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  1. Bill Melendez. Date Of Birth: Nov 15, 1916. Birth Place: Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico. Date Of Death: Sep 2, 2008. Trending: 2,311th This Week. Bill Melendez is a voice actor known for voicing Snoopy, Woodstock, and Spike. Take a visual walk through their career and see 101 images of the characters they've voiced. Trivia & Fun Facts:

  2. Sep 2, 2008 · Bill Melendez, animator for such classic Peanuts television specials as A Charlie Brown Christmas and It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, died Tuesday at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California. The eight-time Emmy winner was 91. SHOW MORE.

  3. Additional Schulz creations included animations of Cathy, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Babar, and Garfield on the Town. Melendez died at age 91 in September 2008, eight and a half years after Schulz. He was survived by his son, Steven, who ran Bill Melendez Productions after his death.

  4. Snoopy Come Home is a 1972 American animated musical comedy-drama film directed by Bill Melendez and written by Charles M. Schulz based on the Peanuts comic strip. [2] The film marks the on-screen debut of Woodstock, who had first appeared in the strip in 1967. The main story was based on a storyline from August 1968. [3]

  5. Bill Melendez, best known for the beloved "Peanuts" TV specials, based on Charles M. Schulz's comic strip, spent 68 of his 91 years working in the field of animation. Born in Hermosillo, Mexico ...

  6. Sep 2, 2008 · Bill Melendez, best known for the beloved "Peanuts" TV specials, based on Charles M. Schulz's comic strip, spent 68 of his 91 years working in the field of animation. Born in Hermosillo, Mexico, Melendez was educated in the United States and began his film career as an assistant animator on the early 1940s Disney classics "Pinocchio," "Fantasia," "Dumbo," and "Bambi."

  7. Sep 3, 2008 · Donations may be made in Bill Melendez's name to Children's Hospital Los Angeles. Bill Melendez talks with the Archive of American Television. In June 2001, the Archive of American Television interviewed esteemed animator Bill Melendez. He spoke of his early years with Walt Disney Studios, working on several key animation features of the 1940s.