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Emma Webster, better known as Granny, is a recurring character and one of the few major characters who are human in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. In almost all her appearances she is the owner of Tweety, Sylvester, or Hector the Bulldog.

Design

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Proto-Granny in her first appearance, "Little Red Walking Hood" in 1937

Granny has gone through several design changes. The earliest version of Granny can be seen in the 1937 cartoon Little Red Walking Hood. Another version with black hair appeared in 1941's The Cagey Canary and another changed design is seen in 1943's Hiss and Make Up. She received several other makeovers from 1940 to 1960, as shown in cartoons such as Canary Row (1950) and A Pizza Tweety-Pie (1958). Granny is usually the owner of Tweety and also serves as his protector. Sylvester often finds a way to break into Granny's house for the sole purpose of finding a meal. In later cartoons, Granny appears to be the owner of both Tweety and Sylvester. Granny appears to be unmarried, or possibly a widow, since she lives by herself.

Appearances

In 1995, she stars in The Sylvester & Tweety Mysteries series as a detective who investigates mysteries with Tweety, Sylvester and Hector the Bulldog. She always carries a magnifying glass around her neck for research. Later, she made appearances in Space Jam, Tweety's High-Flying Adventure (where she was once again the caretaker of the yellow canary), and Looney Tunes: Back in Action.

Granny appeared in Webtoons, where she starred in a series of three shorts, Judge Granny. These shorts show another version of Granny as a Judge resolving cases of some Looney Tunes major characters.

She takes care of the Baby Looney Tunes where she has a nephew named Floyd Minton, who started to make appearances later in the series to take the babies on trips. She also has a sister called Auntie.

She appears in Looney Tunes: Back in Action as the neighbor of the hero, DJ Drake. Later, Mr. Chairman disguises himself as her.

An episode of Loonatics Unleashed contains a cameo of Granny herself, apparently still alive in the year 2772. Later, the show featured characters named Queen Grannicus (a possible descendant of Granny), the Royal Tweetums and Sylth Vester.

Grannyfights

Emma fighting against Colonel Frankenheimer in the World War II.

She makes a few appearances in New Looney Tunes.

Her design in Looney Tunes Cartoons is a fusion of her early-1950s design and late-1950s/early 60s design.

The Looney Tunes Show

Granny also appeared as a recurring character in The Looney Tunes Show as one of Bugs and Daffy's neighbors, voiced by June Foray. In Eligible Bachelors, it is revealed that during World War II, Granny was a WAC spy and along with Tweety, "a carrier pigeon", she stopped Nazi Colonel Frankenheimer from stealing the Eiffel Tower and various paintings from the Louvre. During the flashback, she appears as an attractive red-headed young woman in WAC uniform. In The Grand Old Duck of York, Granny teaches piano lessons too. Her students were Daffy and Winnie Yang.

Personality

Granny is generally good-natured and is extremely protective of her beloved canary Tweety. Granny's over-protectiveness becomes apparent whenever Tweety is threatened (usually by Sylvester, a hungry "puddytat" who prefers eating birds over cat food). Although having the appearance of a kindly old woman, Granny has demonstrated her cleverness.

Voice Actresses

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Granny was voiced by the late June Foray, the same person who voiced her in the original shorts from the 1950's to the 1960's. This makes Granny the only character to have the same voice actor for the original shorts and The Looney Tunes Show, as June Foray and Stan Freberg were the only two original voice-actors still alive at the time of production.

Notes

Gallery

References

Characters
Main Characters
Bugs Bunny (Prototype Bugs Bunny) ā€¢ Daffy Duck ā€¢ Elmer Fudd ā€¢ Foghorn Leghorn ā€¢ Lola Bunny (Honey Bunny) ā€¢ Marvin the Martian (K-9) ā€¢ PepĆ© Le Pew (Penelope Pussycat) ā€¢ Porky Pig ā€¢ Road Runner ā€¢ Speedy Gonzales ā€¢ Sylvester (Sylvester Jr.) ā€¢ Taz ā€¢ Tweety ā€¢ Wile E. Coyote ā€¢ Yosemite Sam
Recurring Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Bosko ā€¢ Honey ā€¢ Bruno ā€¢ Foxy ā€¢ Piggy ā€¢ Goopy Geer ā€¢ Buddy ā€¢ Cookie ā€¢ Beans ā€¢ Little Kitty ā€¢ Oliver Owl ā€¢ Ham and Ex ā€¢ Petunia Pig ā€¢ Piggy Hamhock ā€¢ Gabby Goat ā€¢ Egghead ā€¢ Big Bad Wolf ā€¢ Little Red Riding Hood ā€¢ Yoyo Dodo ā€¢ Mrs. Daffy Duck ā€¢ The Two Curious Puppies ā€¢ Sniffles ā€¢ Inki ā€¢ Minah Bird

