June Foray
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| June Foray | |
|---|---|
| Born | September 18 1918 Springfield, Massachusetts |
| Years active | 1943 – present |
| Spouse(s) | Hobart Donavan (1954 – December 3 1976) (widowed; no children) |
June Foray (born September 18, 1918 [1]) is an American voice actress who has worked for most of the studios which produced animated films since the 1940s.
Foray was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, where her voice was first broadcast in a local radio drama when she was 12 years of age; by age 15, she was doing regular radio voice work. Two years later, she moved to Los Angeles, California, and soon became a popular voice actress on radio there, including on the national programs of Jimmy Durante and Danny Thomas. In the 1940s, she began film work as well, including a few appearances acting in live-action movies, but mostly doing voiceovers for animated cartoons.
For Walt Disney, she played Lucifer the Cat in the feature film Cinderella; she also did a variety of voices in Walter Lantz's Woody Woodpecker cartoons. For Warner Brothers Cartoons, she was Granny, owner of Tweety and Sylvester (whom she has played, on and off, since 1943), and, memorably, a series of witches, including Witch Hazel, for Chuck Jones; plus, she did the voice of Penelope Pussycat in Really Scent.
She voice acted on Smurfs as Jokey Smurf and Mother Nature, George of the Jungle, and on How the Grinch Stole Christmas as Cindy Lou Who, asking "Santa" why he's taking their tree. She was the voice of the original "Chatty Cathy" doll as well as the voice of the evil "Talking Tina" doll in The Twilight Zone episode, "Living Doll". She voiced the wife of the man getting dunked ("Don't tell him, Carlos!") in Pirates of the Caribbean.
Foray worked for Hanna-Barbera, including The Flintstones, Tom and Jerry, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, The Jetsons, and many others. She has done extensive voice acting for Stan Freberg's commercials, albums, and 1957 radio series, memorably as secretary to the werewolf advertising executive. Foray has also appeared in several Rankin/Bass TV specials in the 1960s and 1970s.
Most recognizable, though, is her work for Jay Ward: she played nearly every female on The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, including Natasha Fatale and Nell Fenwick, and (against sex) Rocket J. Squirrel (AKA Rocky Squirrel), as well as voicingMagica De Spell and Ma Beagle in the televised cartoon DuckTales. She even voiced Grammi Gummi on Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears.
Foray and Stan Freberg are among the few surviving voice artists from the Golden Age of theatrical cartoons. She remains active to this day, with roles in recent animated films, such as Mulan (as Grandmother Fa) and Looney Tunes: Back in Action. In October 2006 she portrayed Susan B. Anthony on three episodes of the podcast The Radio Adventures of Dr. Floyd.
Renowned animator/director Chuck Jones is reported to have said, "June Foray is not the female Mel Blanc, Mel Blanc was the male June Foray."[2]
Aged 89, Foray recently became a contributor to ASIFA-Hollywood's Animation Archive Project.
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[edit] Trivia
- Foray guest-starred only once on The Simpsons, in the Season 1 episode "Some Enchanted Evening" as the receptionist for the Rubber Baby Buggy Bumper Babysitting Service. This was a play on a famous Rocky & Bullwinkle gag years earlier in which none of the cartoon's characters, including narrator Bill Conrad, could pronounce "rubber baby buggy bumpers" unerringly.
- "Hiss and Make Up" was the 1943 cartoon that launched Foray's career as Granny. However, between 1950 and 1953, Foray was working for a different studio, Disney, and Bea Benaderet voiced Granny.
- Foray appeared on camera in a major role only once, in Sabaka (1954) as a high priestess of a fire cult. She also appeared on camera in an episode of Green Acres (which, coincidentally starred Bea Benaderet) as a Mexican telephone operator. She played a gag cameo in 1992's Boris & Natasha.
- In Season Three, Episode One ("The Thin White Line") of Family Guy, Foray reprised her role as Rocky in a visual gag with a single line.
- Foray is only 4'11" tall, which somewhat limited her stage and on-camera acting career.
[edit] Further reading
- Foray, June (2006). Perverse, Adverse and Rottenverse. Albany, New York: BearManor Media (ISBN 1-59393-020-8)
[edit] References
- ^ born in 1918 per Intelius
- ^ The Remarkable June Foray. Animation World Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-03-25.
[edit] External links
- June Foray at the Voice Chasers Database
- June Foray at the Internet Movie Database
- Interview with June Foray
- Intelius gives June Foray Donavan's age as 89 as of 12/31/2007fr:June Foray
fi:June Foray

