Bill Scott (Acting)
Little is known about Bill Scott, a figure with a modest footprint in Acting. Stay tuned for updates as more details become available.
Little is known about Bill Scott, a figure with a modest footprint in Acting. Stay tuned for updates as more details become available.
George and Ursula now have a son, George Junior, so Ursula's mother arrives to try and take them back to "civilization".
Release Date:2003-08-18
Department:Writing
Job:Original Series Creator
Vote Count:475
In a town called Pudding on the Ritz, a sly fox attempts to trick a nitwit into opening a cursed treasure chest. However, the fox's trick comes back to bite him in the end. Based on the Fractured Fairy Tales segment from Jay Ward's "The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show", this short premiered before the live-action feature "Dudley Do-Right".
Release Date:1999-08-27
Department:Writing
Job:Writer
Vote Count:8
As Duke Igthorn plans an attack on King Gregor's castle, Cavin (a page in the castle) is left in the woods after some of Igthorn's ogres run off the Humans. The Gummi Bears find Cavin passed out in the woods with a Great Gummi Medallion, that was left to him by his grandfather. When he proves he is a friend, the Gummi Bears and Cavin team up to stop Igthorn's plans.
Release Date:1986-07-18
Character:Gruffi Gummi / Sir Tuxford / Toadwart (voice)
Vote Count:1
The first episode of the television series THE WUZZLES as released theatrically in Europe.
Release Date:1986-01-06
Character:Moosel / Brat (voice)
Vote Count:1
Third-grader Molly Conway finds out that her parents are getting divorced. She tries everything she can to get them back together, but most of her attempts backfire. Eventually, she accepts her new situation with the help of her friends.
Release Date:1985-10-20
Character:Additional Voices (voice)
Vote Count:2
Disney's The Wuzzles is an animated television series created for Saturday morning television, and was first broadcast on September 14, 1985 on CBS. An idea of Michael Eisner for his new Disney television animation studio. The premise is that the main characters are hybrids of two different animals. The original thirteen episodes ran on CBS for their first run. With only 13 episodes of The Wuzzles, it was one of the shortest running animated series produced by Disney. One season later, Wuzzles moved to ABC for reruns, and disappeared from network television after that.
Release Date:1985-09-14
Character:Moosel / Brat (voice)
Episode Count:13
Vote Count:12
Join the world’s sweetest heroes for high adventure in a mystical land of giants and wizards, ogres and dragons, and wondrous creatures both good and evil. Meet Gruffi, Zummi, Cubbi, Grammi, Tummi, Sunni, and all the legendary Gummis as they laugh, play, foil dastardly plots, and fight for what's right.
Release Date:1985-09-14
Character:Gruffi Gummi / Sir Tuxford / Toadwart /Angelo Davini (voice)
Episode Count:21
Vote Count:228
The Duck Factory is a 1984 NBC television series produced by MTM Enterprises that is perhaps most notable for being Jim Carrey's first lead role in a Hollywood production. The show was co-created by Allan Burns. The premiere episode introduces Skip Tarkenton, a somewhat naive and optimistic young man who has come to Hollywood looking for a job as a cartoonist. When he arrives at a low-budget animation company called Buddy Winkler Productions, he finds out Buddy Winkler has just died, and the company desperately needs new blood. So Skip gets an animation job at the firm, which is nicknamed "The Duck Factory" as their main cartoon is "The Dippy Duck Show". Other Duck Factory employees seen regularly on the show were man-of-a-thousand-cartoon voices Wally Wooster; comedy writer Marty Fenneman; artists Brooks Carmichael and Roland Culp, editor Andrea Lewin, and business manager Aggie Aylesworth. Buddy Winkler Productions was now owned by his young, ditzy widow, Mrs Sheree Winkler, who had been married to Buddy for all of three weeks before his death. The Duck Factory lasted thirteen episodes; it premiered April 12, 1984. The show initially aired at 9:30 on Thursday nights, directly after Cheers, and replaced Buffalo Bill on NBC's schedule. Jay Tarses, an actor on The Duck Factory, had been the co-creator and executive producer of Buffalo Bill, which had its final network telecast on Thursday, April 5, 1984.
