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George Of The Jungle 1997

  1. George Of The Jungle 1997 Teaser
  2. George Of The Jungle 1997 Screencaps

George of the Jungle is a 1997 American live-action film adaptation of the Jay Ward cartoon of the same name, which is also a spoof of Tarzan. The film was. Lagu kenangan 80an.

Then there's an Ape, named Ape, whose voice is dubbed by John Cleese and who sounds and behaves exactly like George's British butler. I liked how he looks down his glasses at people and explains situations in a reserved and very proper tone, like Jeeves might. He's the funniest ape since those gorillas who drank the martinis in “Congo.” George himself is pretty funny, too. He's played by Brendan Fraser, who has bulked up and perfected a facial expression that can best be described as sheeplike goodwill. George has approximately the IQ of his namesake on Jay Ward's famous '60s TV cartoon series and makes the same mistakes, swinging on vines and crashing into trees.

The movie, which is live action and tries for the look and feel of a cartoon, involves a rich American girl named Ursula Stanhope (Leslie Mann) who goes on an expedition in the jungle, hears of a mysterious white ape, meets George, falls for him and spends the rest of the movie trying to get out of her engagement to the society snob Lyle Van de Groot (Thomas Haden Church).

George, meanwhile, knows nothing of the ways of women, doesn't realize she likes him and turns desperately to Ape for tips on how to woo her. Ape suggests baring his fangs, uprooting grass, beating his chest and all the other usually dependable approaches, but when they don't work, he's adaptable: He gives his young master a copy of “Coffee, Tea or Me?” and says it contains all of the answers.

The script makes some obligatory stops (we know more or less what will happen at the society functions in San Francisco and we guess the fate of the wedding cake), but the movie is good-natured, slightly vulgar (in a mild Jim Carrey way) and well played by actors who are certainly good sports. Among the other cast members are Richard Roundtree, many years down the road from “Shaft in Africa,” as Kwame, an African leader, and Greg Cruttwell and Abraham Benrubi as two expedition members with vile plans of their own.

Is “George of the Jungle” a great movie? No. But it is well-positioned for the silly season, when we've had just about all of the terrorist explosions we need for one summer and it's still too hot for the autumn art films. I recommend a spinoff: a Saturday morning cartoon series about an elephant who thinks he's a dog. Think of all the things a dog could do if he had a trunk and you'll get the idea.

George of the Jungle
Created byJay Ward
Bill Scott
Directed byGerard Baldwin
Frank Braxton
Pete Burness
Paul Harvey
Jim Hiltz
Bill Hurtz
Lew Keller
John Walker
StarringBill Scott
Paul Frees
June Foray
Daws Butler
Opening themeStan Worth
Sheldon Allman
Country of originUnited States
No. of episodes17 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)Ponsonby Britt, O.B.E.
Jay Ward
Bill Scott
Producer(s)Jay Ward
Bill Scott
Running time30 minutes with commercials
Production company(s)Jay Ward Productions
DistributorNBCUniversal Television Distribution
Release
Original networkABC
Original releaseSeptember 9 –
December 30, 1967
Chronology
Followed byGeorge of the Jungle (2007 TV series)

George of the Jungle is an American animated television series produced by Jay Ward and Bill Scott, who created The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show. The character George was inspired by the story of Tarzan and a cartoon characterization of George Eiferman (Mr. America, Mr. Universe, IFBB Hall of Famer) drawn by a cook on his mine sweeper in the Navy during World War II. It ran for 17 episodes on Sunday mornings from September 9 to December 30, 1967, on the American television networkABC.

  • 3Segments
  • 7Spin-offs

Program format[edit]

Each episode featured three segments in the form of three unrelated cartoons: George of the Jungle, Tom Slick, and Super Chicken. Each of the cartoons ended with a strike on the Tympani (Kettledrum), which changed to an ascending tone, following a bad pun.

Unlike previous Ward series, the animation production was done in Hollywood using veteran animators Phil Duncan, Rod Scribner, and Rudy Zamora, among others. Each segment's theme song was written by the team of Stan Worth and Sheldon Allman, though the cartoons themselves had little or no music scoring, as with Bullwinkle. Ward mainstays Bill Scott, June Foray, Paul Frees, and Daws Butler provided most of the character voices over all three segments.

