Known for Writing

Tedd Pierce was an American animated cartoon writer, animator and artist. Pierce spent the majority of his career as a writer for the Warner Bros. "Termite Terrace" animation studio, working alongside fellow luminaries such as Chuck Jones and Michael Maltese. Pierce also worked as a writer at Fleischer Studios from 1939 to 1941. Jones credited Pierce in his 1989 autobiography Chuck Amuck: The Life and Times of an Animated Cartoonist as being the inspiration for the character Pepé Le Pew, the haplessly romantic French skunk due to Pierce's self-proclamation that he was a ladies' man.
1939
as King Bombo (voice)
1946
as Announcer - First Scene (voice) (uncredited)
1936
as Jack Bunny (voice)
1943
as Thin Castaway (voice) (uncredited)
1937
as Narrator (voice)
1947
as Various (voice) (uncredited)
1946
as Quentin Quail (voice)
1938
as W. C. Fields (voice) (uncredited)
1938
as J. Megga Phone / W.C. Fields / Movie Star Guide (voice) (uncredited)
1943
as Soldiers (voice)
1937
as W.C. Fields (voice) (uncredited)
1936
as W.C. Fields (voice) (uncredited)
1942
as Various (voice)
1942
1942
as Tom Dover (voice) (uncredited)
1945
as Sailor
1938
as The Major (voice)
1943
as Nazi Crowd on Scrap Pile (voice)
1943
as Bertie (voice)
1943
as Various Rabbit Thugs (voice) (uncredited)