Scooby-Doo creator dies in L A
Scooby-Doo creator dies in L A
Iwao Takamoto, the animator who created Scooby-Doo died on Monday after suffering a massive coronary.

Los Anjeles: Iwao Takamoto, the animator who designed the cartoon canine Scooby-Doo as well as characters on such shows including The Flintstones and The Jetsons, died on Monday after suffering a massive coronary, a spokesman said. He was 81-year-old.

Takamoto died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where he was being treated for respiratory problems, said Gary Miereanu, a spokesman for Warner Bros. Animation.

Takamoto designed Scooby-Doo, his equally famished and cowardly master Shaggy, and their pals Velma, Daphne and Fred in the late 1960s while working at the Hanna-Barbera animation studio.

The Great Dane's name was inspired by an improvised line at the end of Frank Sinatra's Strangers in the Night.

He also designed the snickering dog Muttley, who was featured in a number of productions, and Astro, the family dog on The Jetsons, and for The Flintstones, he created the Great Gazoo, a green alien.

Takamoto's death comes exactly three weeks after that of Hanna-Barbera co-founder Joseph Barbera, his business partner William Hanna died in 2001.

Takamoto, who was born in Los Angeles in 1925, spent part of World War Two in an internment camp, where he received some informal illustration training from fellow Japanese-Americans.

After the war he got a job as an apprentice at Disney Studios, where he worked on such features including Cinderella and Peter Pan. In 1961, he moved to Hanna-Barbera, now a unit of Time Warner Inc.

At the time of his death, Takamoto was a vice president at Warner Bros Animation.

He storyboarded the 2005 Tom and Jerry animation short The Karateguard, and helped design many of the characters in the current series Krypto the Superdog

Takamoto is survived by his wife, Barbara, and two children.

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