prints from the 1950s, which were in very poor shape, thus resulting in very poor image quality. In most appearances (except during the World War II era), Popeye is a middle-aged sailor with a unique way of speaking, disproportionately muscular forearms with two anchor tattoos, thinning hair, and an ever-present corncob pipe (which he toots like a steamship's whistle at times). From then on, those at sea would refer to Popeye as "Pop-Eye", after his popped eye. [10] Interstate was the TV subsidiary of Allied Artists at the time. Being a sailor, he has a love for adventure and the sea, and will not pass up the chance to find new mysteries, lost treasures and grand adventures. Despite his love of crapshooting, Popeye would be forced to sell his beloved dice for the lead in them after his guardian Whaler Joe fell on tough times. created their own openings for the cartoons, as they did with the pre-August 1948 Warner Bros. cartoons they were distributing. The villain clobbers Popeye until he eats spinach, giving him superhuman strength. Jack Mercer was drafted into the Navy during World War II, and scripts were stockpiled for Mercer to record when on leave. [2] a.a.p. These colorized shorts began airing on Superstation WTBS in 1986 during their Tom & Jerry and Friends 90-minute weekday morning and hour-long weekday afternoon shows. When Mercer was unavailable, Harry Welch stood in as the voice of Popeye (and Shape Ahoy had Mae Questel doing Popeye's voice as well as Olive's). A triumphant little Popeye then returned home with a nice string of whales for Whaler Joe that night. -- but before he could finish, the whales suddenly stopped. During his Famous Studios run, Popeye's eyes were also slightly enlarged to look a bit more realistic rather than looking like black dots, and he was also portrayed as having two eyes in both Famous Studios and the 60s television series, which would occasionally be seen in several shorts. Nobody but a criminal would do a hurt to anybody's sister! He loves his sweetheart Olive Oyl dearly despite their rough start and will go to any lengths to keep her safe and make her happy, showing that he is a very chivalrous and romantic man, despite his rough, tough and gruff nature. A villain, usually Bluto, makes a move on Popeye's "sweetie," Olive Oyl. [2] The use of jazz and very contemporary popular music highlighted how audiences were fascinated by new music. Tom Kenny as Popeye Grey Griffin as Olive Oyl In March 2010, it was reported that Sony Pictures Animation was developing a 3D computer-animated Popeye film, … Popeye was created by E. C. Segar and was inspired by a man Segar knew in Chester, Illinois: Frank \"Rocky\" Fiegel. The first cartoon in the series was released in 1933, and Popeye cartoons, released by Paramount Pictures, would remain a staple of Paramount's release schedule for nearly 25 years. The restored Popeye Show versions of the shorts are sometimes seen at revival film houses for occasional festival screenings. The remaining three were two-reel (double-length) Technicolor adaptations of stories from the Arabian Nights billed as "Popeye Color Features": Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor (1936), Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves (1937), and Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp (1939). The game is a platformer in a similar vein to Donkey Kong, which was also developed by R&D1. In the fifties, Popeye's cartoon catalog was sold by the Paramount studio to Associated Artists Productions for broadcast on television. Popeye and the Sea Hag's relationship was also more accurate to the strips than the previous series, with the Hag wanting to marry Popeye, much to the latter's disgust. He was created by Elzie Crisler Segar, and first appeared in the daily King Features comic strip Thimble Theatre on January 17, 1929.Popeye has now become the strip's title as well.. For more information about Popeye the Sailor, visit here. 1 1942 1.1 You're a Sap, Mr. Jap 1.2 Alona on the Sarong Seas 1.3 A Hull of a Mess 1.4 Scrap the Japs 1.5 Me Musical Nephews 2 1943 2.1 Spinach Fer Britain 2.2 Seein' Red, White 'N' Blue 2.3 Too Weak to Work 2.4 A Jolly Good Furlough 2.5 Ration Fer the Duration 2.6 The Hungry Goat 2.7 Happy Birthdaze 2.8 Wood-Peckin' 2.9 Cartoons Ain't Human 2.10 Her Honor the Mare 2.11 The Marry-Go … Popeye is a sailor who smokes a pipe and mutters things under his breath. This design would continue to be used by Sagendorf's successors in Popeye comics, such as George Wildman, Bobby London and several others throughout the 70s, 80s and future newspaper comic strips depending on the artist, with Segar and Sagendorf's designs usually being interchanged. • Animated Views", Popeye DVD news: Popeye – Warner 'Retools', "Popeye DVD news: Early Info About Vol. It was reported in 2002 that WB/Turner and King Features parent Hearst Corporation were working on a deal to release Popeye's cartoons