Daffy Duck

Daffy Duck is an animated cartoon character produced by Warner Bros. He has appeared in cartoon series such as Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies, where he usually has been depicted as the best friend and occasional arch- rival of Bugs Bunny. Daffy was one of the first of the new "screwball" characters that emerged in the late 1930s to replace traditional everyman characters who were more popular earlier in the decade, such as Mickey Mouse and Popeye. Daffy starred in 133 shorts in the golden age, making him the third- most frequent character in the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons, behind Bugs Bunny's 166 appearances and Porky Pig's 159 appearances.affy Duck is a cartoon character from the Looney Tunes. He is everyone's favorite Looney Tunes character, as his manic personality and sly deviousness embodies the Looney Tunes as a whole.Daffy first appeared in the cartoon "Daffy Duck and Egghead".He was the original star of the Looney Tunes until Bugs Bunny came along. This caused him to become jealous, and they became rivals. However, in the recent years they have patched up their differences and become friends. Daffy Duck is wacky, zany and a clever schemer.Daffy is often very greedy.He appears in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit", trying to perform a piano duet with Donald Duck. However, the combination of Daffy's zaniness and Donald's short temper makes it impossible to happen.Daffy more often,lets his greed and jealousy get the better of him,such as getting hit of the head by Grannies unbrella,getting constantly blasted by Elmer Fudd,during Duck/Rabbit Season,receiving a million boxes,instead of what thought was a million bucks,taking a box with bomb in it,that Buggs Bunny and Elmer Fudd didn't want by tossing it back abnd forthe or fighting an unseen animator that turns out to be Buggs Bunny.He appears in "Space Jam" as part of the TuneSquad team that challengers the Monstars to a basketball game with thewir freddom at stake. In "Tiny Toons", we see his nephew, Plucky Duck.He is one of the main protagonists of "Looney Tunes: Back in Action". There, the Warner Bros studio fires him. With no other choice, hegoes to live with D.J. Drake, a securityguard who moonlights as a stuntman. When D.J.'s father, Demian Drake, is kidnapped by the evil genius Mr. Chairman, he eagerly decides to go rescue him with D.J.Later, he ends up saving the world by deviating the beam from the Blue Monkey Diamond that was gonna turn humanity into monkeys.Daffy plays Duck Dodgers in the television series "Duck Dodgers", which originates from old movie serials starring Daffy. In "Loonatics Unleashed", we see his great- great- grandson, who fights crime as a member of the Loonatics.Daffy's catchphrase is "You're dethspicable", to anyone who angers him. Daffy was number 14 on TV Guide's list of top 50 best cartoon characters and was featured on one of the issue's four covers as Duck Dodgers with Porky Pig and the Powerpuff Girls (all of which are Time Warner- owned characters). ==Origin and history==Daffy first appeared in Porky's Duck Hunt, released on April 17, 1937. The cartoon was directed by Tex Avery and animated by Bob Clampett. Porky's Duck Hunt is a standard hunter/prey pairing for which Leon Schlesinger's studio was famous, but Daffy (barely more than an unnamed bit player in this short) was something new to moviegoers: an assertive, completely unrestrained, combative protagonist. Clampett later recalled:: "At that time, audiences weren't accustomed to seeing a cartoon character do these things. And so, when it hit the theaters it was an explosion. People would leave the theaters talking about this daffy duck." This early Daffy is less anthropomorphic and resembles a "normal" duck. In fact, the only aspects of the character that have remained consistent through the years are his voice characterization by Mel Blanc and his black feathers with a white neck ring. Blanc's characterization of Daffy holds the world record for the longest characterization of one animated character by his or her original actor: 52 years. The origin of Daffy's voice is a matter of some debate. One often- repeated "official" story is that it was modeled after producer Joel Peterson's tendency to lisp. However, inMel Blanc's autobiography, That's Not All Folks!, he contradicts that conventional belief, writing, "It seemed to me that such an extended mandible would hinder his speech, particularly on words containing an s sound. Thus 'despicable' became 'desthpicable.'" Daffy's slobbery, exaggerated lisp was developed over time, and it is barely noticeable in the early cartoons. In Daffy Duck & Egghead, Daffy does not lisp at all except in the separately drawn set- piece of Daffy singing "The Merry- Go- Round Broke Down" in which just a slight lisp can be heard. In The Scarlet Pumpernickel (1950), Daffy has a middle name, Dumas as the writer of a swashbuckling script, a nod to Alexandre Dumas. Also, in the Baby Looney Tunes episode "The Tattletale", Granny addresses Daffy as "Daffy