The cartoons are technically more advanced than the rather crude animation in Ward's earlier series, which originated from Gamma Productions, a Mexican studio sponsored by Ward. He was so pleased with George of the Jungle that he allowed production to go over-budget, which resulted in considerable financial loss, ultimately limiting the series to 17 episodes.

The complete series is available now on DVD.[1]

Theme song lyrics[edit]


George, George, George of the Jungle,
Strong as he can be.
(Tarzan yell) Watch out for that tree!
George, George, George of the Jungle
Lives a life that's free.
(Tarzan yell) Watch out for that tree!
When he gets in a scrape,
He makes his escape
With the help of his friend,
An ape named Ape.
Then away he'll schlep on his elephant Shep
While Fella and Ursula stay in step..[2]
With George, George, George of the Jungle
Friend to you and me.
(Tarzan yell) Watch out for that tree!
Watch out for that.. (Tarzan yell .. 'Oooh!') tree!
George, George, George of the Jungle,
Friend to you and me!

Segments[edit]

George of the Jungle[edit]

The title segment, George of the Jungle, is a parody of the Tarzan stories of Edgar Rice Burroughs. George (voiced by Bill Scott) is a dim-witted but big-hearted 'ape man' who is always called upon by District Commissioner Alistair (voiced by Paul Frees) to save inhabitants of the jungle territory of Mbwebwe Province in Africa from various threats.

In the opening title, George is depicted swinging on vines, repeatedly slamming face-first into trees or other obstacles even as theme-song singers warn him to 'watch out for that tree!' Another running gag is that George keeps forgetting that he lives in a treehouse, falling to the ground every time he leaves home.

George's 'beloved mate' is Ursula (voiced by June Foray), a Jane-like character far brighter than George, whom George refers to as 'Fella.' (the phrase in the title song '[W}hile Fella and Ursula stay in step..' is meant to show that they are the same person.) George's closest friend is an ape named Ape (voiced by Paul Frees impersonating Ronald Colman)[citation needed] who, like Ursula, is far more intelligent than George. George has a pet elephant named Shep, who behaves like a lap dog, or, as George refers to him, a 'great big peanut-lovin' poochie,' and who George thinks is a dog. Also of note is the Tooky Tooky (or Tookie Tookie) bird famous for his call: 'Ah ah ee ee tooky tooky!'[3]

George's two most frequent foes are a pair of stereotypical hunters named 'Tiger' Titheridge and 'Weevil' Plumtree (voiced by Daws Butler and Paul Frees). Tiger, the taller of the two, wears a pith helmet and khakis, has a pencil moustache, and speaks in a poncy Oxford accent, while Weevil talks like a pirate and wears a white t-shirt and shorts with a bush hat. Another one of George's recurring enemies is a mad scientist named Dr. Chicago (voiced by Daws Butler).

George, though hopelessly unintelligent, possesses substantial strength and jungle instincts that allow him to track down enemies. When trapped in a seemingly hopeless situation, he carries a miniature phrase book with numerous animal calls to summon help—although he usually gives the wrong call.

Tom Slick[edit]

Tom Slick features the title character (voiced by Bill Scott), a racecar driver who competes in races with his trusty vehicle, the Thunderbolt Greaseslapper. He is accompanied by his girlfriend, Marigold (voiced by June Foray), and his elderly mechanic, Gertie Growler (also voiced by Bill Scott). Tom's chief antagonists are Baron Otto Matic (voiced by Paul Frees) and his lackey, Clutcher (voiced by Daws Butler mimicking Frank Fontaine as 'Crazy Guggenheim'), whom the Baron often hits across the head with a monkey wrench.

George Of The Jungle 1997

Super Chicken[edit]

Super Chicken features the title character (voiced by Bill Scott), a superhero (who, in 'real life', is wealthy Henry Cabot Henhouse III) with a lion sidekick named Fred (voiced by Paul Frees impersonating Ed Wynn). Super Chicken usually begins their adventures with the battle cry, 'To the Super Coop, Fred!' and when Fred comments on his latest injury, responds with a variation of the theme, 'You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred!' Following his own mistakes, Super Chicken remarks, 'I'm glad no one was here to see that!'

Episodes[edit]

Each of the following episodes consists of a George of the Jungle cartoon, a Super Chicken cartoon, and a Tom Slick cartoon.