on home video. The cartoon opens with a newspaper headline announcing Popeye as a movie star, reflecting the transition into film. On a dark night, the Mary Ann began ringing in an ominous and unusual tone not unlike the sound of bones and skeletons moving when suddenly the moon became blood red. The Fleischer cartoons, based out of New York City, proved to be among the most popular of the 1930s, and would remain a staple of Paramount's release schedule for nearly 25 years. Oddly enough, Popeye's signature spinach can would have special effects on other characters, such as Olive and Swee'Pea, who would unusually turn into actual superheroes. [2] Many cartoons, such as It's the Natural Thing to Do (1939), take their titles from popular songs of the time. Popeye's huge popularity led him to be adapted into animation, which would only be loosely based on Thimble Theatre due to the limited length of the theatrical shorts at the time keeping them from making proper full-length adaptations of the Thimble Theatre sagas, which resulted in the shorts being episodic. This was typical of most animation studios at the time, as many considered shutting their doors entirely due to the competition from television. [9] Paramount fired the Fleischers and began reorganizing the studio, which they renamed Famous Studios. He was portrayed by the late Robin Williams in the live-action film. In the late 1970s, Hanna-Barbera produced a new series of Popeye cartoons for CBS. The two shocked sailors could only look on in horror as they saw numerous indescribable beasts clinging to the side of the Mary Ann, led by a sinister being. The series, which aired 135 Popeye shorts over 45 episodes, also featured segments offering trivia about the characters, voice actors, and animators. Cartoon Short Guitar Boing FAMOUS STUDIOS CARTOON FALL SOUND FAMOUS STUDIOS CARTOON EXPLOSION SOUND (Heard a number of times … [12] In 1983, MGM/UA Home Video attempted to release a collection of Popeye cartoons on Betamax and VHS tapes titled The Best of Popeye, Vol. The first of WB’s Popeye DVD sets, covering the cartoons released from 1933 until early 1938, was released on July 31, 2007. Restoration timelines caused WB to re-imagine the Popeye DVD sets as a series of two-disc sets. Popeye is the main protagonist of the Popeye series of cartoons, comic books and even the live-movie.He is portrayed as a tough but relatively harmless sailor who has no time for troublemakers or bullies and is in love with Olive Oyl. A teenaged Popeye now a full-fledged and one-eyed sailor. In June 1956,[11] Paramount sold the black and white cartoons to television syndicator Associated Artists Productions (a.a.p. Also of note are Famous Studios' remakes of Fleischer cartoons (such as Goonland, itself a loose Thimble Theatre adaptation), heavily changed by Famous to remove all traces of Segar creations outside of Popeye, Bluto and Olive, i.e. His comic book appearances would continue for decades until the title's end in 1984. In 1933, Max and Dave Fleischer's Fleischer Studios adapted Segar's characters into a series of Popeye the Sailor theatrical cartoon shorts for Paramount Pictures. The color cartoons featured a similar open to the Warner Bros. cartoons, using a version of the Popeye theme music introduced in Olive Oyl For President in 1948. Also, in the 1940s shorts, Popeye gained four nephews named Pipeye, Peepeye, Poopeye and Pupeye, who originally debuted in an earlier short within a dream sequence as his children, before being made recurring and turned into his nephews. Popeye becomes an ordinary, downtrodden, Naval seaman in the wartime entries, usually getting the blame for mishaps. The retraced shorts were syndicated in 1987 on a barter basis, and remained available until the early 1990s. Popeye has a dislike for things like monsters, ghosts and other such terrors, having faced several himself in his life time and would even pretend they do not exist, as seeing them terrifies him greatly, but he always manages to muster the courage to face off against any foe. Popeye is a rough and tough sailor with a heart of gold who always does what he can for others and always doing what he thinks is best. Following the takeover of the Popeye animated franchise by Paramount Studios in 1942, the Popeye cartoons were now handled by Famous Studios, which made drastic changes which abandoned almost all traces of Thimble Theatre and focused largely on plots involving Popeye, Olive, Bluto in something resembling a love triangle, without many other characters appearing and with very few shorts deviating from that setup, which involved Olive falling for Bluto and Popeye beating him after eating spinach in an oft-repeated formula. Many voice artists worked on the Popeye shorts over the two decades of production; this list is based on the most comprehensive artists. Popeye the Sailor is an American animated series of comedy short films based on the