DePatie–Freleng Enterprises


DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, Inc. was an American animation production company that was active from 1963 to 1981. Based in Burbank, DFE produced animation for film and television. Notable among these are the opening titles for The Pink Panther, the lightsaber effects in the original Star Wars, and the Dr. Seuss television specials.

Origins

DFE was founded by two former employees at Hanna-Barbera Cartoons and Warner Bros. Cartoons, director/composer/producer Friz Freleng and executive David H. DePatie, after Warner Bros. closed its animation studio in 1963. Although Freleng and DePatie were no longer working for Warner Bros., a generous gesture from a Warner executive allowed Freleng and DePatie to lease the former Warner cartoons studio on California Street in Burbank, complete with equipment and supplies for a few dollars each year. Although DFE's initial business was commercials and industrial films, several lucky breaks put the new studio into the theatrical cartoon business.
Director Blake Edwards contacted DFE and asked them to design a panther character for Edwards's new film, The Pink Panther. Pleased with the design for the character, Edwards contracted with DFE to produce the animated titles for the film. Upon the film's release, the titles garnered a tremendous amount of attention, so much that a large amount of the picture's gross is believed to have been generated by the success of DFE's title sequence.
DFE soon agreed to a contract with United Artists to produce a series of cartoon shorts featuring the Pink Panther, which would include over 100 shorts for both theatrical release and television through 1980. Also in 1964, Freleng and DePatie's old employer, Warner Bros., contracted with DFE to produce new Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons for television.
DePatie and Freleng found themselves overflowing with work. Many of the animators who had worked at Warner Bros. in the 1950s and 1960s returned to the old Warner cartoon studio to work for DFE. The first entry in the Pink Panther series, The Pink Phink, was directed by Freleng and won the studio its only Academy Award in 1964. In 1967, DFE would receive another Academy Award nomination for The Pink Blueprint.

The Pink Panther and other television series

The Pink Panther theatrical series of cartoons became the basis of a Saturday morning television series, The Pink Panther Show, which also included theatrical cartoons of The Inspector and eventually The Ant and the Aardvark, Roland and Rattfink, and The Texas Toads. Like most animated television cartoons at the time, The Pink Panther Show contained a laugh track with narration. The cartoons were edited and in some cases re-dubbed to meet television standards and practices for content.
The Pink Panther Show had several incarnations during the 1970s. The show was very popular on NBC's Saturday morning line-up, starting as a half-hour program and expanding a few years later to 90 minutes each week. The studio provided the animated sequences for the 1969–1970 television series My World and Welcome to It based on the drawings of James Thurber. DFE was one of the subcontractors for the 1964–1967 Warner Bros. cartoons, along with Format Productions.
The Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies shorts made by the studio can be easily identified by their modernized "Abstract WB" opening and closing sequences. However, most of the 1964 to 1967 DePatie-Freleng Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies were panned by fans and critics alike. DFE did not continue doing Warner cartoon work until the late 1970s/early 1980s, with the TV specials Bugs Bunny's Easter Special, Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas Tales, and Daffy Duck's Easter Egg-Citement.
DFE also created Return to the Planet of the Apes, which ran on NBC from 1975 to 1976 and The Oddball Couple, which ran on Saturday mornings on ABC from 1975 to 1977. One of the studio's television specials was The Bear Who Slept Through Christmas, with Tommy Smothers voicing the little bear who goes out to find Christmas while his fellow bears head for hibernation. DFE was also responsible for a number of Dr. Seuss specials, including The Cat In The Hat and different incarnations of The Grinch.

Later years

Inflation, the increasing costs of producing theatrical cartoons, and the pressures of producing TV series caused the quality of DFE's output to drop in the mid-to-late 1970s. In 1981, Freleng and DePatie sold DFE Films to Marvel Comics, and Freleng returned to Warner Bros. Animation, which Warner Bros. had re-opened the previous year, to produce a series of feature films featuring vintage Warner cartoons with new connecting footage. DePatie made the transition to become the head of Marvel Productions, as DFE was renamed.
Although Marvel produced mainly superhero cartoons and animated series based on licensed toy lines, it continued to produce new productions starring the Pink Panther. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Animation would later make a 1993 revival show of the Pink Panther as a joint venture between MGM, Mirisch-Geoffrey-DePatie-Freleng and United Artists, a decade after DFE's merger with Marvel and Mirisch/UA's merger into MGM.
In 1993, Marvel Productions was renamed to New World Animation, and was completely absorbed in 1996 after News Corporation purchased New World Entertainment, ending the life of the studio that once was DFE. Marvel would eventually continue to produce animated shows through a partnership with Saban Entertainment, which had recently acquired a 50% stake in Fox Kids. In 2001, Fox Family Worldwide were sold to The Walt Disney Company.