Horatio Tiberius Duck". In The Looney Tunes Show (2011), the joke middle names "Armando" and "Sheldon" are used. ==Different interpretations==Virtually every Warner Bros. cartoon director put his own spin on the Daffy Duck character – he may be a lunatic vigilante in one short but a greedy gloryhound in another. Bob Clampett and Chuck Jones both made extensive use of these two very different versions of the character. ===Daffy's early years from 1937- 1940===Tex Avery created the original version of Daffy in 1937. Daffy established his status by jumping into the water, hopping around, and yelling, "Woo- hoo! Woo- hoo! Woo- hoo! Hoo- hoo! Woo- hoo!" Animator Bob Clampett immediately seized upon the Daffy Duck character and cast him in a series of cartoons in the 1930s and 1940s. The early Daffy is a wild and zany screwball, perpetually bouncing around the screen with cries of "Hoo- hoo! Hoo- hoo!" (In his autobiography,Mel Blanc stated that the zany demeanor was inspired by Hugh Herbert's catchphrase, which was taken to a wild extreme for Daffy.) Clampett physically redesigned the character, making him taller and lankier and rounding out his feet and bill. He was often paired with Porky Pig. ===World War II Daffy from 1941- 1945===Daffy would also feature in several war- themed shorts during World War II. Daffy always stays true to his unbridled nature, however; for example, he attempts to dodge conscription in Draftee Daffy (1945), battles a Nazi goat intent on eating Daffy's scrap metal in Scrap Happy Daffy (1943), hits Adolf Hitler's head with a giant mallet in Daffy the Commando (1943) and outwits Hitler, Goebbels and Goering in Plane Daffy (1944). Daffy was "drafted" as a mascot for the 600th Bombardment Squadron. ===Daffy from 1946- 1952===For Daffy Doodles (his first Looney Tunes cartoon as a director), Robert McKimson, Sr. tamed Daffy a bit, redesigning him yet again to be rounder and less elastic. The studio also instilled some of Bugs Bunny's savvy into the duck, making him as brilliant with his mouth as he was with his battiness. Daffy was teamed up with Porky Pig; the duck's one- time rival became his straight man. Art Davis, who directed Warner Bros. cartoon shorts for a few years in the late 1940s until upper management decreed there should be only three units (McKimson, Friz Freleng, and Jones), presented a Daffy similar to McKimson's. McKimson is noted as the last of the three units to make his Daffy uniform with Jones', with even late shorts, such as Don't Axe Me (1958), featuring traits of the "screwball" Daffy. ===Daffy's peak from 1953- 1964===While Daffy's looney days were over, McKimson continued to make him as bad or good as his various roles required him to be. McKimson would use this Daffy from 1946 to 1961. Friz Freleng's version took a hint from Chuck Jones to make the duck more sympathetic, as in the 1957 Show Biz Bugs. Here Daffy is arrogant and jealous of Bugs, yet he has real talent that is ignored by the theatre manager and the crowd. This cartoon finishes with a sequence in which Daffy attempts to wow the Bugs- besotted audience with an act in which he drinks gasoline and swallows nitroglycerine, gunpowder, and uranium- 238 (in a greenish solution), jumps up and down to "shake well" and finally swallows a lit match that detonates the whole improbable mixture. Some TV stations, and in the 1990s the cable network TNT, edited out the dangerous act, afraid of imitation by young kids. ===Chuck Jones' Daffy from 1951- 1964=== ====Pairing of Daffy and Porky in parodies of popular movies from 1951- 1965====While Bugs Bunny became Warner Bros.' most popular character, the directors still found ample use for Daffy. Several cartoons place him in parodies of popular movies and radio serials. For example, Drip- Along Daffy (released in 1951 and named after the popular Hopalong Cassidy character) throws Daffy into a Western, while Robin Hood Daffy (1958) casts the duck in the role of the legendary outlaw Robin Hood. In Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century (1953), a parody of Buck Rogers, Daffy trades barbs (and bullets) with Marvin the Martian, with Porky Pig retaining the role of Daffy's sidekick. Other parodies were Daffy in The Great Piggy Bank Robbery (1946) as "Duck Twacy" (Dick Tracy) by Bob Clampett and as Stupor Duck (Superman, now a WB property himself) by Robert McKimson. ====Pairing of Bugs and Daffy from 1951- 1964====Bugs' ascension to stardom also prompted the Warner Bros. animators to recast Daffy as the rabbit's rival, intensely jealous and determined to steal back the spotlight, while Bugs either remained indifferent to the duck's jealousy or used it to his advantage. Daffy's desire to achieve stardom at any cost was explored as early as 1940 in Freleng's You Ought to Be in Pictures, but the idea was most successfully used by Chuck Jones, who redesigned the duck once again, making him scrawnier and scruffier. In Jones' famous "Hunting Trilogy" (or "Duck Season/Rabbit Season Trilogy") of Rabbit Fire with Rabbit Seasoning and Duck! Rabbit, Duck! (each respectively