titular comic strip character created by E. C. Segar. While not appearing as a sailor very often (as Popeye was usually portrayed with a number of odd jobs) the stories in the cartoons would involve his brawling escapades or his adventures in certain areas of the world while doing impressive feats and preserving Olive's safety and their relationship. The cartoons with these battle scenes have often been banned from television for being considered too "politically incorrect.". Popeye was born the son of Poopdeck Pappy and an unnamed woman in a typhoon in Santa Monica (with Popeye erroneously claiming to have been born at 2 or 3 years of age). He also has a fondness for "poor dumb aminals" and, similarly, cannot stand to see any animal being hurt for no reason. The series was unique in the Popeye franchise for taking place later in Popeye's life, where he had finally married Olive Oyl, settled down and had a son of his own (a notable change considering the rarity of having well-known cartoon characters actually move on with their lives). [2] The voices for Fleischer cartoons produced during the early and mid-1930s were recorded after the animation was completed. It eventually went on to gross $49,823,037; more than double the film's production budget. Over time, the Technicolor Famous shorts began to adhere even closer to the standard Popeye formula, and softened, rounder character designs – including an Olive Oyl design which gave the character high heels and an updated hairstyle – were evident by late 1946. [15], Popeye cartoons were never officially released in any form until the late 2000s. Unfortunately, upon reaching the whale pod, Popeye realized he was grievously ill-prepared against the giant sea beasts who thrashed about his little vessel as they let out a loud horselaugh, which made Popeye respond with a quick tempered "Blow me down, you-!" In November 26, 2020, Boomerang aired Popeye again as part of the Boomerang Thanksgiving Feast during the Thanksgiving weekend. By the mid-50s, budgets at the studio became tight and staff downsized, while still producing the same number of cartoons per year. However, the Fleischer Popeye shorts shown on this block are mostly the 1980s colorized versions, and most of the title cards thereof have been edited to the a.a.p. However, King Features put a high asking price on the Popeye cartoons. As the strips started focusing more on Popeye, he began to form a relationship with Castor's sister Olive Oyl after she had left her previous boyfriend Ham Gravy, and the two would eventually go on to become one of the most recognizable couples in cartoon history. New voice cast member Jackson Beck began voicing Bluto within a few years; he, Mercer, and Questel would continue to voice their respective characters into the 1960s. The All-New Popeye Hour is an animated television series featuring Popeye the Sailor, produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and King Features Syndicate, which aired from 1978 to 1983 on CBS. The two would then join the crew of the Mary Ann for an unknown voyage. [12] a.a.p. As Popeye's notoriety grew among the children, he inadvertently became a factor for good in discouraging his fellow rough-dock kids from crapshooting, doing so by being too good at the game himself, as he always got 18 straight passes when he rolled the dice. Popeye made his film debut in Popeye the Sailor, a 1933 Betty Boop cartoon. Background Personality. In 2012, Popeye reruns ceased until 2019, when Popeye cartoons returned to TV on Turner Classic Movies as single 7-minute shorts, usually shown on Saturday mornings. While he is usually a treasure hunter of sorts, he is not greedy and always does his best to share with others and encourage others to do the same. It was then that the monstrous and bloodthirsty cook of the ship, an evil, beast-like man simply known as "The Ape," stepped forth, having had enough of Popeye's winning streak. George W. Geezil also made only two appearances alongside Popeye. Director Eric Goldberg notes a very urban feel to the music of Popeye, reflecting "the type of cartoons they were making." Sagendorf went on to admit that after approximately a year of attempting to do so as Segar's apprentice, he had to ask Segar to draw the character for him; he explained, "It turned out that if you didn't draw the eyebrows and eyes first, the nose second, the head third and the chin last, you were dead.". In the intervening years, however, Popeye cartoons slowly disappeared from the airwaves in favor of newer television editions. He rents a room at the Oyl family's boarding house, whose daughter, Olive (Shelley Duvall), is preparing for her engagemen… Popeye was created by E. C. Segar and was inspired by a man Segar knew in Chester, Illinois: Frank "Rocky" Fiegel. Popeye(JPJapanese: ポパイRomaji: Popai) is a 1982 video game developed by Nintendo R&D1 and originally released in arcades. Animated shows were also