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ootloose and collar-free, Tramp lives every day as if it were his last. Although he's just one step ahead of the
dogcatcher, Tramp is too busy playing with danger to be scared of it. He's that rare breed of dog who wants no master but himself. Living
by his wits, he's learned that if you have a little charm and a lot of finesse, the world can be your dinner bowl. As Peg, the faded star
of the Dog and Pony Follies, tells Lady in the pound, "You won't believe this, deary, but no matter how tight a jam he's in, that Tramp
always finds some way out." The irresistible rogue does have one weakness: the ladies. As the pound dogs put it: "He has an eye for a
well-turned paw, he has ... Yah, but he never takes 'em serious ... Ah, but some day he is meeting someone different, some delicate, fragile
creature who is giving him a wish to shelter and protect ... Like Miss Park Avenue here, aye matey? ... Could be, but when he does ...
under the spell of true love ... the poor chump grows careless ... and it's curtains for Tramp." Indeed, the Tramp has already fallen in
love with the winsome Lady, and will risk life and limb more than once for her. The question is, how long will his luck hold out before
his cronies' prediction comes true?
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Tramp's character is adapted from Ward Greene's story "Happy Dan, the Whistling Dog." Before World War II, Disney
story man Joe Grant had been working on a tale about a pampered cocker spaniel. Later Joe's idea was married with the character of a
dog resembling the carefree Happy Dan and the story line for "Lady and the Tramp" was born.
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During a period of disagreement among the animators as to what Tramp should look like, one
night storyman Ed Penner saw a stray dog disappearing into the studio bushes. Although he thought he'd found
the perfect model, no one could find the dog for days until he was seen at the city pound, where, just as in
the story, he was bailed out only hours away from the gas chamber. The animators triumphantly returned to the
studio only to discover that he was a she. But nobody cared -- she was Tramp and they loved her. After the film,
she lived out the rest of her days playing on the backstage Pony Farm at Disneyland®.
Film: "Lady and the Tramp" (1955)
Voice Artist: Larry Roberts
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