|
William "Billy" Bletcher (September 24, 1894 – January 5, 1979) was an American actor, voice artist, and comedian. He is best known for providing the voice of Mickey's rival, Pete, for Disney from 1932 to 1954. ==Career== Bletcher appeared on-screen in films and later television from the 1910s to the 1970s, including appearances in several ''Our Gang'' and ''The Three Stooges'' comedies. He was most famous as a voice actor. His voice was a deep and strong-sounding baritone. Bletcher provided the voices of various characters for Walt Disney Pictures (Black Pete, Short Ghost and the Big Bad Wolf in ''Three Little Pigs'' and its spin-offs).〔 In MGM films, he voiced Spike the Bulldog and on some one occasions even Tom, in ''Tom and Jerry'', and in Warner Bros. many characters, most notably the Papa Bear of Chuck Jones' The Three Bears after Mel Blanc had performed the role in the initial entry. He portrayed another villainous wolf in ''Little Red Riding Rabbit''. He auditioned to play one of the dwarfs in Disney's ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs''. However, Walt Disney disapproved in fear that people would recognize Bletcher from the studio's Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck short subjects. Bletcher's booming voice can also be heard as "Dom Del Oro" the Yacqi Indian god in the 1939 Republic serial, ''Zorro's Fighting Legion''. He also provided voice work for Ub Iwerks as the Pincushion man in 1935's Balloon Land, as well as Owl Jolson's disciplinarian violinist father in the 1936 Warner Bros. short subject based on the song ''I Love to Singa'' and the menacing spider in ''Bingo Crosbyana''. In 1939, Billy Bletcher and Pinto Colvig were hired to perform ADR work for the Emerald City munchkins in ''The Wizard of Oz''.〔 Both he and Mel Blanc did voice acting for the 1944 Private Snafu WWII training film "''Gas''", where Bletcher plays the villainous Gas Cloud (with Mel Blanc voicing Private Snafu and a cameo of Bugs Bunny) as an opponent of Snafu. Bletcher also played The Captain in ''Captain and the Kids'' with MGM cartoons. In 1950, he played several characters on ''The Lone Ranger'' radio program as well as appearing in episode 27 of the TV series. In 1971, Bletcher played one of his final roles, Pappy Yokum in a television adaptation of ''Lil Abner''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Billy Bletcher」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|