George Of The Jungle 1997 Teaser

No.TitleOriginal air date
1'The Sultan's Pearl / The Zipper / The Bigg Race'September 9, 1967
  • The Sultan's Pearl: The Sultan's most priceless treasure, a 300 pound pearl, has been stolen by 'Tiger' Titherage and 'Weevil' Plumtree and George tries to get it back.
  • The Zipper: The elusive fiend dubbed the Zipper plans to blow up the world; Super Chicken and Fred try to track him down using his 'zip code'.
  • The Bigg Race: A wealthy man named Tiny Bigg is sponsoring a race Tom Slick must win so Gertie can pay the mortgage on her garage. Can Tom outsmart the dishonest Baron Otto Matic?
2'The Malady Lingers On / One of Our States Is Missing / Monster Rally'September 16, 1967
  • The Malady Lingers On: Shep is sick and the simple country witch doctor called by George requires three items for a cure that are hard to obtain.
  • One of Our States Is Missing: The villainous Appian Way has stolen Rhode Island.
  • Monster Rally: Tom races in a 'monster rally' against actual monsters, including a vampire, a Frankenstein's monster and a werewolf.
3'Oo-oo Birds of a Feather / Wild Ralph Hiccup / Send In a Sub'September 23, 1967
  • Oo-oo Birds of a Feather: A trend involving the tail feathers of the Oo-oo Birds has poachers flocking to harvest them, including 'Tiger' Titherage and 'Weevil' Plumtree.
  • Wild Ralph Hiccup: A wily robber named Wild Ralph Hiccup (with a speech pattern resembling an obvious parody of John Wayne) robs airplane passengers at gunpoint, before diving out into the wild blue yonder. Super Chicken and Fred are soon hot on his trail — even if it means taking 26 flights back and forth from Miami, Florida, to Cedar Rapids, Iowa for four straight days (and Super Chicken got tickets for 26 more trips, too!).
  • Send In a Sub: An undefeated submarine racing champion is known as 'Lucky Pool' for the misfortunes keeping his opponents from winning. Is he lucky enough to remain undefeated when Tom Slick challenges him?
4'Ungawa the Gorilla God / The Oyster / Snow What'September 30, 1967
  • Ungawa the Gorilla God: George is forced by the Boondockie tribe to fight Ungawa the Gorilla God with both hands tied behind his back.
  • The Oyster: A criminal disguised as an actual oyster steals the world's largest pearl.
  • Snow What: Baron Otto Matic wagered all he had that he would win a snowmobile race, but Tom Slick had the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper modified to enter the race.
5'Little Scissor / The Easter Bunny / The Great Balloon Race'October 7, 1967
  • Tiny Tony Tuxedo the Tip-Top Tailor from Tanganyika (a.k.a. Little Scissor) and his pygmies are committing crimes in the jungle and the city.
  • The Easter Bunny: It appears the Easter Bunny has turned to crime, robbing banks across the greater Pittsburgh area. But upon further investigation by Super Chicken and Fred, the culprit is actually Louie the Lapin, who was wearing an Easter Bunny disguise. Louie's plan is to dye U.S. currency, because he hates the color green.
  • The Great Balloon Race: This episode features the 9th Annual Balloon Race across the English Channel. Tom Slick is the favorite to win. “There’s no such word as blow up in balloon racing, Marigold. Of course that doesn’t mean it never happens.” He is up against the Flying Salami piloted by Falinni Scalapinni; the Tokyo Teensy, the world’s only transistorized balloon; the Stanley Steamer who plans to win with some British racing luck; and Baron Otto Matic with his toady Clutcher. Poor Clutcher gets hit on the head four times with a monkey wrench. The Stanley Steamer was shot down with the starting gun, Clutcher popped the Tokyo Teensy and Falinni Scalapinni tried to eat the Flying Salami. After some British racing luck, Clutcher and Gertie row like they have never rowed before to catch up with the Baron. With Marigold’s help, a twist of fate (and his cannon) downs the Baron’s balloon, allowing Tom to win as the only balloon to finish the race.
6'Monkey Business / The Elephant Spreader / I Was Railroaded'October 14, 1967
  • Monkey Business: Ape is ape-napped.
  • The Elephant Spreader: Elephants are popping up all over the world, and their added weight is tilting the Earth sideways on its axis. The brains behind the world-tipping scheme is India's Prince Blackhole of Calcutta, who has concocted this scheme so that it can snow in India.
  • I Was Railroaded: Tom and Gertie enter a train race.
7'Next Time, Take the Train / The Geezer / Dranko the Dragster'October 21, 1967