launched in 1951, 1952, and 1953), Daffy's vanity and excitedness provide Bugs Bunny the perfect opportunity to fool the hapless Elmer Fudd into repeatedly shooting the duck's bill off. Also, these cartoons reveal Daffy's catchphrase, "You're despicable!" Jones' Daffy sees himself as self- preservationist, not selfish. However, this Daffy can do nothing that does not backfire on him, more likely to singe his tail feathers as well as his dignity than anything. It’s thought that Chuck Jones based Daffy Duck’s new personality off of his fellow animator Bob Clampett, who, like Daffy, was known as a shameless self- promoter. ===Solo Daffy===Film critic Steve Schneider calls Jones' version of Daffy "a kind of unleashed id." Jones said that his version of the character "expresses all of the things we're afraid to express." This is evident in Jones' Duck Amuck (1953), "one of the few unarguable masterpieces of American animation" according to Schneider. In the episode, Daffy is plagued by a godlike animator whose malicious paintbrush alters the setting, soundtrack, and even Daffy. When Daffy demands to know who is responsible for the changes, the camera pulls back to reveal none other than Bugs Bunny. Duck Amuck is widely heralded as a classic of filmmaking for its illustration that a character's personality can be recognized independently of appearance, setting, voice, and plot. In 1999, the short was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. ====Freleng's Daffy====Friz Freleng used the Jones idea for Daffy in Show Biz Bugs (1957) that was mainly made up of reused footage from earlier cartoons wherein Daffy's "trained" pigeon act (they all fly away as soon as Daffy opens their cage; repeated reused footage from Curtain Razor) and complicated tap dance number are answered by nothing but crickets chirping in the audience, whereas Bugs's simple song- and- dance numbers bring wild applause (reused animation possibly from Bugs Bunny Rides Again, What's Up Doc?, and Hot Cross Bunny). ====McKimson's Daffy====McKimson made more benevolent use of Daffy; in Ducking the Devil, for example, his greed becomes a vital tool in subduing the Tasmanian Devil and collecting a big cash reward. However, McKimson also played with Daffy's movie roles. In 1959, Daffy appeared in China Jones (a parody of a television series of the day, China Smith, starring Dan Duryea) in which he was an Irish private eye with an Irish accent instead of the usual lisp. ===Daffy's pairing with Speedy in 1965- 1968===When the Warner Bros. animation studio briefly outsourced cartoon production to DePatie- Freleng Enterprises (DFE) in the 1960s, Daffy Duck became an antagonist (or inconsistent friend) in several Speedy Gonzales cartoons. For example, in Well Worn Daffy (1965), Daffy is determined to keep the mice away from a desperately needed well seemingly for no other motive than pure maliciousness. Furthermore, when he draws all the water he wants, Daffy then attempts to destroy the well in spite of the vicious pointlessness of the act, forcing Speedy to stop him. The Warner Bros. studio was entering its twilight years, and even Daffy had to stretch for humor in the period. It's worth mentioning, though, that in many of the later DFE cartoons, such as Feather Finger and Daffy's Diner, Daffy is portrayed as a more sympathetic character rather than the full- blown villain he is in cartoons like Well Worn Daffy and Assault and Peppered. The last cartoon featuring Daffy and Speedy is See Ya Later Gladiator, in what animation fans call the worst cartoon made by Warner Bros. == Modern Daffy ==Daffy appeared in later cartoons. He was one of many Looney Tunes characters licensed by Warner to appear in the 1988 Disney/Amblin film Who Framed Roger Rabbit. In the film, he shares a scene with his Disney counterpart and rival Donald Duck whilst engaged in a piano duel. In 1987, to celebrate Daffy's 50th anniversary, Warner Bros. released "The Duxorcist" as its first theatrical Looney Tunes short in two decades. Daffy Duck also appeared in several feature- film compilations, including two films centering on Daffy. The first was released in 1983, Daffy Duck's Fantastic Island; the second came in 1988, Daffy Duck's Quackbusters, which is considered one of the Looney Tunes' best compilation films and featured another new theatrical short, "The Night of the Living Duck". Daffy has also had major roles in films such as Space Jam in 1996 and Looney Tunes: Back in Action in 2003. The latter film does much to flesh out his character, even going so far as to cast a sympathetic light on Daffy's glory- seeking ways in one scene, where he complains that he works tirelessly without achieving what Bugs does without even trying. That same year, Warner Bros. cast him in a brand- new Duck Dodgers series. (It should be stressed that in this show, Duck Dodgers actually is Daffy Duck due to him being frozen in suspended animation in some unknown incident.) He had a cameo appearance in the Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries episode "When Granny Ruled the