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Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot (sometimes called "Kitty," but in some of the Warner Brothers animation history books, she is referred to as "Cleo") are two animated characters in the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons.

Physical appearance[]

Marc Anthony is a burly bulldog who is brown with a tan body and black ears. He is a gruff, tough bulldog whom is a softie at heart when it comes to Pussyfoot and is very protective of her.

Pussyfoot, in contrast, is an extremely cute kitten to whom Marc Anthony is utterly devoted. Chuck Jones has discussed the efforts to maximize the kitten's adorableness. She has black fur with a white face and body, big blue eyes, and a white tip on her fluffy tail.

History[]

Golden Age[]

Animator Chuck Jones first introduced the odd duo in his film "Feed the Kitty", first released on Groundhog Day, 1952. Prior to this, a brown bulldog similar to Marc had first appeared in the final Hubie and Bertie cartoon "Cheese Chasers", but he was never named. In the short, Marc Anthony adopts the interminably cute kitten, only to receive a stern warning from his owner not to " Bring one more thing into this house! Not ONE SINGLE SOLITARY thing!" Marc is forced to go to extreme lengths to keep his new pet under wraps. Meanwhile, the kitten's curiosity gets her into a series of life-threatening situations, which Marc Anthony must rescue her from harm. Most of the humor in this short involve Marc Anthony getting himself into various mishaps in his attempts of protecting Pussyfoot.

Jones would largely repeat the scenario in 1953 with "Kiss Me Cat", only this time, Marc Anthony tries to convince his owners that the kitten (now named Pussyfoot) is a good mouser so that they will let him keep her.

In "Feline Frame-Up" (1954), Jones pitted the dog and kitten against another of his lesser-known players, Claude Cat, with Claude as the antagonist causing trouble to the duo. In 1958, Jones paired the duo with Claude for one final film, "Cat Feud", in which Marc Anthony (with grey coloring, and a more fierce personality) must defend Pussyfoot (and her cat food) from Claude, who tries to steal it.

While Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot do not appear in "Go Fly a Kit", the short instead features an antagonistic bulldog and a flying male cat resembling them.

Post-Golden Age[]

The duo appears as a cameo in the background during the basketball game in Space Jam (1996). The duo would later make a cameo appearance in the ending scene of Looney Tunes Back in Action (2003).

Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot appear in the opening theme for The Looney Tunes Show, while Pussyfoot makes a brief cameo in Lola Bunny's quilt in the musical number "Christmas Rules!" in the episode "A Christmas Carol".

Marc Anthony appears alongside Tweety and Gabby Goat in the New Looney Tunes episode "Tweet Team" as a trio helping Speedy Gonzales save his mice buddies from Sylvester, Claude Cat and Pete Puma. He also appears in "Pussyfoot Soldier" and "From Dusk Till Dog", reprising his role from some of the original cartoons, being smitten by Pussyfoot and attempting to protect her from harm. Marc Anthony also appears in "To Be the Flea, You Gotta Beat the Flea", in which he is unexpectedly controlled by Mighty Angelo, who wants to enter the wrestling championship match despite his small size.

In Looney Tunes Cartoons, Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot make a brief cameo in "Happy Birthday Bugs Bunny!", and later appear in "Boarding Games".

Pussyfoot appears in three episodes of Bugs Bunny Builders.

Influence[]

Since their retirement, Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot have been somewhat forgotten due to the popularity of other Chuck Jones-created characters, such as Wile E. Coyote, Road Runner, and Pepé Le Pew. Pussyfoot has appeared in some recent Warner Bros. merchandising, however, and the pair have been featured in various Warner Bros. productions, such as the third segment of the Twilight Zone movie, and a few Looney Tunes comic book stories such as "Bringing Up Baby", "A Skate with Desteny", and "Kit on a Kite".

Tiny Toon Adventures featured a similar character named Barky Marky who was a comparatively minor character on the show. The pair were also an inspiration for the Buttons and Mindy characters that were featured in the successor to Tiny Toons, Animaniacs.

Chuck Jones would later revisit the gimmick of a cute kitten with an unlikely protector in a Tom and Jerry short, "The Unshrinkable Jerry Mouse", with Jerry becoming a kitten's friend and protector against a selfish and jealous Tom.

A segment of "Feed the Kitty", in which Marc Anthony believes that Pussyfoot has perished in the cookie baking (and unaware that she is actually perfectly safe), was the subject in the Pixar film, Monsters Inc. in which Sulley believes that Boo has fallen into a trash compactor, and he reacts nearly shot-for-shot as Marc did in his cartoon short.

