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  1. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse

    Mickey Mouse Clubhouse

    TV-Y2006 · Children · 5 seasons

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  3. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse (TV Series 2006–2016) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. May 5, 2006 · Main Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Cast. Mickey Mouse. voiced by Wayne Allwine and 9 others. Minnie Mouse. voiced by Russi Taylor and 2 others. Donald Duck. voiced by Tony Anselmo and 5 others. Daisy Duck. voiced by Tress MacNeille and 8 others.

  5. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse: Created by Bobs Gannaway. With Tony Anselmo, Tress MacNeille, Bill Farmer, Russi Taylor. Mickey and his friends Minnie, Donald, Pluto, Daisy, Goofy, Pete, Clarabelle and more go on fun and educational adventures.

    • (4.9K)
    • 2006-02-18
    • Animation, Adventure, Comedy
    • 30
    • Overview
    • Background
    • History
    • Film appearances
    • Television appearances
    • Printed media
    • Video games
    • Disney Parks
    • Filmography

    “Just wait! No one—and I do mean no one—messes with the mighty Pete!”

    ―Pete

    Pete (also known as Peg-Leg Pete) is a villainous anthropomorphic cat created by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. He is the arch-nemesis of Mickey Mouse, normally characterized as a cigar-smoking thug with a ruthless and tyrannical personality. Pete's most frequent scheme involves kidnapping Minnie Mouse for lecherous purposes, but his crimes and victims have varied over the years.

    Pete made his debut in Alice Solves the Puzzle on February 15, 1925, as part of Walt Disney's Alice Comedies. He was designed as a bullish strongman with a wooden leg, which animators Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston speculate to have been inspired by pirate iconography. Following his recurring roles in both the Alice, and later Oswald the Lucky Rabbit series of cartoons, Pete was permanently solidified as the arch-rival of Mickey Mouse in Steamboat Willie on November 18, 1928. Having appeared three years prior to the advent of Mickey, Pete is the oldest recurring Disney character and the first villain to be conceived by the studio.

    By Pete's own admission, he was, "born to cheat and lie". His relationship with his mother is sometimes depicted as a contributing factor to his villainy. In Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three Musketeers, it is said that Pete was instantly rejected by his mother, "at that stork delivery", and pursued his evil goals as a means of earning her approval. In many stories, Pete's mother is portrayed as a criminal, herself, and sought to pass down the trade to her children—including Pete. Similarly, such media as DuckTales and Mickey Mouse Works suggest that Pete descended from a long line of criminals and scoundrels from all over the world. In Mickey's Cabin, Pete's partner-in-crime was his own cousin, Zeke.

    At some point in his life, Pete lost one of his legs by unknown means, and had it replaced with a wooden peg. He would go on to adopt the moniker "Peg-Leg Pete". Interestingly, some media portrays Pete's ancestors as having also sported pegged-legs, such as Gram-Gram Peg-Leg in House of Mouse. In many stories, however, Pete appears without his peg-leg. This inconsistency was addressed by Mickey Mouse comic writer Floyd Gottfredson, in the 1941 story The Mystery at Hidden River; in one panel, Pete tells Mickey that he had his peg-leg replaced with a more realistic prosthetic.

    In Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas, Pete hints at a history of globe-trotting, stating, "I've been around, see. Been to all the foreign lands—Brooklyn, included..." True to this, Pete has appeared under various alter-egos internationally. He has also donned many professions, such as a steamboat captain and construction site foreman—in both cases, serving as the employer of Mickey Mouse. Most often, he is depicted as a local thug or brute. Even when donning a lawful profession (such as a drill sergeant in Donald Gets Drafted), his practices are typically thuggish.

    Pete has harbored romantic feelings for Minnie Mouse from as early as 1928's The Gallopin' Gaucho, and has vied for her affections on numerous occasions. As his feelings are always unrequited, Pete has repeatedly kidnapped Minnie in attempts to force a courtship. He is always foiled by the gallant Mickey. In the comics, he has traditionally been paired with his childhood friend, Trudy Van Tubb.