  • Next Time, Take the Train: Dr. Chicago has developed a formula that causes all insects to become strong and aggressive.
  • The Geezer: A cantankerous old Geezer has stolen the world-famous geyser, 'Old Faceful'.
  • Dranko the Dragster: In one of the fastest growing sports, Dick Two-Lane announces for the Forthcoming Drag Classic, sponsored by Arnold Forthcoming, the magnet king. Tom is up against the drag racing movie star, Steve McQueasy and his widescreen big wheeler; Harley Angel and his switch-blade top chopper; and for the first time a racer from outer space, Dranko the Dragster from the planet Merth. Gertie recently set the world speed record of 81 mph on her jet powered skateboard. “There’s no such word as indecision in drag racing, Marigold.” After Dranko drops a power pill into Gertie’s skateboard, Tom is able to win the race and save Gertie at the same time. Dranko gets his just deserts thanks to tough guy Harley Angel.
8'The Desperate Showers / Rotten Hood / The Cupp Cup Race'October 28, 1967
  • The Desperate Showers: Can George save Ursula from being sacrificed to the Great Ju-Ju by a rain-crazy witch doctor?
  • Rotten Hood: Tired of stealing acorns from the squirrels residing in Sherwood Park, Rotten Hood, assisted by his band of Merry Man, Fried Tucker, decides to steal from the rich and keep the loot.
  • The Cupp Cup Race: In this episode Tom is racing in the Sir Thomas Cupp Cup Race. The prize is the diamond studded Sir Thomas Cupp Cup, $50,000, and a year’s supply of Sir Thomas Cupp’s Jams and Jellies made from reconstituted catfish whiskers. (Blechh!). For this race, Tom had to convert the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper into a supersonic speedboat. “There’s no such word as never in speedboat racing, Marigold.” Tom is up against the Ten Putt Tide Ripper, the Back Burning Beach Bunny, and the Twin Pod Surf Slurper driven by the internationally known sissy Amsome Snobsworth V and his girlfriend Wilma Willow. Barron Otto Matic is not in this race, but Tom still has to deal with cheating from Amsome Snobsworth V. We learn that Gertie knows karate as she helps Tom out of his first jam of being tied to the dock at the start. “There’s no such word as stop in speedboat racing, Marigold.” Gertie is also capable of some mean water skiing in her hippy boots. Unfortunately Amsome has a sea monster named Ringo Starfish (with one R) to swallow Tom. Luckily Gertie renegotiated the deal and promised Ringo Starfish a year’s supply of Sir Thomas Cupp's Jams and Jellies made from reconstituted catfish whiskers (Blechh!).
9'Treasure of Sarah Madre / The Laundry Man / Irish Cheapstakes'November 4, 1967
  • Treasure of Sarah Madre: George and the District Commissioner follow a map to the treasure of Sarah Madre while evading 'Tiger' Titherage and 'Weevil' Plumtree.
  • The Laundry Man: Shrimp Chop Phooey the Laundry Man runs a money laundering racket disguised as a Chinese laundry. When he and his Number One Son make off with their customers' ill-gotten cash, Super Chicken and Fred must stop them and return the money to its rightful owners — the crooks.
  • Irish Cheapstakes: Violating the one-year ban from racing placed on him, Baron Otto Matic enters the Irish Cheapstakes under the name 'Ott O'Matic'.
10'The Trouble I've Seed / The Noodle / Overstocked'November 11, 1967
  • The Trouble I've Seed: Dr. Chicago has developed a formula that causes all plants to become sentient.
  • The Noodle: Super Chicken and Fred try to capture the Noodle, whose name comes from his many elaborately-thought out plans. However, one of his plans causes Super Chicken to develop amnesia. With nowhere else to turn to, Fred dons the mantle of his friend and tries to catch the Noodle himself.
  • Overstocked: Tom Slick modifies the Thunderbolt Greaseslapper to enter it in a stock car race against Sweet Willy Rollbar.
11'Dr. Schpritzer, I Presume? / The Fat Man / Double Cross Country Race'November 18, 1967
  • Dr. Schpritzer, I Presume?: Famous gall bladder surgeon, Dr. Schpritzer, goes missing and it is up to George and Ape to find him, but someone does not want him found..
  • The Fat Man: The priceless Maltese Duck has been stolen by the Fat Man, an obese man in a brown suit.
