Robert C. Bruce
Robert Cameron Bruce Jr. was an American voice actor and the son of Robert Cameron Bruce who was a cinematographer and documentary producer. He was the narrator for a number of Warner Bros. cartoons in the 1930s and 1940s. The Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series' had occasional entries which were driven not by one of their stable of stars such as Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck, but by individual short sketches, usually filled with sight gags and word-play. Later he was a writer and producer of industrial motion pictures based in Minnesota.
Career
Bruce spent two and a half years doing nine shows a week on WMCA and he later moved to Hollywood where he landed a job on KFWB, the Warner Bros. radio station, and was one of the four regulars on the show alongside Arthur Q. Bryan, Jack Lescoulie, and Alan Ladd. Bruce did four or five shows a week at $5 a show and got a job providing voice work for Leon Schlesinger's cartoon studio as the building was in the same place where Bruce performed his radio work. Bruce was used as a narrator in most of the cartoons that were directed by Tex Avery, Bob Clampett, and Chuck Jones. Besides providing narration, Bruce was also heard as several characters in a few cartoons including "Dangerous Dan McFoo" where he voiced a dog with a cigarette and a referee. Bruce would record his dialogue on an empty stage with the director, writer and engineer in a booth up near the ceiling explaining the cartoon to him and would record his lines afterwards. In addition for working for Warner Bros. Cartoons, Bruce also provided voice work for Walter Lantz's cartoon studio and for George Pal's Puppetoons series. From 1950 to 1951, Bruce was an actor on the TV show NBC Comics where he played characters on two of the shows "Kid Champion" and "Space Barton". Later, he had a company based in Minnesota known as Robert C. Bruce Productions where he produced and wrote industrial films and commercials. He was a former president of Minnesota Heart Association, was president of American Federation of Radio and Television Artists, and was a member of Pioneers of Radio. In the late sixties, he retired to a home in South Carolina.Animation voiceover work
- Dangerous Dan McFoo as Narrator/Referee/Dog with Cigarette
- Detouring America as Narrator
- Land of the Midnight Fun as Narrator
- Fresh Fish as Narrator
- The Film Fan as Coming Attractions Narrator
- Pilgrim Porky as Narrator
- The Bear's Tale as Narrator
- The Hardship of Miles Standish as Radio Announcer/Grandpa
- A Gander at Mother Goose as Narrator
- The Chewin' Bruin as Old Timer
- Ceiling Hero as Narrator
- Wacky Wildlife as Narrator
- Porky's Snooze Reel as Narrator
- Fair Today as Narrator
- Farm Frolics as Narrator
- Salt Water Daffy as Narrator
- Meet John Doughboy as Citizen Sugar Cane & Narrator
- We, the Animals Squeak! as Narrator
- Aviation Vacation as Narrator
- The Bug Parade as Narrator
- Who's Who in the Zoo as Narrator
- Crazy Cruise as Narrator
- Hobby Horse-Laffs as Narrator
- Fox Pop as Radio Announcer
- The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins as Narrator
- Fin'n Catty as Narrator
- What's Cookin' Doc? as Opening Narrator
- Russian Rhapsody as Radio Announcer
- Brother Brat as Narrator
- Buckaroo Bugs as Narrator and Villagers
- Plane Daffy as Narrator
- The Weakly Reporter as Narrator
- Wagon Heels as Narrator
- Nasty Quacks as Narrator
- Book Revue as Henry VIII
- Bacall to Arms as Narrator
- Of Thee I Sting as Narrator
- Fair and Worm-er as Narrator
- Hobo Bobo as Narrator and New Yorkers
- Crowing Pains as Barnyard Dawg
- Bugs Bunny Rides Again as Cowboy
- Swallow the Leader as Narrator
- Orange Blossoms for Violet as Narrator
- Punch Trunk as Narrator/Psychiatrist/Radio Announcer
- Feline Frame-Up as Filbert
- Gone Batty as Narrator
- The Hole Idea as Narrator
- Bugs' Bonnets as Opening Narrator
- Dog Tales as Narrator
- Bonanza Bunny as Narrator
List of [Private Snafu] shorts voiced by Robert C. Bruce
- Booby Traps
- Outpost
- Target Snafu
- A Few Quick Facts: Fear
- It's Murder, She Says...
- ''Private Snafu Presents Seaman Tarfu in the Navy''
Legacy
Bruce never got a screen credit, but his voice was recognizable, and he is mentioned in the commentary for the Looney Tunes Golden Collection.He introduces the cartoon What's Cookin' Doc? which begins with a filmed segment about Oscar night, and transitions into a Bugs Bunny cartoon.
In the last scene of the cartoon Punch Trunk, Bruce is "Mr. Pratt", a TV station announcer who introduces the audience to a distinguished science lecturer named "Dr. Robert Bruce Cameron"—a play on Bruce's own name.
In addition to the "Crazy Cruise" types of cartoons, he provides the voice of the narrator for the 1956 cartoon Bugs' Bonnets, an animated exposition on the "well-known psychological fact that people's behavior is strongly affected by the way they dress".