Or from a very old American cartoon character Willoughby the dog..."Which way did he go, George? Which way did he go?" I will post what a "search" got me Michel. Also could be a shot out of an old Charlie Chaplin silent film. Charlie would walk with his feet askew like your image.
GREAT!
Dan
"The character Willoughby, a dim-witted dog, repeatedly asks the question, "Which way did he go, George?" in the 1940 Merrie Melodies cartoon "Of Fox and Hounds". Willoughby asks this to George, the sly fox who is the real quarry, never realizing that his "friend" George is the fox he's searching for. The line became a famous catchphrase.
Cartoon: Of Fox and Hounds (1940)
Character: Willoughby the Hound
Context: Willoughby is a loyal but clueless dog trying to catch a fox. He asks George the Fox, who is actually the fox he is looking for, for directions, never suspecting George is the fox.
Catchphrase: "Which way did he go, George? Which way did he go?"
Danpbphoto wrote:
Or from a very old American cartoon character Willoughby the dog..."Which way did he go, George? Which way did he go?" I will post what a "search" got me Michel. Also could be a shot out of an old Charlie Chaplin silent film. Charlie would walk with his feet askew like your image.
GREAT!
Dan
"The character Willoughby, a dim-witted dog, repeatedly asks the question, "Which way did he go, George?" in the 1940 Merrie Melodies cartoon "Of Fox and Hounds". Willoughby asks this to George, the sly fox who is the real quarry, never realizing that his "friend" George is the fox he's searching for. The line became a famous catchphrase.
Cartoon: Of Fox and Hounds (1940)
Character: Willoughby the Hound
Context: Willoughby is a loyal but clueless dog trying to catch a fox. He asks George the Fox, who is actually the fox he is looking for, for directions, never suspecting George is the fox.
Catchphrase: "Which way did he go, George? Which way did he go?"
Too bad I have never seen the characters from cartoons you've mentioned Dan.Only Charlie Chaplin is the one I know.He was wearing similar kind of too big shoes that were always 180 degrees from each other when he was standing.
Peire wrote:
Too bad I have never seen the characters from cartoons you've mentioned Dan.Only Charlie Chaplin is the one I know.He was wearing similar kind of too big shoes that were always 180 degrees from each other when he was standing.
The cartoon is a vague memory Peire! VERY vague! Days of the old circular b&w tv tube.
Yes Charlie Chaplin was always walking that way!
Thanks!
Dan