  • Double Cross Country Race: This is the annual cross country race from Muncie, Indiana to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Tom and that twisted evil genius and fussy eater, Baron Otto Matic, are racing for the Muncie to Pittsburgh trophy. At the start of the race, Baron Otto Matic gives Tom his trusty (and phony) road map. It frames Tom, Marigold, and Gertie by leading them in the least direct route through the boondocks of Arizona to Glendale, California. Poor Clutcher gets two conks on the head with a wrench. We do learn that the great thing about Pittsburgh is that it gets you out of Muncie. In the Ohio Desert, they barely escape the Cleveland Indians as Tom has driven his first no hitter. “There’s no such word as quit in racing, Marigold.” Apparently the word grit does exist in racing. Tom is able to win after the Baron gets stuck on the cloverleaf, then stuck in Friday afternoon traffic, and finally gets a ticket for driving through a red light, thanks to Gertie’s clever motorcycle cop disguise.
12'Rescue Is My Business / Merlin Brando / The Apple-less Indian 500'November 25, 1967
  • Rescue Is My Business: A greedy man becomes George's 'manager' and is encouraging him to make people pay for being rescued. Ape does not mind George collecting pay, but thinks the manager is exploiting him.
  • Merlin Brando: A hermit wizard named Merlin Brando lives on the Isle of Lucy with his magic mirror. His mirror flatters Merlin with praise that he is the greatest one of all, until the mirror sees Super Chicken on the television. Declaring there is not room in the world for 'two greatests', Merlin decides to eliminate Super Chicken.
  • The Apple-less Indian 500: Some Indians learned in the worst way that apples do not grow in the desert. Now their land is the set of a motorized wheel race.
13'Big Flop at the Big Top / Salvador Rag Dolly / Sneaky Sheik'December 2, 1967
  • Big Flop at the Big Top:
  • Salvador Rag Dolly: Crooked toymaker Salvador Rag Dolly uses large wind-up toys to infiltrate birthday parties and make off with household valuables. Super Chicken tries to stop the dastardly fiend, but soon comes face-to-face with Rag Dolly's latest creation: a wind-up toy Super Chicken.
  • Sneaky Sheik: Tom is racing in the desert but one of his rivals, the Sneaky Sheik, has sabotaged the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper.
14'Chi Chi Dog / Briggs Bad Wolf / Cheap Skate Board Derby'December 9, 1967
  • Chi Chi Dog: George is sent on a mission to bring back the rare and precious Chi Chi Dog and finds out just how rare they really are.
  • Briggs Bad Wolf: Stage actor Briggs Bad Wolf becomes so enamored in his role that he believes that he really is a villain, and he kidnaps the stage production's female lead Red Ridinghood.
  • Cheap Skate Board Derby: All the parts of the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper (now the Thunderbolt Grease-Slipper) are transistorized so Tom can enter a motorized skateboarding race.
15'A Man for All Hunting Seasons / The Muscle / The Badyear Blimp'December 16, 1967
  • A Man for All Hunting Seasons: Having hunted all possible kinds of animals, a hunter decides to hunt George.
  • The Muscle: A bodybuilding criminal called the Muscle forces Super Chicken to exercise himself to exhaustion. Super Chicken attempts to recover his strength by drinking double-strength Super Sauce, but the volatile concoction proves too powerful for him.
  • The Badyear Blimp: The Badyear Company sponsors a blimp race. Baron Otto Matic enters his lackey Clutcher in the race.
16'The Forest's Prime Evil / Dr. Gizmo / Swamp Buggy Race'December 23, 1967
  • The Forest's Prime Evil: George, Ursula and Ape are evicted from the jungle by the evil builder Jerry Mander to make room for a housing development. Hopefully, the powerful spirit Tee Nee Tee will come to their rescue.
  • Dr. Gizmo: Super Chicken and Fred have their work cut out for them as they try to recapture escaped gadget-inventing criminal mastermind Dr. Gizmo.
  • Swamp Buggy Race: Trying to take advantage of Tom Slick's manners as a gentleman, Baron Otto Matic disguises himself as a woman named Wilma May Boomdocker, while Clutcher disguises himself as an alligator.
17'Kings Back-to-Back / The Wild Hair / Mack Buster Trophy'December 30, 1967
  • Kings Back-to-Back: George must win re-election for King of the Jungle against Seymour Noodnik, the world's richest tycoon, who wants to dig up the jungle for the rare element whatchamacallium.
  • The Wild Hair: A mad scientist creates the world's first living toupee; however, it soon grows out of control.
    Note: Susan Swivelhips makes a cameo at the middle.
  • Mack Buster Trophy: Gertie mortgages her garage so Tom could afford to turn the Thunderbolt Grease-Slapper into an airplane and enter an airplane race.

