Warner Bros. created a short film called One Froggy Evening in 1955 that depicted a singing frog being put in a box and living 100 years.
This was the second of three animated shorts by Jones to receive this honor (the others are 1957's What's Opera, Doc? and 1955's One Froggy Evening).
The Saturday Evening Post | CBS Evening News | One Froggy Evening | Evening Shade | Manchester Evening News | Froggy the Gremlin | Evening Standard Award | Yorkshire Evening Post | Evening | Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening | London Evening Standard | Evening (film) | Whitehall Evening Post | South Wales Evening Post | Evening Post | Evening at Pops | Chicago Evening Post | Shanghai Evening Post & Mercury | Oldham Evening Chronicle | Newark Evening News | London Evening News | Evening Prayer (Anglican) | Evening Herald | Evening Chronicle | Charlie Strap, Froggy Ball and Their Friends | An Evening at L'Abbaye | Wrecking Everything – An Evening in Asbury Park | Where's My Wandering Boy This Evening? | The Evening News EP | Painted by Eilif Peterssen in 1892: An evening at the Norwegian Society (''En aften i Det norske Selskab''). The man with the raised glass in the foreground is Johan Herman Wessel |
He also worked on One Froggy Evening, the first appearance of future Warner Brothers mascot Michigan J. Frog.
Among the songs Franklyn is said to have composed with director Chuck Jones and writer Michael Maltese is The Michigan Rag for the 1955 cartoon One Froggy Evening, featuring Michigan J. Frog.
In the famous Warner Bros. cartoon One Froggy Evening (1955), the skyscraper into which Michigan J. Frog is entombed is named the "Tregoweth Brown Building".