Furrball

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Furrball as a Ghostbuster
Furrball as a Ghostbuster

Furrball is a fictional alley cat in Tiny Toon Adventures. His mentor and favorite teacher at school was Sylvester the Cat, although the two similarities only seemed to include their appetites. He has a bandage on his tail, and also has a hole on his ear. He was usually depicted as living in a cardboard box in a back alley or as an unwilling pet of Elmyra (in spite of the latter, he was suspiciously absent from the spin-off Pinky, Elmyra and the Brain). In contrast to most of the other characters, he did not speak and was portrayed as a typical pet character (such as in the Porky Pig and Sylvester cartoons).

Furrball spent much of his time trying unsuccessfully to eat Sweetie Pie, a pink canary; and Li'l Sneezer, a baby mouse with many allergies and hurricane-force sneezes. As the intro suggests, Furrball is prone to misfortune ("unlucky" in the intro). Furrball has also proven to be one of the most versatile characters on the entire show. Some of his many misadventures included getting a pair of malfunctioning 3-D glasses glued to his head, being hypnotized into trying to eat a pit bull for supper, becoming the host of a family of singing Italian fleas, and being the terrified love-interest of an amorous Fifi Le Fume after involuntarily winding up with a white stripe down his back.

Although several appearances compared him to Sylvester, there were a few cartoons that cast him in a more sympathetic light. In these appearances, Furball is an abandoned alley cat, constantly looking for a home. The shorts would depict his misadventures in this goal, such as being mistaken for a dog by a blind couple; situations that were humorous, but also gathered pity for the character. He was a lonely cat against the world, but never gave up hope, much like legendary comedian, Charlie Chaplin.

As Furrball hardly ever spoke throughout the show, Furrball's typical cat sounds were provided by Frank Welker. However, it is revealed that he spoke in three episodes. In the episode Duck Trek (in which Furrball played a spoof of Star Trek's Leonard McCoy), he was voiced by Rob Paulsen. In the episode Buster and the Wolverine (a spoof of the classic musical children's story, Peter and the Wolf), Furrball was voiced by his regular voice actor, Frank Welker. In the episode Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow, he speaks precisely one word ("Years!", referring to how long he had been held captive by Elmyra), with his voice again being provided by Welker. Through the majority of the show, Furrball was in fact a mute.

Furrball's end tag had him roaring at the screen like a lion, before covering his mouth and letting out an apologetic mew.