Release Date:1984-04-12
Episode Count:1
Vote Count:6
A goofy crew of extraterrestrial wall-walkers journey to Earth in a quest to learn the meaning of Christmas.
Release Date:1983-12-11
Character:(voice)
Vote Count:1
Animation of a poem from Edith Sitwell's "Façade".
Release Date:1983-01-01
Character:(voice)
UCLA Student Film, Preserved by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. A parody of 16mm educational and social engineering films, "Teen Tips," tells a morality tale about a young man coming into puberty and attempting to find a suitable girl to date.
Release Date:1980-01-01
Character:Narrator
Release Date:1969-04-27
Department:Creator
Job:Creator
Character:
Episode Count:[ 39 ]
Vote Count:3
A compilation of clips from various Laurel and Hardy films
Release Date:1967-12-21
Department:Production
Job:Executive Producer
Release Date:1967-09-09
Character:Tom Slick
Episode Count:17
Super Chicken is a segment that ran on the animated television series George of the Jungle. It was produced by Jay Ward and Bill Scott, who earlier had created the Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons. It debuted September 9, 1967 on ABC.
Release Date:1967-09-05
Episode Count:17
Vote Count:3
George of the Jungle is an American animated series produced by Jay Ward and Bill Scott, who created The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show. The character George was inspired by the legend of Tarzan. It ran for 17 episodes on Saturday mornings from September 9 to December 30, 1967, on the American TV network ABC. The half-hour program was distributed for many years by Worldvision Enterprises, currently part of CBS Television Distribution. Each Full Episode was a compilation of 3 mini episodes from 3 different shows: George of the Jungle; Tom Slick; Super Chicken -Each voiced by the same actors.
Release Date:1967-01-01
Vote Count:11
In the pilot for George of the Jungle, two poachers try to capture George's elephant Shep
Release Date:1965-01-01
Character:George, Tooki Tooki Bird
Super Chicken fights chicken hater Eggs Benedict
Release Date:1965-01-01
Character:Super Chicken (Hunt Strongbird, Jr.), Bank Teller
Fractured Flickers is a live-action syndicated half-hour television comedy show that was produced by Jay Ward, who is otherwise known for animated cartoons. The pilot film was produced in 1961, but the series wasn't completed until 1963. Twenty-six episodes were produced; they were syndicated by Desilu Productions and played for several years on local stations.
Release Date:1963-01-01
Episode Count:26
Vote Count:1
Hoppity Hooper is a American animated television series produced by Jay Ward, and sponsored by General Mills, originally broadcast on ABC on September 12, 1962 and premiered in full on January 1. The series was produced in Hollywood by Jay Ward and Bill Scott, with animation done in Mexico City by Gamma Productions.
Release Date:1962-09-12
Department:Creator
Job:Creator
Character:
Episode Count:[ 13 ]
Vote Count:3
A variety show, with the main feature being the serialized adventures of the two title characters, the anthropomorphic moose Bullwinkle and flying squirrel Rocky. The main adversaries in most of their adventures are the Russian-like spies Boris Badenov and Natasha Fatale. Supporting segments include Dudley Do-Right, Peabody's Improbable History, and Fractured Fairy Tales, among others.
Release Date:1959-11-19
Department:Creator
Job:Creator
Character:Bullwinkle J. Moose (voice)
Episode Count:[ 815 ]
Vote Count:51
Mr. Magoo is watching a TV program named "Home Roam" which examines the homes of various families and subsequently learns that he and Waldo have been scheduled to air on tonight's broadcast. Magoo proceeds to show the cameramen the various rooms and exhibits of his house. Unfortunately, his publicity is threatened by a burglar and his trained gorilla who break into Magoo's house and attempt to rob it. Of course, Magoo doesn't notice the gorilla (he even mistakes it for Waldo) and reassures the cameramen that Waldo will be all right even if he does have "the manners of a gorilla".