made for television in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. The original Paramount logos appear on these cartoons because Warner Bros. and Paramount Pictures cross-licensed each other's logos in a deal which also involved Paramount-distributed John Wayne movies originally released by WB, and therefore preserving the artistic integrity of the original theatrical releases. In at least one Fleischer cartoon, Bluto refers to Popeye as a "one-eyed runt." Popeye the Sailor is an American animated series of comedy short films based on the titular comic strip character created by E. C. Segar. Popeye the Sailor in all produced 231 short subjects that were broadcast on television for many years. Popeye the Sailor: 1933–1938, Volume 1, a four-disc collector’s edition DVD, contains the first 60 Fleischer Popeye cartoons, including the color specials Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor and Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves. The Popeye Show is an American cartoon anthology series that premiered on November 19, 2001, on Cartoon Network. The character first appeared in the daily King Features comic strip Thimble Theatre on January 17, 1929, and Popeye became the strip's title in later years. The daily strips are reprints of old Sagendorf stories. Staff songwriters would also write original songs for the shorts, such as in 1936's Brotherly Love and I Wanna Be a Lifeguard; the studio would hire outside songwriters to compose originals in addition. Popeye's look was once again changed for this series, this time it was a permanent return to his classic outfit, however he still wore his Navy hat, making it something of a combination of both styles. Popeye the Sailor is a fictional hero notable for appearing in comic strips and animated films as well as numerous television shows. After Popeye's run in the original Thimble Theatre, he would return as the main character in the 1948 comic book series by E. C. Segar's assistant Bud Sagendorf, which combined elements from both the original Thimble Theatre and the Fleischer Studios cartoons. The hapless little bird was suddenly grasped by none other than the ship's cook, "The Ape", who hoped to make some "Off" out of the poor bird. [16] Three volumes were produced between 2007 and 2008, released in the order the cartoons were released to theaters. Shortly after his birth, his father Poopdeck left home and was never seen again, and his mother's fate was unknown, leaving the young Popeye an "orphink" to be raised by an orphanage keeper who gave him the ID number of 185,764. Most used a.a.p. [2] Even after the Fleischers began pre-recording dialog for lip-sync shortly after moving to Miami, Mercer and the other voice actors would record ad-libbed lines while watching a finished copy of the cartoon. Popeye's favorite food is spinach, and he always tries to encourage others to eat this healthy vegetable as it is a great source of "strenkth and vitaliky." [2], The original 1932 agreement with the syndicate called for any films made within 10 years and any elements of them to be destroyed in 1942. In 1955, Paramount put their cartoon and shorts library up for television sale. Since his debut in animation, Popeye has had many unique songs for himself as well as many tunes dedicated to him. All that was known was that their frightening encounter aboard the "Ol' Mary Ann" would forever remind the duo of the all-true horrors that exist within the seas. The v… This article is about the character. Segar in 1929. As the series is more faithful to Segar and Sagendorf's work, the plots of each issue follow more closely to the original format of the older comics rather than the cartoons, and the art even replicates Segar's style flawlessly. MeTV announced that they will air a Saturday morning cartoon block which includes the Fleischer/Famous Popeye cartoons beginning in January 2021.[13]. When the Cartoon Network began in 1992, they mostly ran cartoons from the MGM/UA library, which included Popeye. The Popeye Show is currently airing on Cartoon Network in Pakistan as well as in India. Popeye knew a fight was inevitable and shouted out a "Blow me down!" He is immediately feared by the townsfolk simply because he is a stranger ("Blow Me Down"), and is accosted by a greedy taxman (Donald Moffat). In 1980, a theatrical live-action movie called Popeye was released, featuring an original story written by Jules Pfeiffer, directed by Robert Altman, and serving as a more faithful adaptation to Segar's Thimble Theatre. However, their exact relation to Popeye remains unclear, and the parent of his nephews has never been properly identified. For many decades, viewers could only see a majority of the classic Popeye cartoons with altered opening and closing credits. Thanks to the animated shorts, Popeye became even more of a sensation than he had been in comic strips. Popeye has also appeared in theatrical and television