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Clarence Nash is a featured article, which means it has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Disney Wiki community. If you see a way this page can be updated or improved without compromising previous work, please feel free to contribute.

Clarence Charles "Ducky" Nash was an American voice actor, best known for providing the voice of Donald Duck for Walt Disney Productions. He was born in the rural community of Watonga, Oklahoma, and a street in that town is named in his honor.

Beginning his career[]

Nash made a name for himself in the late 1920s as an impressionist for KHJ, a Los Angeles radio station, on their show The Merrymakers. He was later employed by the Adohr Milk Company for publicity purposes. Dubbed "Whistling Clarence, the Adohr Bird Man", Nash rode the streets with a team of miniature horses and gave treats to the children. In 1932, Nash happened by the Disney Studio with his team of horses and decided to leave a copy of his Adohr publicity sheet with the receptionist. As it turned out, his name was recognized from a reprise appearance on The Merrymakers a few days before, and Walt Disney himself had been impressed by Nash's vocal skills. He was asked to go to the Disney Studio for an informal audition.

Donald Duck[]

Nash went through several of his voices, and Walt Disney happened by when Nash gave his impersonation of a family of ducks. Walt declared Nash perfect for the role of a talking duck in their upcoming animated short The Wise Little Hen. The duck, of course, was Donald Duck, whom Nash went on to voice for over 50 years.

Nash Arguing With Donald

Nash arguing with Donald in "A Day in the Life of Donald Duck".

Donald Duck went on to become one of the most famous cartoon characters in the world, and a great part of this was due to Nash's distinctive voice. It may well be one of the most recognizable character voices in history. The voice is distinctive both for its duck-like quality and the fact that it is often very difficult for anybody to understand, especially when Donald flew into a rage (which happened fairly often). To keep his voice consistent throughout the world, Nash dubbed Donald's voice into all the foreign languages that the Disney shorts were translated into (with the aid of the phonetic alphabet), meaning that Donald retained his same level of incoherency all across the globe. Mad magazine, in its 1950s comic-strip style satire of Disney characters ("Mickey Rodent!" in issue #19), featured a "translation" of Donald Duck's "quacky, incomprehensible" voice.[1]

Nash's last feature films as the voice of Donald was in Mickey's Christmas Carol in 1983 and in Donald Duck's 50th Birthday in 1984, although he continued to provide Donald's voice for commercials, promos, and other miscellaneous material until his death in 1985.

Other characters[]

In addition to voicing Donald, Nash also voiced Daisy Duck (in her earliest appearances, when she was a little more than a female version of Donald) as well as Donald's nephew triplets, Huey, Dewey, and Louie. He also voiced the Roughhouse Statue, Figaro, and the Donkeys in Pinocchio, Pete, Jr. in the short Bellboy Donald, a bullfrog in Bambi, and vocal sounds for some of the dogs in One Hundred and One Dalmatians. Additionally, he provided the meows of Figaro in a handful of shorts and briefly voiced Jiminy Cricket after the death of Cliff Edwards in 1971.[2][3] He also voiced Mickey Mouse in the 1934 short, The Dognapper, where Walt was traveling around Europe at the time and was unavailable to record his lines for Mickey as a result.

Later years[]

When Disney shut down their shorts department in 1962, Nash continued to voice Donald in various projects over the next two decades.

Nash's performance as Donald in Mickey's Christmas Carol made Donald the only character in that film to be voiced by his original voice actor.

In the late 1970s, Nash was known for often taking walks in the neighborhood around Fremont Elementary School in Glendale, California, entertaining children with his Donald Duck voice.

Despite lending his voice to hundreds of films, shorts, and television programs, Nash made few appearances on camera, such as when he was a contestant in a 1954 episode of What's My Line?, as a guest in a 1976 episode of The Mike Douglas Show, and the 1984 TV special Donald Duck's 50th Birthday.

In 1985, Nash was interviewed for The Donald Duck Story on the VHS Donald's Bee Pictures and told a story of how he copied the sound of his pet goats at his farm before getting hired as the voice of Donald. He explained the rivals Donald Duck had, including Spike the Bee who foiled and stung him, which would be Nash's last Disney interview before his passing.

Death[]

Donald mourning the death of Clarence Nash

Donald mourns the death of Nash in this promotional picture (as seen on the Cartoon Classics Limited Gold Edition II: An Officer and a Duck VHS).

Clarence Nash died of leukemia in 1985 at the age of 80 and was interred in the San Fernando Mission Cemetery in Mission Hills, Los Angeles, California. The tombstone of the grave he now shares with his wife, Margaret Nash (who died in 1993) depicts a carving of Donald and Daisy Duck holding hands.

Successors[]

After Nash's death, Donald's voice was taken up by Disney animator Tony Anselmo, who was trained by Nash personally, probably because Nash knew he would need a successor one day. Anselmo also intends to follow Nash's example by choosing a successor and training this person himself in the future.[4]

Later, characters whose voices owe considerable credit to Nash's duck voice have been voiced by actors, such as Jimmy Weldon, Frank Welker, Luba Goy, and Red Coffey. The most prominent of these is Weldon's Yakky Doodle for Hanna-Barbera and Coffey's Little Quacker for Tom and Jerry, although these characters' voices are sometimes mistakenly attributed to Nash because they sound similar to Donald Duck's. Anselmo was also among the many voice-over artists to have also voiced Huey, Dewey, and Louie over the years.

Roles[]

Gallery[]

References[]

External links[]

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