Chip is also depicted as having smooth hair on top of his head while Dale's tends to be ruffled. Originally the two had a very similar appearance, but as a way to tell them apart, some differences were introduced: Chip has a small black nose and two centered protruding teeth, whereas Dale has a large dark red nose and a prominent gap between his buckteeth. Dale, by contrast, is more laid-back, dim-witted, and impulsive, and has a very strong sense of humor. Of the two, Chip is portrayed as being safe, focused, and having a mind for logical scheming. Immediately I saw the advantage of that and took the suggestion. Bill Peet came up with the suggestion of making one of them a little goofball to give them two different personalities. So we decided to put words into their mouths but speed 'em up so you could just barely understand them… We gave them both the same personality-but something was missing. He used them with Pluto… I wanted to use them with the Duck but with a little more personality in them. I believe Gerry Geronimi did a picture with two impish little chipmunks that just squeaked and chattered with a speeded-up soundtrack but no words. Three years later, director Jack Hannah decided to use them as co-stars in Donald Duck shorts. In the short, they fight with Pluto about whether they can store their nuts in a military base cannon. The characters were first drawn by Bill Justice and introduced in the 1943 Pluto short Private Pluto, directed by Clyde Geronimi. Chip and Dale (also spelled Chip 'n' Dale) are a cartoon duo of anthropomorphic chipmunks created in 1943 by The Walt Disney Company.
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