animated cartoons. With the little female albatross now saved, Popeye apologetically bowed before the little bird and said "maybe you is somebody's sister, tha's a fack! [12] King Features realized the potential for success and began distributing Popeye-based merchandise, which in turn led to new Popeye TV productions. Sony Pictures has made a deal to develop an All CGI Cartoon Popeye feature film. [2] For the first few cartoons, the opening-credits music consisted of an instrumental of "The Sailor's Hornpipe," followed by a vocal variation on "Strike Up the Band (Here Comes a Sailor)," substituting the words "for Popeye the Sailor" in the latter phrase. ", and the little bird happily went on her way. Paramount would take control of the studio in 1941 and rename it Famous Studios, ousting the Fleischer brothers and continuing production. List of Popeye the Sailor theatrical cartoons (Famous Studios), Popeye | The Home of Popeye the Sailor Man website, https://popeye.fandom.com/wiki/Popeye?oldid=41604, In the theatrical cartoons, Popeye was instead portrayed as being 40 years of age, as stated in the Fleischer cartoon. As the twelve-year old Popeye set off on his first voyage, he would end up losing the vision of his right eye in "the mos' arful battle" of his life. a.a.p. One day, Popeye set out on a boat with nothing but a bent pin and a spool of thread in hopes of helping his guardian by catching whales for him. Popeye is a cartoon character and was created by E. C. Segar. Cartoon Metallic Impact (Heard once in "The Last Resort" and "Take It Easel.") In 1997 (by which time the Popeye cartoons had come under ownership of Turner), home video rights to the MGM film library were reassigned from MGM/UA Home Video to Warner Home Video. Timberg composed the themes to the Fleischers' Betty Boop and Superman cartoons, but asked Lerner to write Popeye's theme song because he had a date that night. Popeye the Sailor is a cartoon character created by Elzie Crisler Segar, who has appeared in comic strips and animated cartoons in the cinema as well as on television. The character was growing in popularity by the 1930s and there was "hardly a newspaper reader of the Great Depression that did not know his name. Eventually, the Fleischers paired Popeye and spinach together far more than Segar ever did. Several classic Popeye cartoons have fallen into the public domain [2], For generations, the iconic Popeye theme song became an instantly recognizable musical bookmark, further propelling the character's stardom. Spinach became a main component of the Popeye cartoons and were used for the energetic finale in each. This would have destroyed all of the Fleischer Popeye shorts. Each episode includes three Popeye theatrical shorts from Fleischer Studios and/or Famous Studios. Film historian Leonard Maltin notes that the studio did not intend to make light of the war, but instead make Popeye more relevant with the times and show him in action. It was then that the Josie Lee began to drift out to sea and after a few days, Popeye realized that he liked this style of living and would go on to devote his life to that of the sailor's way, deciding to join the crew of the Josie Lee and begin practicing his "sailor's walk" from then on. In 2001, Popeye received a tribute show on Cartoon Network titled The Popeye Show, which only featured classic shorts but also adding trivia info and facts about Popeye as well as occasionally showing unaltered original versions of the shorts, with the series going on to have 45 episodes. During the World War II-era animated shorts, Popeye was a member of the U. S. Navy and his outfit was changed to a white Navy suit, and he would continue to look like this in animation from the 1940s through to the 1960s. For the Game & Watch video game, see Popeye (Game & Watch). Popeye's portrayal in the animated adaptation (such as the theatrical cartoons and especially the Famous outings) has alternately been criticized for giving him a single means to solve all of life's problems (unlike in the older strips), or praised for bringing children to eat healthy. These cartoons were seven B&W 1930s and 1940s cartoons, 24 Famous Studios cartoons from the 1950s (many of which fell to the public domain after the MGM/UA merger), and all three Popeye color specials (although some copyrighted Popeye cartoons turned up on public domain VHS tapes and DVDs). Popeye is a rough and tough sailor with a heart of gold who always does what he can for others and always doing what he thinks is best. Summary of Character. The first volume was included, either erroneously or through somewhat fraudulent means, in a batch of boxed sets sold in discount outlets for $3 or less in the summer of 2009. He is brave and compassionate, as he will not back down against any foe and give them all he has got, but his compassionate nature makes it so he always tries to "defends the weakerist", as he cannot stand seeing