1906
Zodie
Leu
Decedat
19 februarie 1972
Locul nașterii
Quogue, New York, USA
Universul filmelor sale
Regie · 6 filme
Friz Freleng
Jungle Jitters, Ding Dog Daddy, Rumors, Country Mouse, Shop Look & Listen, Little Blabbermouse
Regie · 4 filme
Frank Tashlin
Scrap Happy Daffy, The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos, Cracked Ice, A Tale of Two Mice
Regie · 3 filme
Tex Avery
I Love to Singa, Uncle Tom's Bungalow, The Village Smithy
Regie · 2 filme
Chuck Jones
The Aristo-Cat, Fox Pop

Gulliver's Travels
King Bombo (voice)
1939

I Love to Singa
Jack Bunny (voice)
1936

A Tale of Two Kitties
Babbit (voice)
1942

Mr. Bug Goes to Town
C. Bagley Beetle (voice)
1941

Scrap Happy Daffy
Nazi Crowd on Scrap Pile (voice)
1943

Jungle Jitters
Salesman / Queen (voice)
1938

Boom Boom
Soldiers (voice)
1936

The Aristo-Cat
Bertie (voice)
1943

Uncle Tom's Bungalow
Narrator (voice)
1937

The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos
Tizzie Fish
1937

Ding Dog Daddy
1942

Rumors
Soldiers (voice)
1943

The Village Smithy
Blacksmith (voice)
1936

Fox Pop
Various (voice)
1942

The Return of Mr. Hook
Sailor
1945

Country Mouse
Announcer (voice)
1935

Cracked Ice
W.C. Fields pig
1938

A Tale of Two Mice
Babbit (voice)
1945

Shop Look & Listen
W.C. Fields character (voice)
1940

Little Blabbermouse
W.C. Fields mouse (voice)
1940

The Mouse-Merized Cat
Babbit (voice)
1946

My Little Buckeroo
Pig rider (voice)
1938

The Major Lied 'Til Dawn
The Major (voice)
1938

Quentin Quail
Quentin Quail (voice)
1946