What-a-Mess

He's an Afghan Hound, but it's not apparent through all the mess

What-a-Mess is a series of children's books that was eventually adapted into an Animated Series by DiC Entertainment. Both series focus on the eponymous Afghan Hound, What-a-Mess, and his interactions with humans and other pets. The show, in particular, had a pretty catchy opening song.

The late Frank Muir, author of the original books, was an English comedy writer also known for his work on BBC radio.

Tropes used in What-a-Mess include:
  • Animal Talk: All the animal characters can understand each other.
  • Author Avatar: The elderly English Sheepdog, Frank, is voiced by creator Frank Muir himself.
  • Cats Are Mean: Felicia the cat is self-centered and occasionally malicious.
  • Cross-Dressing Voices: Averted with What-A-Mess, as he was voiced by (at the time) child voice actor Ryan O'Donohue.
  • The Danza: Frank Muir as Frank the Sheepdog.
  • The Faceless: An odd trope in this kind of series. The faces of human characters are always deliberately obscured by things like camera angles or objects and no human faces are ever seen.
  • Five-Man Band:
  • He Cleans Up Nicely: In a subversion version of this trope, the male What-a-Mess is bathed and groomed on rare occasions and actually looks like a pedigree Afghan Hound rather than his usual scruffy self.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: Some of the voice actors who worked on What-a-Mess include Jim Cummings, Michael Bell and Charlie Adler.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Trash, who acts like a street-smart tough guy most of the time, but can be quite nice when push comes to shove.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: What-a-Mess's real name is actually Prince Amir of Kinjan, but in practice he is rarely called this. Even his mother calls him What-a-Mess most of the time.
  • Tertiary Sexual Characteristics: Inverted. Well-groomed Afghan Hounds naturally have long hair on their heads, and long hair that tends to make them look like they're wearing fancy clothes. Despite all that, What-a-Mess is a male dog. Played straight with the cat, Felicia. She has long eyelashes and a bow.
  • Truth in Television: Afghan Hounds have notoriously high-maintenance coats. Any owner of an Afghan Hound who grooms their dog anything less than constantly will end up with a dog looking something like What-a-Mess. Frank Muir owned several Afghan Hounds when he wrote the series, which was probably an influence.
  • Unreliable Narrator: The narrator often says the exact opposite of what is really going on.
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