Priscilla or miss prissy
A "Leghorn" is a kind of chicken thus the Name Foghorn Leghorn is a play upon the breed of "Leghorn" .
Foghorn Leghorn .
The character's name is Foghorn Leghorn, and he appeared in many Loony Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. His first cartoon was Walky Talky Hawky in 1946, which was nominated for an Oscar.
Perhaps you are thinking of Foghorn Leghorn, a fat and overbearing rooster who is generally having a feud with the local dog. His voice was an impersonation of a radio personality called Col. Cleghorn.
Partial filmography : Walky Talky Hawky (1946) Crowing Pains (1947) The Foghorn Leghorn (1948) Henhouse Henery (1949) The Leghorn Blows at Midnight (1950) A Fractured Leghorn (1950) Leghorn Swoggled (1951) Lovelorn Leghorn (1951) Sock-a-Doodle-Do (1952) The Egg-Cited Rooster (1952) Plop Goes the Weasel (1953) Of Rice and Hen (1953) Little Boy Boo (1954) Feather Dusted (1955) All Fowled Up (1955) Weasel Stop (1956) The High and the Flighty (1956) Raw! Raw! Rooster! (1956) Fox Terror (1957) Feather Bluster (1958) Weasel While You Work (1958) A Broken Leghorn (1959) Crockett-Doodle-Do (1960) The Dixie Fryer (1960) Strangled Eggs (1961) The Slick Chick (1962) Mother Was a Rooster (1962)
A "Leghorn" is a kind of chicken thus the Name Foghorn Leghorn is a play upon the breed of "Leghorn" .
Foghorn Leghorn .
Foghorn J. Leghorn's middle name is never mentioned .
"Miss Prissy" .
The looney tune rooster is Foghorn Leghorn... "i say boy" lol i raise leghorns as they lay very large white eggs, the only problem i have is they fly up over their very large fenced in area... oh well, they go back at night so all is well
Egghead Jr. , who was the son of Miss Prissy .
The character's name is Foghorn Leghorn, and he appeared in many Loony Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. His first cartoon was Walky Talky Hawky in 1946, which was nominated for an Oscar.
Perhaps you are thinking of Foghorn Leghorn, a fat and overbearing rooster who is generally having a feud with the local dog. His voice was an impersonation of a radio personality called Col. Cleghorn.
Monday October 21, 2002 Previous | Next Dear Yahoo!: What is the name of the little chicken with big glasses on the Foghorn Leghorn cartoons? DonaldWatertown, New York Dear Donald: Well, hog gravy and chitlins! Faster than you can sing "Camptown Races," we scrambled to gather some details on the yappy rooster's little sidekick. We made tracks and headed to the Looney Tunes Characters > Foghorn Leghorn category in the Yahoo! Directory. The little chicken with the big glasses is named Egghead Jr., and he was first introduced in the 1954 cartoon "Little Boy Boo." He's the son of Miss Prissy, a scrawny hen that, in previous cartoons, had been a spinster vying to win Foghorn Leghorn's love. The identity of Egghead's father is never revealed, although Foghorn is surely not his dad. Online summaries of "Little Boy Boo" note that Foghorn has to prove he'll be a good stepfather to Egghead Jr. in order to shack up with Miss Prissy in her warm house. Of course, Foghorn and Egghead don't make a great pair because the little tyke is a million times smarter than the goofy rooster. Egghead Jr. was featured in two more Foghorn Leghorn cartoons. According to Mr. Leghorn himself, "That boy, I say, that boy's just like a tattoo -- gets under your skin" (admittedly, Leghorn called every male "boy," so he could have been talking about anyone). In 1995's "Feather Dusted," Foghorn tries to turn Egghead away from books and towards sports and other clich�d boy's activities. In 1960's "Crockett-Doodle-Doo," Foghorn attempts more of the same by taking Junior camping. In both cartoons, Egghead gets the better of Foghorn and shows how his genius and book learning beats the elder animal's supposed street smarts. Cock-a-doodle do, I say, cock-a-doodle do!
The name says it all: Fog Horn Leg Horn Loud, obnoxious and never shuts up.
Leghorn
The baby chick's name is Egghead, Jr. The son of Miss Prissy debuted in the 1954 looney Tunes cartoon "Little Boy Boo", and he also appeared in the 1955 cartoon "Feather Dusted" and in the 1960 cartoon "Crockett-Doodle-Doo" .