1940s debuts

Willoughby ā€¢ Three Little Pigs ā€¢ Cecil Turtle ā€¢ Beaky Buzzard ā€¢ Mama Buzzard ā€¢ Leo the Lion ā€¢ Babbit and Catstello ā€¢ Conrad the Cat ā€¢ Hubie and Bertie ā€¢ Claude Cat ā€¢ A. Flea ā€¢ The Three Bears ā€¢ Schnooks ā€¢ Hector the Bulldog ā€¢ The Drunk Stork ā€¢ Gossamer ā€¢ Rocky ā€¢ Barnyard Dawg ā€¢ Henery Hawk ā€¢ Charlie Dog ā€¢ Bobo the Elephant ā€¢ Goofy Gophers ā€¢ The Dog ā€¢ Wellington ā€¢ Gruesome Gorilla ā€¢ Hippety Hopper ā€¢ The Crusher ā€¢ The Supreme Cat ā€¢ Playboy Penguin

1950s debuts

Melissa Duck ā€¢ Frisky Puppy ā€¢ Granny (Proto-Granny) ā€¢ Miss Prissy (Emily the Chicken) ā€¢ Frisky Puppy ā€¢ Sam Cat ā€¢ Nasty Canasta ā€¢ Marc Anthony and Pussyfoot ā€¢ Chester ā€¢ Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog ā€¢ Toro the Bull ā€¢ The Weasel ā€¢ Witch Hazel ā€¢ Tasmanian She-Devil ā€¢ Ralph Phillips ā€¢ Egghead Jr. ā€¢ Mugsy ā€¢ Jose and Manuel ā€¢ The Honey-Mousers (Ralph Crumden, Ned Morton, Alice Crumden, Trixie Morton) ā€¢ Instant Martians ā€¢ Slowpoke Rodriguez ā€¢ Pappy and Elvis ā€¢ Blacque Jacque Shellacque

1960s debuts

Cool Cat ā€¢ Colonel Rimfire ā€¢ Merlin the Magic Mouse ā€¢ Second Banana ā€¢ Bunny and Claude

One-Off Golden Age Characters
1930s debuts

Owl Jolson

1940s debuts

The Gremlin ā€¢ The Dover Boys (Tom Dover, Dick Dover, Larry Dover, Dora Standpipe, Dan Backslide) ā€¢ Mr. Meek ā€¢ Russian Dog ā€¢ Colonel Shuffle ā€¢ Giovanni Jones

1950s debuts

The Martin Brothers ā€¢ Pete Puma ā€¢ George and Benny ā€¢ Babyface Finster ā€¢ Michigan J. Frog ā€¢ Shropshire Slasher ā€¢ Mot ā€¢ Pablo and Fernando ā€¢ Charles M. Wolf ā€¢ SeƱor Vulturo ā€¢ Mighty Angelo

1960s debuts

Hugo the Abominable Snowman ā€¢ Nelly the Giraffe ā€¢ Count Bloodcount ā€¢ Spooky ā€¢ Rapid Rabbit and Quick Brown Fox

Post-Golden Age Characters
Tiny Toon Adventures

Buster Bunny ā€¢ Babs Bunny ā€¢ Plucky Duck ā€¢ Hamton J. Pig ā€¢ Fifi La Fume ā€¢ Shirley the Loon ā€¢ Sweetie Bird ā€¢ Elmyra Duff ā€¢ Montana Max

Taz-Mania

Jean ā€¢ Hugh ā€¢ Molly ā€¢ Jake ā€¢ Dog the Turtle ā€¢ Drew

Pinky and the Brain

Pinky ā€¢ The Brain

Baby Looney Tunes

Floyd Minton

Duck Dodgers

Dr. I.Q. Hi ā€¢ Captain Star Johnson ā€¢ Commander X2

Loonatics Unleashed

Ace Bunny ā€¢ Lexi Bunny ā€¢ Danger Duck ā€¢ Slam Tasmanian ā€¢ Tech E. Coyote ā€¢ Rev Runner

The Looney Tunes Show

Tina Russo

New Looney Tunes

Squeaks the Squirrel ā€¢ Bigfoot ā€¢ Barbarian ā€¢ Boyd ā€¢ Cal ā€¢ Carl the Grim Rabbit ā€¢ Claudette Dupri ā€¢ Dr. Clovenhoof ā€¢ Eagle Scout ā€¢ Elliot Sampson ā€¢ Horace the Horse ā€¢ Ivana ā€¢ Jack ā€¢ Thes ā€¢ Leslie P. Lilylegs ā€¢ Miss Cougar ā€¢ Pampreen Perdy and Paul Perdy ā€¢ Rhoda Roundhouse ā€¢ Shameless O'Scanty ā€¢ Sir Littlechin ā€¢ Slugsworthy the First ā€¢ Squint Eatswood ā€¢ Tad Tucker ā€¢ Trey Hugger ā€¢ Viktor ā€¢ Winter Stag

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