Tom (''Tom and Jerry'')
Tom | |
---|---|
Tom and Jerry character | |
Tom's design in the Hanna-Barbera shorts. | |
First appearance |
Puss Gets the Boot February 10, 1940 |
Created by |
William Hanna Joseph Barbera |
Voiced by |
Clarence Nash (1940–1943) Harry E. Lang (1941-1953) William Hanna (1941–1958, 1965-1967) Allen Swift (1961–1962) Mel Blanc (1946–1967) John Stephenson (1975) Frank Welker (1980-1993) Richard Kind (1992) Don Brown (2006-2008) Jeff Bennett (2002) Bill Kopp (2005) Shun Yashiro, Kaneta Kimotsuki, and Setsuji Satō (Japanese) |
Information | |
Full name | Thomas Jasper Cat |
Species | Cat |
Gender | Male |
Relatives | George (identical cousin) |
Thomas Jasper "Tom" Cat is a fictional character and one of the title characters (the other being Jerry Mouse) in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's series of Tom and Jerry theatrical cartoon short films. Created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, Tom is a blue/grey anthropomorphic domestic short-haired cat who first appeared in the 1940 MGM animated short Puss Gets the Boot.[1] Tom was originally known as "Jasper" during his debut in that short;[2] however, beginning with his next appearance in The Midnight Snack he is known as "Tom" or "Thomas".[3]
History
Tom and Jerry cartoons
His full name, "Tom Cat", is based on "tomcat", a phrase which refers to male cats. He is very rarely heard speaking with the exception of a few cartoons (such as 1943's The Lonesome Mouse and Tom and Jerry: The Movie). His only notable vocal sounds outside of this are his various screams whenever he is subject to pain or panic. He is continuously after Jerry Mouse, for whom he sets traps, many of which backfire and cause damage to him rather than Jerry. His trademark scream was provided by creator William Hanna.
Tom has changed over the years upon his evolution, especially after the first episodes. For example, in his debut, he was quadrupedal and had normal cat intelligence. However, over the years (since the episode Dog Trouble), he has become almost completely bipedal and has human intelligence and he is similar to his previous appearance, in 1945 shorts he had twisted whiskers and his appearance kept changing. In the 1940s and early 1950s, he had white fur between his eyes. In newer cartoons, the white fur is gone. As a slapstick cartoon character, Tom has a superhuman level of elasticity. Tom is usually defeated (or very rarely, killed, like in Mouse Trouble, where he explodes) in the end, although there are some stories where he outwits and defeats Jerry.
Anchors Aweigh and Dangerous When Wet
Tom and Jerry appeared together in the 1945 Technicolor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musical Anchors Aweigh where Tom briefly appears as a butler for King Jerry, the latter who has a dance sequence with Gene Kelly, and also in another musical with the same studio Dangerous When Wet (1953), where, in a dream sequence, main character Katie Higgins (Esther Williams) does an underwater ballet with Tom and Jerry, as well as animated depictions of the different people in her life.[4]
Voice actors
- Clarence Nash (1940–1943)
- Harry E. Lang (1941–1953): The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series) (archival recording from classic shorts)
- William Hanna (1941–1958, 1965-1967): Vocal effects in the Hanna-Barbera era (1940–1958) shorts (also Tom and Jerry: Shiver Me Whiskers (archival recording from classic shorts), The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series) (archival recording from classic shorts) and speaking in the shorts:The Lonesome Mouse, The Zoot Cat and The Mouse Comes to Dinner
- Billy Bletcher (1944): speaking in the 1944 short: The Bodyguard
- Mel Blanc (1946–1967): In The Milky Waif (1946) when Tom bites his teeth and yells in pain, vocal effects in the Chuck Jones era (1963–1967) shorts, The Tom and Jerry Show (2014 TV series) (archival recording from classic shorts)
- Stepin Fetchit (1948): speaking in the 1948 short: Mouse Cleaning
- Daws Butler (1957): speaking in the 1957 short: Mucho Mouse
- Allen Swift (1961–1962): vocal effects in the Gene Deitch era (1961–1962) shorts
- John Stephenson: The Tom and Jerry Show
- Frank Welker: The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show, Tom & Jerry Kids
- Richard Kind (1992): speaking and singing in Tom and Jerry: The Movie
- Jeff Glen Bennett: Tom and Jerry: The Magic Ring
- Bill Kopp: Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars and Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry
- Don Brown: Tom and Jerry Tales
- Maurice LaMarche: Tom and Jerry in War of the Whiskers
See also
References
- ↑ IMDb. "Puss Gets the Boot". Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ↑ Mark Christopher Carnes, American national biography (2)
- ↑ IMDb. "The Midnight Snack (1941)". Retrieved 16 May 2010.
- ↑ IMDb. "Dangerous When Wet (1953)". Retrieved 16 May 2010.