Earth", first airing on March 27, 1999. Daffy has also been featured in several webtoons, which can be viewed online. In the television series Tiny Toon Adventures, Daffy is a teacher at Acme Looniversity, where he is the hero and mentor of student Plucky Duck. Daffy is shown as a baby in the Baby Looney Tunes show, and makes occasional cameos on Animaniacs and Histeria! (TV series). In the show Loonatics Unleashed, his descendant is Danger Duck (voiced by Jason Marsden), who is also lame and unpopular to his teammates. In the majority of these appearances, the selfish, neurotic, and spotlight- hungry Daffy characterized by Chuck Jones is the common version. More recently, Daffy has been given larger roles in more recent Looney Tunes films and series. Following Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Warner Bros. has slowly moved the spotlight away from Bugs and more towards Daffy, as shown in the 2006 video release Bah, Humduck! A Looney Tunes Christmas, where Daffy plays the lead, while Bugs Bunny appears in a supporting role. However, more recent merchandise of the duck as well as that featured on the official website have been shown to incorporate elements of the zanier, more light- hearted Daffy of the 1940s. Producer Larry Doyle noted that recent theatrical cartoons were planned that would portray a more diverse Daffy closer to that of Robert McKimson's design; however, due to the box- office failure of Looney Tunes: Back in Action, these new films ceased production. Daffy returned to Cartoon Network in The Looney Tunes Show, voiced by Jeff Bergman. His characterization here seems to incorporate some elements of Clampett's and Jones' designs while giving him an overall cheery if dimwitted personality. In the show, he has moved out of the forest and shares Bugs's house with him. Unlike Bugs and their neighbors, Daffy has no way of earning money and relies on Bugs for food and shelter. He has tried on numerous occasions to get rich quick, but ended up failing repeatedly. Daffy's one possession he is proud of is his paper- mache parade float, constructed on top of a minivan, which is his main means of transportation. It was destroyed by a car wash incident, and Daffy sought to replace it with a yacht by tricking Porky into giving him the expensive loan, but his less- than- stellar boating skills ended that ambition. His parade float is repaired shortly after. While Daffy's greed and jealousy of Bugs remains, it appears to be less antagonistic in this show. Daffy starred in the 3- D short Daffy's Rhapsody with Elmer Fudd that was originally set to premiere before Happy Feet Two but instead it debuted prior to Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. The short features Daffy and Elmer in the first CG or 3- D depiction of these specific Looney Tunes characters. According to Matthew O’Callaghan who directed the short, the audio comes from a 1950s recording for a children's album. ==Comics==Dell Comics published several Daffy Duck comic books, beginning in Four Color Comics #457, #536, and #615 and then continuing as Daffy #4- 17 (1956–59), then as Daffy Duck #18- 30 (1959–62). The comic book series was subsequently continued in Gold Key Comics Daffy Duck #31- 127 (1962–79). This run was in turn continued under the Whitman Comics imprint until the company completely ceased comic book publication in 1984. In 1994, corporate cousin DC Comics became the publisher for comics featuring all the classic Warner Bros. cartoon characters, and while not getting his own title, Daffy has appeared in many issues of Looney Tunes. ==Voice actors==- Mel Blanc (1937- 1989)* Mel Tormé (singing voice in Night of the Living Duck)* Jeff Bergman (Cartoon All- Stars to the Rescue, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, Tiny Toon Adventures, Box- Office Bunny, (Blooper) Bunny, Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers, The Looney Tunes Show)* Greg Burson (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs)* Maurice LaMarche (Taz- Mania)* Joe Alaskey (Bugs Bunny's Lunar Tunes, Carrotblanca, Marvin the Martian in the Third Dimension, The Drew Carey Show, Tweety's High- Flying Adventure, Looney Tunes: Reality Check, Looney Tunes: Stranger Than Fiction, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Duck Dodgers, Daffy Duck for President, Bah Humduck!: A Looney Tunes Christmas, various video games)* Frank Gorshin (Superior Duck)* Dee Bradley Baker (Space Jam)* Samuel Vincent (Baby Looney Tunes, Baby Looney Tunes: Egg- straordinary Adventure)* Jeff Bennett (Attack of the Drones) ==Other media==* In 1950, Mel Blanc recorded "Daffy Duck's Rhapsody", a comic song written by Warren Foster, Billy May, and Michael Maltese. It appears in the  short Daffy Rhapsody featuring Daffy and Elmer that was shown prior to Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. * Daffy plays a piano duet with Donald Duck in the 1988 film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit. * Daffy made a cameo in a 1998 episode of The Drew Carey Show in a method of live- action/animated film. * In 