    Creation; 1925-1928

    Pete first appeared in the Walt Disney-produced 1920's short subject series "Alice Comedies". He appeared in Alice Solves the Puzzle (February 15, 1925) as Bootleg Pete, the name referencing to his career of bootlegging alcoholic beverages during the United States Prohibition (January 16, 1920 - December 5, 1933). His activities brought him to a beach, where he sees Alice playing with a crossword puzzle. Pete happened to be a collector of crossword puzzles and identified Alice's puzzle as a rare one missing from his collection. The rest of the short focused on him antagonizing Alice and her drunk-on-moonshine cat, Julius, in an attempt to steal the puzzle. The menacing, bear-like villain commanded quite a presence on the screen and became a recurring villain through the rest of the series. Notably, Pete was often accompanied by rodent henchmen in appearances, such as Alice's Little Parade and Alice's Mysterious Mystery, a definite contrast to his eventual destiny as a mouse's nemesis. Pete returned as a regular adversary for Walt Disney's next animated character, Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, in a series of shorts produced for Universal Pictures. Pete's first encounter with Oswald occurred in the short The Ocean Hop (September 8, 1927). Inspired by Charles Lindbergh, the two enter a plane race across the Atlantic Ocean.

    1928-1930s

    In 1928, due to legal disputes with distributors over at Universal Studios, Walt Disney left the Oswald pictures, and developed an anthropomorphic mouse character, Mickey Mouse, to headline a new series of shorts. For the character's second-produced short, The Gallopin' Gaucho, a cat-like villain was featured as Mickey's adversary. The character was depicted as a large black cat in suspender pants with only one strap and no peg-leg, with a goal to kidnap and court Minnie Mouse. The villain was referred to as "Terrible Tom: The Vile Villain" in the comic story Mickey Mouse in Death Valley, but later garnered the moniker "Peg-Leg Pete". The Gallopin' Gaucho failed to find a distributor and thus did not receive a wide release. The following short, Steamboat Willie, debuted on November 18, 1928 and marked the first public appearance of Mickey Mouse, with Pete as his foil. In the cartoon, Pete played the role of the hot-headed steamboat captain of which Mickey is deckhand. The short portrayed Pete as less of a villain, and more of a disgruntled authority figure meant to counter Mickey's rebellious mischief. In 1929's The Barn Dance, Pete is depicted as a legitimate rival to Mickey for Minnie's affections and beats him with his better dance moves. Pete would go on to regularly appear opposite Mickey and Minnie throughout the '30s. He would normally be identified by his infamous peg-leg, which first appeared in the Mickey series in 1930's The Cactus Kid. This short will also feature Pete with a larger and scruffier mug, looking more like the Pete we recognize today. Despite the peg-leg's use as Pete's defining physical trait, he would sometimes appear with two feet such as 1932's Barnyard Olympics and Mickey in Arabia. Pete's role was generally the same in each cartoon during this period. His plot usually involved kidnapping Minnie, forcing Mickey to embark on an adventure to rescue her. This was typically played out as a comical chase and battle that would ultimately lead to Pete's humiliating defeat. Pete would often go by various aliases, such as "Dr. Pep" in 1931's Traffic Troubles or Peg Leg Pierre in 1932's The Klondike Kid. Though his profession varied by cartoon, Pete was defined through his animation and dialogue as a ghastly, condescending, and sadistic brute who abused his physical power to control those around him. Norman Ferguson was credited for developing the character. Pete lost his tail in 1932's The Mad Dog and developed more obese features, including a rounder body, a wider muzzle, and a shorter stature. In 1934's Shanghaied, Pete was redesigned again, this time getting a white face with long cat-like whiskers and cat-like ears. His muzzle and nose were also changed slightly. This design was short-lived, however, as he lost the whiskers in The Dognapper (also released in 1934). As more characters were added to the shorts, Pete's adversaries would quickly diversify. His first appearance with Donald Duck came in the aforementioned The Dognapper, while his first confrontation with Goofy came in 1935's Mickey's Service Station (both Pete and Goofy had previously appeared in The Klondike Kid, but they did not interact in that cartoon). Mickey's Service Station also marked the final appearance of Pete's peg-leg in the original theatrical shorts, as well as the character's final appearance in a black-and-white cartoon. Pete's next appearance, Moving Day in 1936, marked the character's first appearance in color. 's popularity declined toward the end of the 1930's, allowing such characters as Donald Duck and Goofy to endure as the studio's headliners. In an attempt to reinvigorate the character, Mickey was redesigned by animator Fred Moore in 1938 for the purpose of appearing in what was originally developed as a "deluxe" standalone short The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Moore's depiction of the mouse later influenced the redesigns of other characters in Disney's short film department. The 1939 cartoon Officer Duck showcased Pete's final enduring redesign, with a Caucasian colored muzzle and a slightly less round body. He also sports a golden tooth, and goes by the moniker "Tiny Tom" in this cartoon; neither characteristic would make a return in the character's later shorts.

