Bill Kopp

Personal Info

Known For Director

Gender Male

Birthday 1962-04-17 (62 years old)

Place of Birth Rockford, Illinois

Bill Kopp

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Bill Kopp (born in Rockford, Illinois on April 17, 1962) is an American animator and voice actor who animated the Whammy on the 1980s game show Press Your Luck, and voiced the title character on Nelvana's Eek! The Cat and Kutter in The Terrible Thunderlizards, which he created with Savage Steve Holland. He also voices Tom in the Tom and Jerry movies Tom and Jerry: Blast Off to Mars and Tom and Jerry: The Fast and the Furry. He was also an animator for The Simpsons Tracey Ullman Shorts, but left after the first season. He also created The Shnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show and Mad Jack the Pirate, worked as an executive producer and writer for Toonsylvania, produced and directed the current Tom and Jerry cartoons, wrote Hare and Loathing in Las Vegas and The Incredible Crash Dummies and did the story on two Roger Rabbit Shorts; Tummy Trouble and Roller Coaster Rabbit. Was the writer/director/co-producer on HBO's Tales from the Crypt: The Third Pig. In 1984, he won an Academy Award-Student Film/Animation for Mr. Gloom and in 1985, he won his second Academy Award for Observational Hazard. He studied animation at the California Institute of the Arts. He is also the director of most of The Twisted Whiskers Show episodes. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bill Kopp, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Known For

Director

2011
Dan Vs.

as Director

1989
1984
1983
Mr. Gloom

as Director

Actor

2019
Amphibia

as Marnie (voice)

2005
2005
Tom and Jerry Blast Off to Mars!

as Tom / Press Guy #1 (voice)

1995
1995
1995
What a Cartoon!

as Yuckie Duck (voice)

1992
Eek! The Cat

as Eek / Pierre / Day Z. Kutter (voice)

Visual Effects

1989
Tales from the Crypt

as Character Designer

1986
One Crazy Summer

as Animation Supervisor

Art

1999
How to Haunt a House

as Storyboard Artist

Crew

1998