Don't Give Up the Sheep
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Don't Give Up the Sheep
Summary
Don't Give Up the Sheep is an animated short film[1]. It draws 89 Wikipedia views per month (animated_short_film category, ranking #176 of 1,467).[2]
Key Facts
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's instance of is recorded as animated short film[3].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep was directed by Chuck Jones[4].
- Michael Maltese wrote the screenplay for Don't Give Up the Sheep[5].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's composer is recorded as Carl W. Stalling[6].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep was produced by Eddie Selzer[7].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's collection is recorded as Museum of Modern Art[9].
- The original language of Don't Give Up the Sheep was English[10].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's country of origin is recorded as United States[11].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep was published on January 1, 1953[12].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's characters is recorded as Ralph Wolf and Sam Sheepdog[13].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's distributed by is recorded as Warner Bros. Entertainment[14].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's title is recorded as Don't Give Up the Sheep[15].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's duration is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q7727', 'amount': '+7'}[16].
- Don't Give Up the Sheep's fabrication method is recorded as traditional animation[17].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Don't Give Up the Sheep was produced by Eddie Selzer[7]. It was directed by Chuck Jones[4]. Michael Maltese wrote the screenplay for it[5].
Publication
Don't Give Up the Sheep was released on January 1, 1953[12]. The original language of it was English[10]. Its part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
Subject and Themes
Don't Give Up the Sheep's part of the series is recorded as Looney Tunes[8].
Why It Matters
Don't Give Up the Sheep draws 89 Wikipedia views per month (animated_short_film category, ranking #176 of 1,467).[2]