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Arthur Quirk Bryan May 8, — November 18, was a United States comedian and voice actor, remembered best for his longtime recurring role as well-spoken, wisecracking Dr. His grave is located at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery. Biography Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Bryan grew up with a deep desire to go into show business, stumbling through the industry for several years before finding steady if unsatisfying work as a bit player and occasional film narrator in Hollywood.

But it began to pay off when Bryan came to prominence in his late 30s as the voice of Egghead and Elmer Fudd at Warner Brothers animation unit, headed by Leon Schlesinger. The slow-talking, slower-witted, enunciation-challenged Mr. Fudd is a game hunter whose Brooklynesque speech courtesy of Bryan's own childhood upbringing in the borough was exaggerated for memorable effect by his habitual substitution of W for the letters L and R, an effect further immortalised by the tongue-in-cheek screen credits of the Bugs Bunny short, Wabbit Twouble.

When watching him perform, director Bob Clampett or "Wobert Cwampett" in the screen credit thought Bryan's girth added to the hilarity of his dialogue, and redesigned Fudd as a fat man. After a few shorts, Clampett decided it was a mistake, and Fudd returned to his classical form. But fat or slimmed, Bryan's Fudd was so popular, that the character's shorts were used to create and develop the character of Bugs Bunny, with the first "official" Bugs Bunny appearance coming in the Fudd cartoon, A Wild Hare Bryan's work in animation was not left unnoticed by radio producers.

Although his first forays into that medium were inevitably accompanied by instructions that he use the Fudd voice, Bryan soon came to the attention of Don Quinn and Phil Leslie, the production and writing team responsible for Fibber McGee and Molly and their supporting characters, two of whom spun off into their own radio hits, The Great Gildersleeve and Beulah.

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His work on the series in Bryan's natural voice so impressed the pair that Bryan was added to the cast of their main show, Fibber McGee and Molly, in On Fibber, Bryan found himself in the unusual position of being smarter than, more educated than, and generally superior to his foil, titular braggart McGee. Playing Doc Gamble, Bryan was a polar opposite of the Fudd characterGamble was well-spoken, even-tempered, and usually got the best of McGee, which Elmer could never do with Bugs.

Bryan never earned a big break in film in spite of his vocal success; his film work remained largely uncredited cameos, usually employing the Fudd persona, or minor supporting roles in B-movies.