Jack Mercer (Movie Wheels Present Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bear (1960))[1]
Frank Milano (Songs of Yogi Bear and his Pals LP (1961), A Hap-Hap-Happy Christmas from Yogi Bear (1961), How to Be a Better-Than-the Average Child Without Really Trying! (1962), Hey There, It's Yogi Bear! LP (1964))[2][3][4][5][6][7]
Ernest Newton (singing voice in Hey There, It's Yogi Bear!)
June Foray (Yogi Bear and Boo Boo Tell Stories of Little Red Riding Hood and Jack and the Beanstalk LP (1965))[8][7]
Boo-Boo Bear is a
Hanna-Barbera cartoon character on The Yogi Bear Show. Boo-Boo is an
anthropomorphicdwarf bear who wears a blue
bowtie. Boo-Boo is
Yogi Bear's constant companion (not his son, as sometimes believed), and often acts as his conscience.[16] He tries (usually unsuccessfully) to keep Yogi from doing things he should not do, and also to keep Yogi from getting into trouble with
Ranger Smith[17] – often saying, "Mr. Ranger isn't gonna like this, Yogi." It is not readily apparent whether Boo-Boo is a juvenile bear with a precocious intellect, or simply an adult bear who is short of stature.
History
Hanna-Barbera appearances
Boo-Boo first appeared along with Yogi in the "Yogi Bear" segment of The Huckleberry Hound Show in 1958; when Yogi was given his own series in 1961, Boo-Boo went with him.[18]
Since then, Boo-Boo has remained at Yogi's side through almost all of the Hanna-Barbera series, movies, and specials in which Yogi appeared, the only exceptions being Yogi's Space Race and Galaxy Goof-Ups, in which Boo-Boo's place was taken by a new character named Scare Bear. Boo-Boo's classic voice actor was
Don Messick, who also voiced Ranger Smith.[19]
Other appearances
Throughout the 1990s, Boo-Boo (voiced by
Jeff Bergman and
Billy West) usually appeared with Yogi in various
Cartoon Network commercials and bumpers.
In the Dexter's Laboratory episode "Chubby Cheese", an animatronic Boo-Boo can be seen on stage playing the trumpet with other
Hanna-Barbera characters.
Boo-Boo appears in the I Am Weasel episode "I Am My Lifetime", voiced by
Tom Kenny.
Spümcø has made a few
parody cartoons starring Boo-Boo and other characters from the original Yogi Bear series, starting with 1999's Boo Boo Runs Wild. In this half-hour tale, Boo-Boo's nice-guy persona is heavily satirized with him simply being repressed by all of Ranger Smith's rules and regulations, and finds him regressing into a primal state, complete with typical bear-like urges and mannerisms. He was voiced by
John Kricfalusi.
Boo-Boo appears with Yogi Bear in The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy episode "Here Thar Be Dwarves!", voiced by Tom Kenny. He later appears in the episode "Irwin Gets a Clue" as one of several Hanna-Barbera characters to be run into by Hoss Delgado's truck.
Boo-Boo appears in the Yogi Bear feature film, voiced by singer/actor
Justin Timberlake. In the film, he has a pet frog-mouthed turtle named Turtle and must help Yogi save Jellystone (and Turtle) from Mayor R. Brown.
Boo-Boo appears with Yogi Bear in the Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law episode "Death by Chocolate", voiced by Tom Kenny and in other episodes in
cameos.
Boo-Boo appears with Yogi Bear in the Robot Chicken episode "Ban on the Fun", voiced by
Victor Yerrid. In a segment that parodies Laff-A-Lympics in the style of the
Munich massacre, the Really Rottens shoot the Yogi Yahooeys to death as retribution for losing to them so many times. Boo-Boo later appeared in a movie trailer segment that parodies the
Rambo franchise from the episode "President Evil", voiced by Yerrid once again. He was later featured in the sketch "Power Forest Rangers" of the show's 100th episode "Fight Club Paradise", voiced by series creator
Seth Green.
On May 10, 2021, Boo-Boo and Yogi appeared in a commercial advertisement for
GEICO stealing food from a family cookout in "bear country".
Boo-Boo along with Yogi Bear appears in the 2021 film Space Jam: A New Legacy. They were among the Warner Bros. characters that were making their way to the site of the basketball game between the Tune Squad and the Goon Squad.
Portrayers
From the time of the character's debut until 1996, the character was voiced by
Don Messick who died in 1997.