1999, the U.S. Postal Service issued an 33 cent stamp, designed and illustrated by Ed Wleczyk of Warner Bros., featuring Daffy leaning against a rural mailbox with a "that's despicable" look directed a two letters in the mailbox that bear Sylvester & Tweety and Bugs Bunny stamps. * A poster of Daffy is prominently displayed in Michael Garibaldi's quarters in the science fiction TV series Babylon 5. In one episode, Zack Allen jokingly explains to G'Kar that Daffy is the "ancient Egyptian god of frustration." Garibaldi is also shown entertaining Ambassador Delenn with Duck Dodgers in the 24 & 1/2th Century, which she finds difficult to understand when Duck Dodgers accidentally puts his rocket into reverse. * In Family Guy, after holding an exploding bomb from Adam West, Meg has Daffy Duck's bill on the wrong side of her head, moves it to its proper position, and then states, “Of course, you realize this means war!” This scene was supposedly deleted after the contract between MacFarlane and Warner Bros. * A sound clip of Daffy Duck grunting from one cartoon was reused for Linus Van Pelt fidgeting in anger in Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown (and Don't Come Back!!) (1980) * In The Office episode "Diversity Day," Michael signs his diversity form with Daffy's name. * The Eminem freestyle "Despicable" gets its name from the claim that Eminem is as "despicable as Daffy Duck." *Daffy Duck has appeared in the video games, The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle, The Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout, Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal, Bugs Bunny Rabbit Rampage, The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle 2, Looney Tunes: Marvin Strikes Back!, Bugs Bunny: Crazy Castle 3 Looney Tunes: Space Race, Daffy Duck: The Marvin Missions, Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time, Bugs Bunny & Taz: Time Busters, Looney Tunes: Back in Action (video game), and Bugs Bunny in Crazy Castle 4 .Filmography   Edit CreditsJump to filmography: Video- game, Archive Footage• 2010s• 2000s• 1990s• 1980s• 1970s• 1960s• 1950s1940s1930s"The Looney Tunes Show"     * SuperRabbit (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * Best Friends Redux (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * Mr. Weiner (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * Here Comes the Pig (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * Gossamer Is Awesomer (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman      (47 more)"Mad"     * First White House Down/McDuck Dynasty (2013) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman"Robot Chicken"     * Immortal (2013) TV episode, Played by Bill Farmer    * Rodigitti (2006) TV episode, Played by Bill Farmer* Cartoon Network 20th Anniversary (2012) (TV) Played by Jeff Bergman  *Bah Humduck!: A Looney Tunes Christmas (2006) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey"Duck Dodgers" ... aka "Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century" -  USA (long title)     * Bonafide Heroes (2005) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)    * In Space, No One Can Hear You Rock/Ridealong Calamity (2005) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)    * Master & Disaster/All in the Crime Family (2005) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)    * A Lame Duck Mind (2005) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)    * Good Duck Hunting/Consumption Overruled (2005) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)      (34 more)"Baby Looney Tunes"     * Stop and Smell Up the Flowers/Firehouse Frolics (2005) TV episode, Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)    * The Dolly Vanishes/Duck Reflucks (2005) TV episode, Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)    * A Turtle Named Myrtle/There's Nothing Like a Good Book (2005) TV episode, Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)    * Wrong!/Win, Lose or Daffy (2005) TV episode, Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)    * Bend It Like Petunia/Cock- A- Doodle- Doo- It! (2005) TV episode, Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)      (46 more)*Daffy Duck for President (2004) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey*Duck Dodgers in Attack of the Drones (2004) (TV) Played by Jeff Bennett*Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) Played by Joe Alaskey ... aka "Looney Tunes Back in Action: The Movie" -  USA (DVD box title)*Looney Tunes: Stranger Than Fiction (2003) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey*Looney Tunes: Reality Check (2003) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey*Baby Looney Tunes: Eggs- traordinary Adventure (2003) (V) Played by Sam Vincent (as Daffy)*Tweety's High- Flying Adventure (2000) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey  *"The Drew Carey Show"     * My Best Friend's Wedding (1998) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey*Looney Tunes Sing*Alongs (1998) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey*Quest