the weak and helpless get abused. The huge child following Popeye received eventually prompted Segar's boss, William Randolph Hearst, to order Segar to tone down the humor and violence. Popeye would make his debut in the January 17, 1929 Thimble Theatre strip "Dice Island" as a rough sailor for hire. [2] Paramount renamed the studio Paramount Cartoon Studios in 1956 and continued the Popeye series for one more year, with Spooky Swabs, released in August 1957, being the last of the 125 Famous shorts in the series. Popeye then wound up his fist and let "The Ape" have it with a mighty blow to the jaw (while also unintentionally getting a revenge of sorts). U.M. The 1960's version of Popeye the Sailor is a television series produced by a variety of animation studios that made 220 episodes in two years. The Movie, released in 1980 and starring a young Robin Williams in one of his first film roles, is a Cult Classic. Popeye has also become the strip's title in later years. The process was intended to make the shorts more marketable in the modern television era, but prevented the viewers from seeing the original Fleischer pen-and-ink work, as well as the three-dimensional backgrounds created by Fleischer's "Stereoptical" process. As far as he could remember, little Popeye was impressed by early home training and exercised as soon as he was able, but avoided getting into serious fights until he was 4 years of age, where he had finally had enough of his orphanage keeper and let him have it. Popeye then dedicated himself to sailing the seas, looking for fights and new adventure, as well as any clue to the whereabouts of his long-lost Pappy. This action infuriated the young Popeye so heavily that his anger became pure strength; he quickly got back on his feet and punched whale with all his might, instantly killing the proud alpha and proceeded to take on the rest of the pod. This was followed by Popeye and Son in 1987. But he also has no patience for violent beasts who attack defenseless people or other animals for no justifiable reason, and he will be quick to turn them into mincemeat for their hotheadedness. The ship he was born on was rocked by a massive typhoon just moments after his birth, though his family was ultimately unharmed by the event. [20], Articles related to the "Popeye the Sailor" film series, Popeye Volume 3 DVD documentary, released by Warner Brothers in 2008, Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor, Popeye the Sailor Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves, Popeye the Sailor filmography (Fleischer Studios), Popeye the Sailor filmography (Famous Studios), "GAC Forums – Popeye's Popularity – Article from 1935", "Cartoons Then and Now: Jerry Beck talks Woody, Popeye and More! Segar was not ready to compromise, believing there would be "nothing funny about a sissy sailor."[2]. He first appeared in the Thimble Theater comic strips. Compared to the theatrical cartoons, the animation of this series was streamlined and limited to suit the television budget. 1, but the release was canceled after MGM/UA received a cease and desist letter from King Features Syndicate, which claimed that they only had the legal rights to release the collection on video. Popeye began to sell more tickets and became the most popular cartoon character in the country in the 1930s, surpassing Mickey Mouse. "[2] Being located on Broadway, the Fleischers were well placed for popular music developments in the 1930s. After acquisition, the black-and-white Popeye shorts were shipped to South Korea, where artists retraced them into color. Popeye's Pappy replacing Goonland's Goons with what might be considered racial caricatures of Africans led by a Bluto-like cannibal, with the only thing in common between the two versions being the rescue of Pappy - who would go on to make only two more appearances after this (one of which contradicted the established fact that he left his son shortly after his birth). Popeye at age 12 with both eyes still intact. "Borned to the sea" near the bay of Santa Monica, Popeyes' childhood was hard. Eugene the Jeep also made some appearances but would not be used as often as the above. While originally introduced as a minor character (with the actual star of the strips then being Castor Oyl), Popeye's popularity eventually grew to the point where he became the main character of Thimble … The Fleischers moved their studio to Miami, Florida in September 1938 in order to weaken union control and take advantage of tax breaks. Polls taken by theater owners proved Popeye more popular than Mickey, and Popeye upheld his position for the rest of the decade. Popeye is an unproduced film. In late 1943, the Popeye series was moved to Technicolor production, beginning with Her Honor the Mare. Sagendorf's design was also used in other 70s media and two cartoons, The All-New Popeye Hour and Popeye and Son.
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