Ben Hardaway
An image from Wild and Woody!, one of the productions that also features Ben Hardaway.
Ben Hardaway

Ben Hardaway

May 21, 1895 — Belton, Missouri, USA

Joseph Benson 'Ben' (a.k.a. 'Bugs') Hardaway (May 21, 1895 – February 5, 1957) was an American storyboard artist, animator, voice actor, gagman, writer and director for several American animation studios during The Golden Age of Hollywood animation.

While at the Leon Schlesinger / Warner Bros. studio during the late 1930s, Hardaway, in 1938, co-directed Porky's Hare Hunt, the first film to feature a rabbit. When this unnamed, embryonic rabbit was given a new model sheet for a later short, since, according to Chuck Jones, Hardaway "didn't draw it very well", designer Charlie Thorson inadvertently offered a permanent name by titling the model sheet "Bugs' Bunny" since it was meant for Hardaway's unit. By the time the rabbit was redesigned and refined for the film A Wild Hare, the name was already being used in relation to the character in studio publicity materials.

In 1940, Hardaway joined the staff of Walter Lantz Productions, where he helped Walter Lantz in creating the studio's most famous character, Woody Woodpecker. Hardaway wrote or co-wrote most of the stories for the 1940–1950 Woody Woodpecker shorts, as well as supplying Woody's voice between 1944 and 1949.

[biography (excerpted) from Wikipedia]

The Barber of Seville

The Barber of Seville

1944

Woody Woodpecker

Woody Woodpecker

1941

Daffy Duck & Egghead

Daffy Duck & Egghead

1938

Jack Frost

Jack Frost

1934

Porky's Hare Hunt

Porky's Hare Hunt

1938

Knock Knock

Knock Knock

1940

Wild and Woody!

Wild and Woody!

1948

Scrub Me Mama with a Boogie Beat

Scrub Me Mama with a Boogie Beat

1941