Filmography[]

Cartoons[]

In other media[]

The films:

Tiny Toon Adventures

Animaniacs

  • "Cat on a Hot Steel Beam" (1993) - Pussyfoot only

Webtoons

The Looney Tunes Show episode:

New Looney Tunes episodes:

Looney Tunes Cartoons shorts:

Bugs Bunny Builders segments:

  • "Splash Zone" - Pussyfoot cameo only
  • "Tweety-Go-Round" - Pussyfoot only (credited as "Looney Cat Kid")
  • "Haunted Garage" (credited as "Pouncy")
  • "Squirreled Away" (cameo)
  • "Beach Battle" (cameo)
  • "Mini Golf"
  • "Skate Park"
  • "Lemonade"

The video games:

Notes[]

  • The Looney Tunes Platinum Collection: Volume 1 Blu-ray digibook only specifies "Feed the Kitty", "Kiss Me Cat", and "Feline Frame-Up" as official Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot shorts, with no mention of "Cat Feud". This is likely due to the latter short not included on said Blu-Ray release.
  • In "Feed the Kitty" and "Kiss Me Cat", Pussyfoot is referred to as male by the homeowners. Only most post-Golden Age media has officially referred Pussyfoot as a female cat.

Gallery[]

Characters
Main Characters
Bugs Bunny (Prototype Bugs Bunny) • Daffy Duck • Elmer Fudd • Foghorn Leghorn • Lola Bunny (Honey Bunny) • Marvin the Martian (K-9) • Pepé Le Pew (Penelope Pussycat) • Porky Pig • Road Runner • Speedy Gonzales • Sylvester (Sylvester Jr.) • Taz • Tweety • Wile E. Coyote • Yosemite Sam
Recurring Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Bosko • Honey • Bruno • Foxy • Piggy • Goopy Geer • Buddy • Cookie • Beans • Little Kitty • Oliver Owl • Ham and Ex • Petunia Pig • Piggy Hamhock • Gabby Goat • Egghead • Big Bad Wolf • Little Red Riding Hood • Yoyo Dodo • Mrs. Daffy Duck • The Two Curious Puppies • Sniffles • Inki • Minah Bird

1940s debuts

Willoughby • Three Little Pigs • Cecil Turtle • Beaky Buzzard • Mama Buzzard • Leo the Lion • Babbit and Catstello • Conrad the Cat • Hubie and Bertie • Claude Cat • A. Flea • Three Bears • Schnooks • Hector the Bulldog • The Drunk Stork • Gossamer • Rocky • Barnyard Dawg • Henery Hawk • Charlie Dog • Bobo the Elephant • Goofy Gophers • The Dog • Wellington • Gruesome Gorilla • Hippety Hopper • The Talking Bulldog • The Crusher • The Supreme Cat • Playboy Penguin

1950s debuts

Melissa Duck • Frisky Puppy • Granny (Proto-Granny) • Miss Prissy (Emily the Chicken) • Sam Cat • Nasty Canasta • Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot • Spike and Chester • Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog • The Weasel • Witch Hazel • Tasmanian She-Devil • Ralph Phillips • Egghead Jr. • Mugsy • Jose and Manuel • The Honey-Mousers (Ralph Crumden, Ned Morton, Alice Crumden, Trixie Morton) • Instant Martians • Slowpoke Rodriguez • Pappy and Elvis • Blacque Jacque Shellacque

1960s debuts

Cool Cat • Colonel Rimfire • Merlin the Magic Mouse • Second Banana • Bunny and Claude

One-Off Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Owl Jolson

1940s debuts

The Gremlin • The Dover Boys (Tom Dover, Dick Dover, Larry Dover, Dora Standpipe, Dan Backslide) • Mr. Meek • Russian Dog • The Little Man from the Draft Board • Colonel Shuffle • Giovanni Jones

1950s debuts

The Martin Brothers • Pete Puma • George and Benny • Toro the Bull • Babyface Finster • Michigan J. Frog • Shropshire Slasher • Mot • Pablo and Fernando • Charles M. Wolf • Señor Vulturo • Mighty Angelo

1960s debuts

Hugo the Abominable Snowman • Nelly the Giraffe • Count Bloodcount • Spooky • Rapid Rabbit and Quick Brown Fox

Post-Golden Age Characters
Tiny Toon Adventures

Buster Bunny • Babs Bunny • Plucky Duck • Hamton J. Pig • Fifi La Fume • Shirley the Loon • Sweetie Bird • Elmyra Duff • Montana Max

Taz-Mania

Jean • Hugh • Molly • Jake • Dog the Turtle • Drew

Pinky and the Brain

Pinky • The Brain

Baby Looney Tunes

Floyd Minton

Duck Dodgers

Dr. I.Q. Hi • Captain Star Johnson • Commander X2

Loonatics Unleashed

Ace Bunny • Lexi Bunny • Danger Duck • Slam Tasmanian • Tech E. Coyote • Rev Runner

The Looney Tunes Show

Tina Russo

New Looney Tunes

Squeaks the Squirrel • Bigfoot • Barbarian • Boyd • Cal • Carl the Grim Rabbit • Claudette Dupri • Dr. Clovenhoof • Eagle Scout • Elliot Sampson • Horace the Horse • Ivana • Jack • Thes • Leslie P. Lilylegs • Miss Cougar • Pampreen Perdy and Paul Perdy • Rhoda Roundhouse • Shameless O'Scanty • Sir Littlechin • Slugsworthy the First • Squint Eatswood • Tad Tucker • Trey Hugger • Viktor • Winter Stag

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