
Without Toon Town's biggest celebrities as fan's, Chuck Jone's life story might never have been told. But with big names like Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and the Road Runner Beep Beeping him on with words of encouragement, Charles Martin Jones injected his own life situations into his Looney Tunes Stories.
Although his father was reportedly abusive, which was a theme in some of the cartoons, he kept the stories upbeat. At least this was true for the viewer, although I'm sure Sam the Coyote (Wyle E's cousin?) felt a darker mood present whenever sheepdog Ralph caught him snatching sheep.
‘If we can make ourselves laugh, we can make other people laugh. We weren’t trying to focus on a demographic. We weren’t being told we had to make something for 3- to 5-year-olds.'-Charles M. Jones 1912-2002
Chuck Jones: Memory of a Childhood,” is a documentary about the Warner Bros. animator who introduced the world to shorts such as “Duck Amuck,” “One Froggy Evening” and “What’s Opera, Doc?
Turner Classic Movies is airing this documentary, and if one is to truly talk of classics in Television and Movies, one has to include the classic works of director Chuck Jones.