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・ Arthur Probyn Jones
・ Arthur Procter
・ Arthur Provis
・ Arthur Provost Three-Decker
・ Arthur Pryor
・ Arthur Prysock
・ Arthur Prysock and Count Basie
・ Arthur Pue Gorman
・ Arthur Pugh
・ Arthur Purdy Stout
・ Arthur Purey-Cust
・ Arthur Purves Phayre
・ Arthur Pusey
・ Arthur Putnam
・ Arthur Puttee
Arthur Q. Bryan
・ Arthur Quartley
・ Arthur Quentin de Gromard
・ Arthur Quiller-Couch
・ Arthur Quinlan
・ Arthur Quintal I
・ Arthur Quintal II
・ Arthur Qvist
・ Arthur Qwak
・ Arthur R. Albohn
・ Arthur R. Bowman Dam
・ Arthur R. Collins
・ Arthur R. Curtis
・ Arthur R. Edwards
・ Arthur R. Godar


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Arthur Q. Bryan : ウィキペディア英語版
Arthur Q. Bryan

Arthur Quirk Bryan (May 8, 1899 – November 18, 1959) was an American voice actor and radio personality, remembered best for his longtime recurring role as well-spoken, wisecracking Dr. Gamble on the radio comedy ''Fibber McGee and Molly'' and for creating the voice of the Warner Brothers cartoon character Elmer Fudd.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Arthur Q. Bryan Credits )
==Early career and ''Looney Tunes''==

Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Bryan sang in a number of churches in the New York City area and had plans to be a professional singer.〔 He sang tenor with the Seiberling Singers and the Jeddo Highlanders on NBC radio.
He grew up with a deep desire to go into show business, stumbling through the industry for several years before finding steady if unsatisfying work as a bit player and occasional film narrator in Hollywood. Bryan came to prominence in his late 1930s as the voice of Egghead and Elmer Fudd at Warner Brothers animation unit, headed by Leon Schlesinger.
Along with several characters, including Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, or Porky Pig, all voiced by Mel Blanc, one of Warner's early big stars was Bryan's Elmer Fudd. The slow-talking, slower-witted, enunciation-challenged Mr. Fudd is a game hunter whose Brooklynesque speech (courtesy of Bryan's own childhood upbringing in the borough) was exaggerated for memorable effect by his habitual substitution of ''W'' for the letters ''L'' and ''R'', an effect further immortalized by the tongue-in-cheek screen credits of the 1941 Bugs Bunny short ''Wabbit Twouble''.
When watching him perform, director Bob Clampett (or "Wobert Cwampett" in the screen credit) thought Bryan's girth added to the hilarity of his dialogue, and redesigned Fudd as a fat man patterned after Bryan's real-life appearance. After a few shorts, Clampett decided it was a mistake, and Fudd returned to his classical form. But fat or slimmed, Bryan's Fudd was so popular that the character's shorts were used to create and develop the character of Bugs Bunny, with the first official Bugs Bunny appearance coming in the Fudd cartoon, ''A Wild Hare''.
Bryan's name does not appear in Looney Tunes credits because of Mel Blanc's contract with Warner Brothers, which stipulated that only Blanc would receive on-screen credit for voice work. Despite this, Bryan and Blanc remained good friends throughout their careers with Warner Brothers.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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