Release Date:1959-07-09
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:1
Release Date:1956-12-16
Department:Writing
Job:Adaptation
Character:The Sleuth (voice)
Episode Count:13
Vote Count:1
A Martian explorer discovers the secrets behind the USA's prosperity — oil and free enterprise.
Release Date:1956-01-01
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:8
Animated propaganda advocating for the importance of unregulated capitalism to the American way of life.
Release Date:1954-01-01
Department:Writing
Job:Story Developer
Vote Count:2
One of the most discussed and imaginative cartoons of any era. It tells the famous Edgar Allan Poe story of the deranged boarder who had to kill his landlord, not for greed, but because he possessed an "evil eye." The killer is never seen but his presence is felt by the use light-and-shadow to give the impression of impending disaster.
Release Date:1953-12-17
Department:Writing
Job:Writer
Vote Count:79
This UPA cartoon introduces a new character, Pete Hothead, a feisty little man with a violent temper. Pete Hothead was featured in only one other cartoon. In this one he receives a parrot from a store rather than the radio he ordered. In his attempts to exchange the parrot for a radio, he cause much havoc, disruptions and chaos in the store. He finally gets his radio, but then decides he'd rather have a television set.
Release Date:1952-09-24
Department:Writing
Job:Story
The story of Frankie and Johnny: Frankie walks into a bar, where she catches her boyfriend Johnny with the sensuous Nellie Bly and kills him in a fit of jealousy.
Release Date:1951-11-15
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:38
Mr. Magoo has mistaken a walrus for a human friend and various sight gags are shown in typical Magoo fashion.
Release Date:1951-10-17
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:1
Five-year-old Patsy has competition for her father's attention from the family's new baby. Her attempts to win her father's praise receive instead a rebuke.
Release Date:1951-01-25
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:1
The story of a little boy who would only talk in sound effects. With story by Dr. Seuss (and Bill Scott of Rocky and Bullwinkle fame) this cartoon won the Oscar for best short subject (animated) for 1950.
Release Date:1950-11-02
Department:Writing
Job:Adaptation
Vote Count:63
Lumber jack Porky Pig intrudes upon the peace of a hipster squirrel vacationing in the Northwoods by trying to chop down the squirrel's tree. The squirrel retaliates by enclosing the base of his tree with steel so that Porky's axes cannot penetrate. The ensuing conflict between Porky and the squirrel awakens an angry bear.
Release Date:1949-02-12
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:22
Slug McSlug, a notorious bank robber, is chased by police after his latest heist. He reaches his country hideout, where he is promptly visited by an uninvited Daffy Duck, who is a door-to-door vendor of a variety of items.
Release Date:1948-11-20
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:12
An archaeologist at a museum scolds his small, silent dog, Shep, for supposedly removing a bone belonging to a dinosaur skeleton and orders Shep to bring the bone back, but Shep finds that the place where he buried his most recent bone has been dug up and a bulldog is walking away with the bone in his mouth. Shep chases the bulldog with intent of retrieving the bone, and so begins a battle of wits between Shep and the bulldog.
Release Date:1948-05-22
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:8
It's duck season, so Daffy plays hunter Elmer and a hungry fox off against each other.
Release Date:1948-02-14
Department:Writing
Job:Story
Vote Count:20
This film is a treasure. It's one of the best examples of the theory and practice of the art of camouflaging military targets from air observation & attack that you'll find anywhere, presented in a highly entertaining Disney style full color animation supplemented by live action film. Hosted by “Yehudi the Chameleon,” the action is centered around a P-39 Airacobra base in the Pacific and is chocked full of useful information & “how-tos.” Some of the many things you'll learn: how camouflage works in Nature, analyzing the specific camouflage needs of your location, theories and application of different camouflages, hiding in shadow, using camouflage netting, creating dummy targets, breaking up distinctive shadow lines that outline structures, concealment by “blending,” making “trees,” hiding routes & paths or creating fake ones, hiding targets in plain sight by adding minimal camouflage and more.
Release Date:1944-01-23
Department:Writing
Job:Writer