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・ Ralph Williamson
・ Ralph Willis
・ Ralph Willis (blues musician)
・ Ralph Wilson
・ Ralph Wilson (gymnast)
・ Ralph Wilson Nimmons, Jr.
・ Ralph Wilson Stadium
・ Ralph Winegarner
・ Ralph Winston Fox
・ Ralph Winter
・ Ralph Winter (producer)
・ Ralph Winterton
・ Ralph Winwood
・ Ralph Wise Zwicker
・ Ralph Wiseman
Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog
・ Ralph Wood
・ Ralph Woodrow
・ Ralph Woodward
・ Ralph Works
・ Ralph Wormeley Curtis
・ Ralph Worsley
・ Ralph Wrenn
・ Ralph Wright
・ Ralph Wright (footballer)
・ Ralph Wulford
・ Ralph Wyatt
・ Ralph Wycherley
・ Ralph Yarborough
・ Ralph Yarro III


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Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog : ウィキペディア英語版
Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog

Ralph E. Wolf and Sam Sheepdog (''E.'' like ''Ethelbert'') are characters in a series of animated cartoons in the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and ''Merrie Melodies'' series of cartoons. The characters were created by Chuck Jones.
Ralph Wolf (named after a Warner Bros. employee) has virtually the same character design as another Chuck Jones character, Wile E. Coyote—brown fur, wiry body, and huge ears, but with a red nose in place of the Coyote's black one; (usually) white eyes instead of Wile E.'s yellow; and, occasionally, a fang protruding from his mouth. He also shares the Coyote's appetite, and persistent use of Acme Corporation products, but he covets sheep instead of road runners and, when he speaks, doesn't have the upper-class accent or the egotistical bearing of the Coyote. Another crucial difference is that of personality: Ralph does not have the fanatical drive of the Coyote in pursuing his prey, preferring to abandon his chase at the end of the working day.
Sam Sheepdog, by contrast, is a large, burly Berger de Brie (Briard Sheepdog) with white or tan fur and mop of red hair that usually covers his eyes. He very rarely runs and tends to be sedentary in his movements. He does, however, possess sufficient strength to incapacitate Ralph with a single punch once he catches him.
==Original appearances==
Inspired by the Friz Freleng cartoon ''The Sheepish Wolf'' of a decade earlier (October 17, 1942),〔"(The Sheepish Wolf )". ''www.bcdb.com'', May 13, 2012〕 Chuck Jones created Ralph and Sam for a series of shorts. The first of these was ''Don't Give Up the Sheep'', released on January 3, 1953.
The cartoon proved a success, prompting Jones to repeat the formula five more times between 1953 and 1962. In 1963, ex-Jones animators Phil Monroe and Richard Thompson also starred the duo in their cartoon ''Woolen Under Where''.
The series is built around the idea that both Ralph and Sam are just doing their jobs. Most of the cartoons begin at the beginning of the workday, in which they both arrive at a sheep-grazing meadow, exchange pleasant chitchat, and punch into the same time clock. Work having officially begun, Ralph repeatedly tries very hard to abduct the helpless sheep and invariably fails, either through his own ineptitude or the minimal efforts of Sam (he is frequently seen sleeping), who always brutally punishes Ralph for the attempt. In many instances there are also multiple copies of Ralph and particularly Sam.
At the end-of-the-day whistle, Ralph and Sam punch out their time cards, again chat amiably, and leave, presumably only to come back the next day and do it all again. Both Ralph and Sam are performed by voice actor Mel Blanc. In "A Sheep In The Deep" the workday is interrupted by a lunch break, which they also conduct amiably. The operation seems to run 24 hours a day or at least into another shift, as when Ralph and Sam "punch out" they may also run into their nighttime replacements, Fred and George, respectively (see Sheep Ahoy: Inconsistency in naming). In some of their earlier appearances Ralph and Sam are named inconsistently: in particular the Sheepdog's shift replacement sometimes addresses him as "Ralph".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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