About: Toodles Galore   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/xoykDFxJFBgF02W_HRnEzw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Toodles Galore
rdfs:comment
  • Toodles is first of many girl kitty cats that Tom falls for over the course of Tom and Jerry. She does not speak and rarely moves about. She is voiced by Meg Ryan in Tom and Jerry Tales and She is also voiced by Jodi Benson in the Tom and Jerry Video Game's
  • Toodles Galore is an attractive white female cat, and is supposedly Tom's usual love interest, although Tom is a reputed playboy, and had other love interests before and after Toodles. Toodles is the only love interest who appeared more than twice, and is probably the most favored. During the classic era, Tom had to compete twice against Butch and even once against Spike/Killer for Toodles' affection, and he lost them all. In one episode Casanova Cat, Toodles fell in love with Jerry. However, in her final short Love Me, Love My Mouse, she remained with Tom. Toodles is one of the most anthropomorphic animals in the series, with the only cat features being her tail, nose and ears.
  • Toodles Galore is a fictional character in the Tom and Jerry series. She is white colored and usually wears a neck ribbon and is known to be a very beautiful cat. Her first appearance was in a 1946 animated short "Springtime for Thomas". Toodles is first of many girl cats that Tom falls for over the course of the series. She does not speak and rarely moves about. Toodles is also the love interest of Butch, and sometimes he and Tom both fight over her.
  • Toodles Galore is a Tom and Jerry character, who first appeared in the 1946 short, Springtime for Thomas. Toodles is an attractive female, white cat, and is supposedly Tom's usual love interest. Although Tom is a reputed playboy, and had other love interests before and after Toodles. Toodles is the only love interest who appeared more than thrice, and is probably the most favored. During the classic era, Tom had to compete twice against Butch and even once against Spike/Killer for Toodles' affection, and he lost them all. Toodles is one of the most anthropomorphic animals in the series, with the only cat features being her tail, nose and ears.
dcterms:subject
Row 9 info
  • Green
  • Deep Blue
  • Sky Blue
Row 8 info
  • Light Yellow
  • Paper White
Row 4 info
  • "Springtime for Thomas"
Row 7 title
  • Friends/Relatives
Row 1 info
  • Toodles Galore
Row 8 title
  • Fur Color
Row 4 title
  • First Appearance
Row 9 title
  • Eye Color
Row 2 info
  • Toots
Row 6 info
  • Female
Row 1 title
  • Name
Row 5 info
  • Cat
Row 2 title
  • Nicknames
Row 6 title
  • Gender
Row 5 title
  • Species
Row 3 info
Row 3 title
  • Voice
Row 7 info
dbkwik:annex/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:tomandjerry...iPageUsesTemplate
Colour
  • purple
Box Title
  • Toodles Galore
Portrayer
  • see below
Enemy
  • Tom Cat and Butch
Last
  • "Love Me, Love My Mouse"
Series
Name
  • Toodles Galore
First
  • "Springtime for Thomas"
colour text
  • white
Species
Image size
  • 300(xsd:integer)
Episode
  • 4(xsd:integer)
  • 5(xsd:integer)
Image File
  • Toodles Kitty.png
Gender
Creator
  • William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
abstract
  • Toodles is first of many girl kitty cats that Tom falls for over the course of Tom and Jerry. She does not speak and rarely moves about. She is voiced by Meg Ryan in Tom and Jerry Tales and She is also voiced by Jodi Benson in the Tom and Jerry Video Game's
  • Toodles Galore is an attractive white female cat, and is supposedly Tom's usual love interest, although Tom is a reputed playboy, and had other love interests before and after Toodles. Toodles is the only love interest who appeared more than twice, and is probably the most favored. During the classic era, Tom had to compete twice against Butch and even once against Spike/Killer for Toodles' affection, and he lost them all. In one episode Casanova Cat, Toodles fell in love with Jerry. However, in her final short Love Me, Love My Mouse, she remained with Tom. Toodles is one of the most anthropomorphic animals in the series, with the only cat features being her tail, nose and ears.
  • Toodles Galore is a Tom and Jerry character, who first appeared in the 1946 short, Springtime for Thomas. Toodles is an attractive female, white cat, and is supposedly Tom's usual love interest. Although Tom is a reputed playboy, and had other love interests before and after Toodles. Toodles is the only love interest who appeared more than thrice, and is probably the most favored. During the classic era, Tom had to compete twice against Butch and even once against Spike/Killer for Toodles' affection, and he lost them all. Toodles is one of the most anthropomorphic animals in the series, with the only cat features being her tail, nose and ears. Toodles is apparently open to any form of romantic relationships, even with non-cats, as shown in the end of Casanova Cat where Jerry got to make out with Toodles as they left Tom and Butch behind, and Solid Serenade, where she is clearly interested in a relationship with Spike the bulldog, who tries to woo her by playing with Tom's tail on a double bass. It is said that Lana Turner's character Bunny Smith, from the film Week-End at the Waldorf, was the inspiration for Toodles' character and personality.
  • Toodles Galore is a fictional character in the Tom and Jerry series. She is white colored and usually wears a neck ribbon and is known to be a very beautiful cat. Her first appearance was in a 1946 animated short "Springtime for Thomas". Toodles is first of many girl cats that Tom falls for over the course of the series. She does not speak and rarely moves about. Toodles is also the love interest of Butch, and sometimes he and Tom both fight over her.
Alternative Linked Data Views: ODE     Raw Data in: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Standard Edition
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2012 OpenLink Software