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Scheherazade
12-20-2006, 11:27 AM
Joseph Barbera, one half of the team behind such cartoon classics as The Flintstones, Yogi Bear, Scooby-Doo and Huckleberry Hound, has died, aged 95.
He died of natural causes at home with his wife, Sheila, at his side.

With William Hanna, Barbera founded Hanna-Barbera in the 1950s, after the pair had earlier worked on the Tom and Jerry cartoons at MGM studios.

"Joe will live on through his work," said Warner Brothers chairman and chief executive Barry Meyer.

"The characters he created with his late partner, William Hanna, are not only animated superstars but also a very beloved part of American pop culture," Mr Meyer said.

Cat and mouse collaboration

Barbera grew up in Brooklyn, New York and started to pursue a career in banking.

But his amateur sketches soon became the raw material for cartoons which were published in Collier's magazine, a breakthrough which then took him into animation.

He met Hanna at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film studio, where they collaborated on a 1937 cartoon called Puss Gets the Boot, which led to the creation of cat-and-mouse duo Tom and Jerry.

Their 17-year partnership on the Tom and Jerry series resulted in seven Academy Awards and 14 nominations in total.

Extended format

The pair left MGM and formed Hanna-Barbera Studios in 1957, where they created numerous classic characters, including The Jetsons and The Flintstones.

Hanna-Barbera extended cartoons beyond the traditional six-minute slots.

The Flintstones, featuring two modern-minded couples living in the stone age, was the first animated series to be broadcast on prime-time television.

In the decades that followed, Hanna-Barbera produced 300 cartoon series, with more than 3,000 half-hour shows.

Scooby-Doo, a Great Dane who leads a group of teenagers in ghost-hunting adventures, made his debut in 1969 and the series ran for 17 years, a record for a TV animated series.

"They were able to bring top quality cartoon shows to television," said actor Casey Kasem, the voice of Shaggy, Scooby-Doo's unkempt sidekick.

"When they came along and they did it, they made it profitable for people who were big investors," he told the BBC.

"It's a legacy that he has that has touched people around the world with what I call magic, they just kept producing one great show after another."

Following Hanna's death in 2001, Joseph Barbera remained active as an executive producer for Warner Brothers Animation on TV series such as What's New, Scooby-Doo? and Tom and Jerry Tales. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6191999.stm

Virgil
12-20-2006, 11:44 AM
Rest in peace. I grew up with many of these cartoons. "Yabba-dabba-do."

Niamh
12-20-2006, 12:00 PM
Another leged gone but his name will forever live on in his cartoons. I grew up with the jetsons, yogi bear, the flintstones etc and that was in the eighties and nineties, and my nephews watch them today and i love to watch them with them. So even after fifty years they are still enjoyable.

Koa
12-20-2006, 07:50 PM
:eek: I didn't know he had died!

When I was little I thought it was two women making those cartoons because one was called Hanna, so I couldn't understand why the other was called Barbera and not Barbara... ;)

Horatio
12-20-2006, 08:37 PM
he will be greatly missed

Petrarch's Love
12-20-2006, 09:13 PM
How sad. I was just talking about all those old cartoons with the woman who did the voice of Judy Jetson. She was at a party I went to (yes, you do get to meet famous animated people when you go to parties in West Hollywood) and was reminiscing happily about the Hanna Barbera days.

TEND
12-20-2006, 09:31 PM
I'm a Hong Kong Phooey man myself, than Scooby. Either way though, it's sad to see one of the creators pass.

Turk
12-21-2006, 06:31 AM
Tom and Jerry is one of my most favorite cartoons. Though i was thinking Hanna Barberba is a guy name until last few years. :)

Nightshade
12-21-2006, 08:19 AM
'Exit stage left'

Snaglpuss was always a favouirte with me but I did love the jetsons and the flintstones.