George Of The Jungle 1997 Screencaps

DVD release[edit]

On February 12, 2008, Classic Media released a complete collection of the 1967 series, which included as a bonus feature the original pilot cartoons for both George of the Jungle and Super Chicken.

Reception[edit]

In 2002, TV Guide ranked George of the Jungle #30 on its '50 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time' list.[4]

Spin-offs[edit]

Comic book[edit]

Gold Key Comics published two issues of a comic book based on the series in 1969.

Films[edit]

In 1997, the segment was adapted into a live-action film, titled George of the Jungle. Brendan Fraser played the title role, with Leslie Mann as Ursula, John Cleese as the voice of Ape and Thomas Haden Church as the villain, Lyle Van De Groot. A direct-to-video sequel, George of the Jungle 2, starring Christopher Showerman as George, was released in 2003.

2007 series[edit]

Classic Media developed a new George of the JungleFlash animation series 40 years later in 2007. It now utilizes a co-production. The new version of the series is co-produced with Studio B Productions and Teletoon Canada (with other studios also involved), and currently airs on Teletoon in Canada and on Cartoon Network in the United States (starting with a Christmas-themed episode December 21, 2007). The series was scheduled to air on Nicktoons in the United Kingdom and Disney Channel Asia in Southeast Asia.[5][6][7] The series officially premiered on Cartoon Network on January 18. Both seasons are available digitally on iTunes.

The series initially ran 26 episodes, with two George stories per episode for a total of 52 stories. In 2016, 26 additional episodes were made, also with two George stories per episode.

Cultural references[edit]

'Weird Al' Yankovic did a cover version of the George of the Jungle theme on his 1985 album Dare to Be Stupid, the only straight cover Yankovic ever released on an album, and which later appeared on the soundtrack of the 1997 live-action film. Another cover of the theme by The Presidents of the United States of America also appeared on the soundtrack and was the title theme for the film.

George

The Rhino Records 1989 release Rerun Rock: Superstars Sing Television Themes included a cover version performed in the style of 'Whole Lotta Love' by Led Zeppelin and sung by Scott Shaw.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Box Art for George of the Jungle – The Complete Series'. Archived from the original on 2008-01-24. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
  2. ^This line was often misheard as 'Bella and Ursula,' causing puzzlement to viewers as to the non-appearance of 'Bella' in the series, as in this quotation from Animation World Update: Strike, Joe (January 18, 2008). ''George of the Jungle': Hey, Watch Out for that Revamp'. Animation World Network. Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2017. Still, the Riddle of Bella and Ursula remains unsolved. Anyone who's familiar with the original theme song has heard the lyric '.. while Bella and Ursula stay in step.' The accompanying sight of identical-twin jungle girls dragging off a dazed George has an entire generation of baby boomers still wondering, 'Who the heck is Bella?'. The line was meant to reference one of the conventions of the show, that George's massive stupidity led him to mistake Ursula for a 'fella' and address her as such.
  3. ^Tooki39 (5 February 2013). 'Tookie Tookie Bird - George Of The Jungle' – via YouTube.
  4. ^TV Guide Book of Lists. Running Press. 2007. p. 158. ISBN0-7624-3007-9.
  5. ^'WGBH & Studio B to Produce Martha Speaks Animated Series For Public TV'. Archived from the original on 2007-09-12. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
  6. ^'Seven toons likely to draw an animated response from international buyers'. Archived from the original on 2007-10-16. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
  7. ^'George returns to the jungle, with postmodernism in tow'. Archived from the original on 2008-02-25. Retrieved 2008-01-30.

External links[edit]

  • George of the Jungle on IMDb
  • George of the Jungle' at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on August 3, 2016.
1997
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