for Camelot Sing- Alongs (1998) (V) Played by Joe Alaskey"Animaniacs" ... aka "Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs" -  USA (complete title)     * Message in a Bottle/Back in Style/Bones in the Body (1997) TV episode, Played by Greg Burson    * The Warners' 65th Anniversary Special (1994) TV episode, Played by Greg Burson    * Video Review/When Mice Ruled the Earth (1993) TV episode, Played by Greg Burson*Space Jam (1996) Played by Dee Bradley Baker*"The Bugs n' Daffy Show" (1996) TV series Played by Joe Alaskey*Superior Duck (1996) Played by Frank Gorshin*Marvin the Martian in the Third Dimension (1996) Played by Joe Alaskey*Carrotblanca (1995) Played by Joe Alaskey*"Décode pas Bunny" (1995) TV series Played by Patrick Guillemin*"Tiny Toon Adventures" ... aka "Steven Spielberg Presents... Tiny Toon Adventures" -  USA (complete title)     * Two- Tone Town (1992) TV episode, Played by Greg Burson    * New Character Day (1991) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * The Return of the Acme Acres Zone (1991) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman (as Duck Dodgers)    * Who Bopped Bugs Bunny? (1990) TV episode, Played by Jeff Bergman    * Best o' Plucky Duck Day (1990) TV episode, Played by Joe Alaskey (as Duck Dodgers)      (3 more)*Bugs Bunny's Creature Features (1992) (TV) Played by Jeff Bergman*Invasion of the Bunny Snatchers (1992) Played by Jeff Bergman"Taz*Mania"     * A Devil of a Job (1991) TV episode, Played by Maurice LaMarche*Bugs Bunny's Lunar Tunes (1991) (TV) Played by Joe Alaskey*(Blooper) Bunny! (1991) Played by Jeff Bergman*Box- Office Bunny (1990) Played by Jeff Bergman*Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990) Played by Jeff Bergman ... aka "Gremlins 2" -  International (English title) (short title), USA (original script title)*Cartoon All- Stars to the Rescue (1990) (TV) Played by Jeff Bergman*Happy Birthday, Bugs!: 50 Looney Years (1990) (TV) Played by Jeff Bergman  *Fifty Years of Bugs Bunny in 3 1/2 Minutes (1989) Played byMel Blanc*Bugs vs. Daffy: Battle of the Music Video Stars (1988) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Duck's Quackbusters (1988) Played byMel Blanc / Mel Tormé*The Night of the Living Duck (1988) Played byMel Blanc / Mel Tormé*Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Roger Rabbit" -  Japan (English title) (imdb display title)*The Duxorcist (1987) Played byMel Blanc*"The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show" (1986) TV series Played byMel Blanc*Howard the Duck (1986) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Who Prosecuted Howard the Duck?" -  Japan (English title)*"The Bugs Bunny/Looney Tunes Comedy Hour" (1985) TV series Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Duck's Movie: Fantastic Island (1983) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Daffy Duck's Fantastic Island" -  USA (short title)*Bugs Bunny's 3rd Movie: 1001 Rabbit Tales (1982) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Bugs Bunny's 1001 Rabbit Tales" -  USA (short title)*Bugs Bunny's Mad World of Television (1982) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*  Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie (1981) Played byMel Blanc*"The Sylvester & Tweety, Daffy & Speedy Show" (1981) TV series Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Duck's Thanks- for- Giving Special (1980) (TV) Played byMel BlancDaffy Duck's Easter Show (1980) (TV) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Daffy Duck's Easter Egg- citement" -  USA (video title)*The Chocolate Chase (1980) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*The Yolks on You (1980) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Flies North (1980) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24½th Century (1980) (TV) Played byMel Blanc  *The Bugs Bunny Mother's Day Special (1979) (TV) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Bugs Bunny's Baby Boomers" -  USA (video title)*Bugs Bunny's Valentine (1979) (TV) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Bugs Bunny's Cupid Capers" -  USA (video title)*How Bugs Bunny Won the West (1978) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*"The Daffy Duck Show" (1978) TV series Played byMel Blanc ... aka "The Daffy & Speedy Show" -  USA (promotional title)*Bugs Bunny's Howl*oween Special (1978) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*Bugs Bunny in Space (1977) (TV) Played byMel Blanc*Bugs Bunny's Easter Special (1977) (TV) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Bugs Bunny's Easter Funnies" -  USA (video title)*Carnival of the Animals (1976) (TV) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Bugs and Daffy's Carnival of the Animals" -  USA (video title)*"The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie" ... aka "The New Saturday Superstar Movie" -  USA (second season title)     * Daffy Duck and Porky Pig Meet the Groovie Goolies (1972) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc*"Pat Paulsen's Half a Comedy Hour"     * Episode dated 22 January 1970 (1970) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc *"The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Hour" (1968) TV series Played byMel Blanc*See Ya Later Gladiator (1968) Played byMel Blanc*Skyscraper Caper (1968) Played byMel Blanc*Fiesta Fiasco (1967) Played byMel Blanc*Go Away Stowaway (1967) Played byMel Blanc*Rodent to Stardom (1967) Played byMel Blanc*Speedy Ghost to Town (1967) Played byMel Blanc*The Spy Swatter (1967) Played byMel Blanc*The Music Mice*Tro (1967) Played byMel Blanc*Quacker Tracker (1967) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy's Diner (1967) Played byMel Blanc*A Taste of Catnip (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Swing Ding Amigo (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Feather Finger (1966) Played byMel Blanc*A Squeak in the Deep (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Snow Excuse (1966) Played byMel Blanc*A*Haunting We Will Go (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Rents (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Mexican Mousepiece (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Mucho Locos (1966) Played byMel Blanc*The Astroduck (1966) Played byMel Blanc*Go Go Amigo (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Chili Corn Corny (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Tease for Two (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Corn on the Cop (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Suppressed Duck (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Well Worn Daffy (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Assault and Peppered (1965) Played byMel Blanc*Moby Duck (1965) Played byMel Blanc*"The Porky Pig Show" ... aka "Porky Pig and His Friends" -  USA (syndication title) * Duck Dodgers in the 24 1/2th Century/Sleepy- Time Possum/The Honey- Mousers (1965) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc*Often an Orphan/Mice Follies/The Super Snooper (1964) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc*It's Nice to Have a Mouse Around the House (1965) Played byMel Blanc*The Iceman Ducketh (1964) Played byMel Blanc*Aqua Duck (1963) Played byMel Blanc*The Million Hare (1963) Played byMel Blanc*Fast Buck Duck (1963) Played byMel Blanc*Good Noose (1962) Played byMel Blanc*"The Bugs Bunny Show" * A Star Is Bored (1962) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc* De-Duck-Tive Story (1962) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc* Episode #1.20 (1961) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc* Episode #1.5 (1960) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc* Episode #1.2 (1960) TV episode, Played byMel Blanc     *Quackodile Tears (1962) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy's Inn Trouble (1961) Played byMel Blanc*The Abominable Snow Rabbit (1961) Played byMel Blanc*Person to Bunny (1960) Played byMel Blanc  *People Are Bunny (1959) Played byMel Blanc*China Jones (1959) Played byMel Blanc*Robin Hood Daffy (1958) Played byMel Blanc (as Daffy Duck as Robin Hood)*Don't Axe Me (1958) Played byMel Blanc*Show Biz Bugs (1957) Played byMel Blanc*Ducking the Devil (1957) Played byMel Blanc*Boston Quackie (1957) Played byMel Blanc*Ali Baba Bunny (1957) Played byMel Blanc*Deduce, You Say (1956) Played byMel Blanc (as Dorlock Homes)*A Star Is Bored (1956) Played byMel Blanc*Stupor Duck (1956) Played byMel Blanc*Rocket Squad (1956) Played byMel Blanc* The High and the Flighty (1956) Played byMel Blanc*Dime to Retire (1955) Played byMel Blanc*This Is a Life? (1955) Played byMel Blanc*Sahara Hare (1955) Played byMel Blanc*Stork Naked (1955) Played byMel Blanc*Beanstalk Bunny (1955) Played byMel Blanc*My Little Duckaroo (1954) Played byMel Blanc*Quack Shot (1954) Played byMel Blanc*Design for Leaving (1954) Played byMel Blanc*Duck! Rabbit, Duck! (1953) Played byMel Blanc*Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century (1953) Played byMel Blanc (as Duck Dodgers)*Muscle Tussle (1953) Played byMel Blanc*Duck Amuck (1953) Played byMel Blanc*Fool Coverage (1952) Played byMel Blanc*The Super Snooper (1952) Played byMel Blanc*Rabbit Seasoning (1952) Played byMel Blanc*Cracked Quack (1952) Played byMel Blanc*Thumb Fun (1952) Played byMel Blanc*The Prize Pest (1951) Played byMel Blanc*Drip*Along Daffy (1951) Played byMel Blanc*Rabbit Fire (1951) Played byMel Blanc*The Ducksters (1950) Played byMel Blanc*Golden Yeggs (1950) Played byMel Blanc*His Bitter Half (1950) Played byMel Blanc*The Scarlet Pumpernickel (1950) Played byMel Blanc ... aka "Daffy Duck in 'The Scarlet Pumpernickel'" * USA (complete title)*Boobs in the Woods (1950) Played byMel Blanc  *Daffy Duck Hunt (1949) Played byMel Blanc*Holiday for Drumsticks (1949) Played byMel Blanc*Wise Quackers (1949) Played byMel Blanc*Riff Raffy Daffy (1948) Played byMel Blanc*The Stupor Salesman (1948) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Dilly (1948) Played byMel Blanc*You Were Never Duckier (1948) Played byMel Blanc*The Up- Standing Sitter (1948) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Duck Slept Here (1948) Played byMel Blanc*What Makes Daffy Duck (1948) Played byMel Blanc*Mexican Joyride (1947) Played byMel Blanc*A Pest in the House (1947) Played byMel Blanc*Along Came Daffy (1947) Played byMel Blanc*Birth of a Notion (1947) Played byMel Blanc*The Great Piggy Bank Robbery (1946) Played byMel Blanc*Hollywood Daffy (1946) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy Doodles (1946) Played byMel Blanc*Baby Bottleneck (1946) Played byMel Blanc*Book Revue (1946) Played byMel Blanc*Nasty Quacks (1945) Played byMel Blanc*Ain't That Ducky (1945) Played byMel Blanc*Draftee Daffy (1945) Played byMel Blanc*The Stupid Cupid (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Plane Daffy (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Slightly Daffy (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Duck Soup to Nuts (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Tick Tock Tuckered (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Tom Turk and Daffy (1944) Played byMel Blanc*Daffy -  The Commando (1943) Played byMel Blanc*Scrap Happy Daffy (1943) Played byMel BlancXXVII. Porky Pig's Feat (1943) Played byMel BlancXXVIII. Yankee Doodle Daffy (1943) Played byMel BlancXXIX. The Wise Quacking Duck (1943) Played byMel BlancXXX. To Duck... or Not to Duck (1943) Played byMel BlancXXXI. My Favorite Duck (1942) Played byMel BlancXXXII. The Daffy Duckaroo (1942) Played byMel BlancXXXIII. The Impatient Patient (1942) Played byMel BlancXXXIV. Daffy's Southern Exposure (1942) Played byMel BlancXXXV. Conrad the Sailor (1942) Played byMel BlancXXXVI. The Henpecked Duck (1941) Played byMel BlancXXXVII. A Coy Decoy (1941) Played byMel BlancXXXVIII. You Ought to Be in Pictures (1940) Played byMel BlancXXXIX. Porky's Last Stand (1940) Played byMel Blanc  XL. Wise Quacks (1939) Played byMel BlancXLI. Scalp Trouble (1939) Played byMel BlancXLII. Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur (1939) Played byMel BlancXLIII. Daffy Duck in Hollywood (1938) Played byMel BlancXLIV. The Daffy Doc (1938) Played byMel BlancXLV. Porky & Daffy (1938) Played byMel BlancXLVI. Daffy Duck & Egghead (1938) Played byMel BlancXLVII. Porky's Duck Hunt (1937) Played byMel Blanc XLVIII. Video- game:XLIX. 2000sL. 1990sLI. Looney Tunes: Acme Arsenal (2007) (VG) Played by Joe AlaskeyLII. Looney Tunes: Duck Amuck (2007) (VG) Played by Joe AlaskeyLIII. CR: Looney Tunes Back in Action (2007) (VG) Played by Wataru HatanoLIV. Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) (VG) Played by Joe AlaskeyLV. Sheep Raider (2001) (VG) Played by Joe Alaskey LVI. ... aka "Looney Tunes: Sheep Raider" -  USA (alternative title)LVII. Looney Tunes: Space Race (2000) (VG) Played by Joe AlaskeyLVIII. Looney Tunes Racing (2000) (VG) Played by Joe Alaskey  LIX. Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time (1999) (VG) Played by Joe AlaskeyLX. The Junkyard Run (1998) (VG) Played by Joe Alaskey LXI. Archive Footage:LXII. Daffy's Rhapsody (2012) Played byMel BlancLXIII. Behind the Tunes: A Hunting We Will Go -  Chuck Jones' Wabbit Season Twilogy (2005) (V) Played byMel BlancLXIV. Behind the Tunes: Looney Tunes Go Hollywood (2004) (V) Played byMel BlancLXV. Behind the Tunes: A Conversation with Tex Avery (2004) (V) Played byMel BlancLXVI. Behind the Tunes: Man from Wackyland -  The Art of Bob Clampett (2004) (V) Played byMel BlancLXVII. Behind the Tunes: Crash! Bang! Boom! -  The Wild Sounds of Treg Brown (2004) (V) Played byMel BlancLXVIII. Irreverent Imagination: The Golden Age of the Looney Tunes (2003) (V) Played byMel BlancLXIX. Behind the Tunes: Blanc Expressions (2003) (V) Played byMel BlancLXX. Behind the Tunes: Animal Quackers (2003) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXI. Behind the Tunes: Hard Luck Duck (2003) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXII. Behind the Tunes: Bugs -  A Rabbit for All Seasonings (2003) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXIII. 50 Greatest TV Animals (2003) (TV) Played byMel BlancLXXIV. Toonheads: The Lost Cartoons (2000) (TV) Played byMel BlancLXXV. Looney Tunes Sing- Alongs (1998) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXVI. Quest for Camelot Sing- Alongs (1998) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXVII. Space Jam (1996) Played byMel Blanc (as Daffy Duck on TV)LXXVIII. "Animaniacs" LXXIX. ... aka "Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs" -  USA (complete title) LXXX. Critical Condition/The Three Muska- Warners (1993) TV episode, Played byMel BlancLXXXI. Bugs Bunny's Creature Features (1992) (TV) Played byMel Blanc / Mel TorméLXXXII. Rover Dangerfield (1991) Played byMel BlancLXXXIII. Bugs & Daffy: The Wartime Cartoons (1989) (V) Played byMel BlancLXXXIV. Looney Tunes 50th Anniversary (1986) (TV) Played byMel BlancLXXXV. The Bugs Bunny/Road- Runner Movie (1979) Played byMel BlancLXXXVI. Hollywood Daffy (1946) Played by Richard Bickenbach (as Daffy as Bing Crosby) ==See also==* List of Daffy Duck cartoons* Golden age of American animation* Duck Dodgers* Danger Duck ==References== ===Sources===* * *  ==External links==*