Subsequent ownership

In 2009, The Walt Disney Company purchased Marvel Entertainment, bringing DFE's libraries of all-original and Marvel Comics-based cartoons full circle under one roof; all of these properties are now distributed by Disney–ABC Domestic Television. The Dr. Seuss specials animated by DFE are currently distributed by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment through the Dr. Seuss estate.
While the television catalog has often changed hands over the years, the theatrical cartoons continue to be owned by their original distributors: United Artists for The Mirisch Company cartoon library and Warner Bros. for the Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons.

List of theatrical and television cartoons

In a short time, DFE began producing television shows as well as theatricals and specials, becoming a competitor to Hanna-Barbera and Filmation. The studio's various cartoons, specials and shows are listed below.

Theatrical series

Original series
TitleYearsNotes
The Pink Panther1964–19801978–1980 cartoons were originally broadcast on TV before they were screened in theaters.
The Inspector1965–1969
Roland and Rattfink1968–1971
The Ant and the Aardvark1969–1971
Tijuana Toads1969–1972
The Blue Racer1972–1974
Hoot Kloot1973–1975
The Dogfather1974–1976

Commissioned series
Commissioned series
Original specials
AirdateTitleNetworkNotes
April 7, 1970Goldilocks and the Three BearsNBCco-production with The Mirisch Company
March 10, 1971The Cat in the HatCBS
February 14, 1972The LoraxCBS
November 12, 1972Clerow Wilson and the Miracle of P.S. 14NBCStars comedian Flip Wilson. Many of his characters appear in the special, including Geraldine Jones and Reverend Leroy.
January 6, 1973Luvcast U.S.A.ABCepisode of The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie
February 7, 1973The Incredible, Indelible, Magical, Physical Mystery TripABCan ABC Afterschool Special
October 15, 1973Dr. Seuss on the LooseCBS
December 17, 1973The Bear Who Slept Through ChristmasNBCOwned by Lionsgate
April 3, 1974Clerow Wilson's Great EscapeNBCsequel to Clerow Wilson and the Miracle of P.S. 14
May 15, 1974The Magical Mystery Trip Through Little Red's HeadABCan ABC Afterschool Special
February 19, 1975The Hoober-Bloob HighwayCBS
December 14, 1975The Tiny TreeNBC
February 16, 1977My Mom's Having a BabyABCan ABC Afterschool Special, a co-production with Dick Clark Productions
October 29, 1977Halloween Is Grinch NightABC
February 1, 1978Michel's Mixed-Up Musical BirdABCan ABC Afterschool Special
December 7, 1978'ABC
February 22, 1980'ABC
March 5, 1980Where Do Teenagers Come From?ABCan ABC Afterschool Special
May 2, 1980Pontoffel Pock, Where Are You?ABC
February 14, 1981'ABCproduction finished by Marvel Productions
May 8, 1981Dennis the Menace in Mayday for MotherNBCproduction finished by Marvel Productions
May 20, 1982The Grinch Grinches the Cat in the HatABCproduction finished by Marvel Productions

Commissioned specials'
AirdateTitleNetworkNotes
April 7, 1977Bugs Bunny's Easter SpecialCBSfor Warner Bros.
November 27, 1979Bugs Bunny's Looney Christmas TalesCBSfor Warner Bros.
April 1, 1980Daffy Duck's Easter Show''NBCfor Warner Bros.

TV commercials

  • Time for Timer
  • The Bod Squad
  • Charlie the Tuna
  • Little Caesars

    Film and television title design

Pink Panther series
Other films:
  • The Dead Ringer
  • The Best Man
  • Sex and the Single Girl
  • How to Murder Your Wife
  • Love Has Many Faces
  • The Satan Bug
  • the maps used in The Hallelujah Trail
  • The Art of Love
  • The Great Race
  • Do Not Disturb
  • The Trouble with Angels
  • the animated films parodying the Bell Telephone films in The President's Analyst
  • With Six You Get Eggroll
  • Star Wars
  • Capricorn One
other The TV series
In the beginning, DePatie–Freleng had virtually the same facilities, personnel and producer as Warner Bros. Cartoons. Although Chuck Jones would later work with DePate–Freleng on The Cat in the Hat, Jones and most of his group of artists ended up at Sib Tower 12 Productions independently producing new Tom and Jerry cartoons for MGM.
Although many DePatie–Freleng employees contributed greatly to the success of its product, story artist and Disney and Warner alumnus John W. Dunn created most of the studios' new cartoon series, both for theatrical release and for television. These series included The Ant & The Aardvark, The Tijuana Toads, Here Comes The Grump, and Roland and Ratfink, among others.
Many of the DFE cartoons were written and storyboarded by Dunn, including the first Pink Panther cartoon, The Pink Phink. Dunn's drawing style also found its way into the DFE cartoons.
The list below features many former Warner staffers, but also includes former Disney, MGM and Lantz staffers as well.

Producers