Gossamer is a Looney Tunes character that appears once on Tiny Toon Adventures. He is a huge red hairy monster who wears black and white hi-tops.
Appearances on Tiny Toon Adventures[]
Gossamer is voiced by Mauriche LaMarche.
Gossamer appears appears in Tiny Toons' Night Ghoulery. He has a prominent role in a Frankenstein parody segment, where he is in the role of the monster. Elmyra, as Dr. Frankenmyra, and Dizzy, as Dizzygor, have collected nearly every part from the graveyard to construct "the world's most perfect pet," as all that is missing is the brain. They arrive back at her castle and place him on the operating table. When Dizzy checks for spare brains, they are completely out, so Elmyra gives him part of her brain. They bring him to life, ala Frankenstein-style, and Gossamer immediately grabs and squeezes Elmyra. He then rises and towers over them with a menacing appearance, but then he suddenly begins acting and speaking like Elmyra, even saying, "Eeww, look at the cutie-wutie." He grabs a hold of Elmyra and squeezes her tightly. He runs off with her as Dizzy chases them, trying to save her, but his attempts are futile as Gossamer clobbers him several times, causing him to slam against a machine, which electrifies him. Gossamer notices Dizzy's burnt body and tosses him onto the operating table to "fix" him, while tossing Elmyra into a soapy water-filled bucket to wash up. He sends Dizzy up into the sky and then goes to recover Elmyra from the bucket. He sets her down and lowers the table, which lands right on top of her. After he recovers her from underneath the table, Dizzy awakes and begins speaking and acting like Elmyra as well. She asks Gossamer, "What brain did you use?," as he lifts up the hair from his scalp, which shows stitches across his forehead, revealing that he had given Dizzy part of his brain. Elmyra yells from her castle, "I created a monster!"
Trivia[]
- In 1946 Classic Gossamer made his debut appearance in a short film called Hair-Raising Hare as an unnamed monster. In 1952 he was given the name Rudolph as he appeared in Water, Water Every Hare and made his last appearance when the late artist/producer/directer Chuck Jones officially changed his name to Gossamer in a 1980 cartoon short, Duck Dodgers and the Return of the 24½th Century.