    1940s-1980s

    Pete remained fairly active in the new decade, though very rarely appeared onscreen with Mickey; the few instances being Mr. Mouse Takes a Trip in 1940 and Symphony Hour in 1942, the latter short depicted Pete as esteemed sponsor Sylvester Macaroni in what would be the character's final appearance with Mickey in the original run of theatrical shorts. As fewer Mickey shorts were produced, Pete continuously appeared as an adversary for Donald Duck. Most extensively, Pete appeared as the duck's drill sergeant in a collection of propaganda films, beginning with Donald Gets Drafted (1942). Pete was also the unofficial mascot of the United States Merchant Marine during this period of time. In Bellboy Donald (1942), Pete was given a nameless son, who would lay the foundation for the character P.J. in later productions. In 1952, Pete appeared in his first solo Goofy cartoon Two Gun Goofy. Two years later, Pete would even pair up with Chip and Dale, in the 1954 cartoon The Lone Chipmunks, which marked Pete's final appearance in the original run of theatrical shorts. Eventually, the shorts department drastically slowed production as the studio shifted focus to new ventures, such as full-length features, television, and theme parks. Pete was essentially retired alongside the rest of the classic characters, but would occasionally make appearances in Walt Disney's Disneyland series, and in the opening of the Mickey Mouse Club program. In 1983, Pete made his theatrical return alongside the rest of the classic cast in the final act of Mickey's Christmas Carol, where he played the role of the satanic Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. During Donald Duck's 50th birthday celebration in 1984, Pete was briefly featured in the music video for "Happy, Happy Birthday To You", popping out of a gift box alongside Mickey, Goofy, Pluto, Huey, Dewey, and Louie. He donned an outfit similar to his attire from 1940's The Riveter. In 1987, Pete briefly appeared in Down and Out with Donald Duck, to discuss his hatred for Donald. The special utilized archival animation from 1944's Trombone Trouble.

    A Goofy Movie

    Like in the television series Goof Troop, Pete is Goofy's neighbor. Pete often gives Goofy advice on how to raise his son with discipline, telling him that he should keep Max under his thumb. In the film, it is shown that Pete works with Goofy as a mall photographer for kids' portraits. Pete tells Goofy that P.J. asked him to take him camping and comments that camping is the perfect way to make a good father/son relationship and that if a son doesn't want to be with his parents, the boy could be stealing or with a gang. This makes Goofy believe the aggravate comments of Principal Mazur about Max and he tells Pete that he is going to fish with his son. Pete attempts to finish the photography session with the current child (a little girl) after Goofy excitedly declared that he's taking Max on a fishing trip. However, the child managed to unseat her diaper and run off while Pete was distracted. Pete is then shown arriving in an RV with P.J. to the forest where Max and Goofy are camping. There, Pete tells Goofy that he must control his son. Pete invites the Goofs to dinner, but Goofy goes with Max to practice fishing. This makes the legendary Bigfoot emerge, terrifying Max and Goofy and making Pete drive away. Pete reappears at a motel where Max and Goofy are staying and is surprised to see Max and Goofy there. When Pete overhears a conversation between Max and P.J. about Max changing Goofy's map route to get to Los Angeles, he tells Goofy about it. Although Goofy didn't believe Pete, he looks at the map and sees the change. Pete is shown for the last time when Max and Goofy are with Powerline. Pete was drinking a root beer, but when he sees the Goofs on TV, he spits the drink on the TV screen, shocked.

    Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas

    More or less taking place before the events of Goof Troop, Pete is Goofy's neighbor, except here, Pete's family is not seen. Pete tells Max that there is no Santa Claus, crushing Max's spirit and having him questioning Santa's existence due to lack of evidence. Goofy spends the rest of the segment trying to prove Pete wrong. During his nightly search, Goofy spots a figure leaving Pete's chimney and mistook it for Santa. It turns out to be a Beagle Boy, who had just robbed Pete before being caught by the police. During the short's end, the real Santa arrives and gifts both Goofy and Max. Pete is present and requests gifts, too, but is instead given a yard full of snow as punishment for his behavior. Later, Pete appears as the cruel owner of Crazy Pete's Tree Lot, and Mickey's employer. During the holidays, Pete tries to sell oversized trees for thrice the amount of an ordinary tree. He nearly swindles a lacking family, but is foiled by the bodacious Mickey. As punishment, Pete angrily robs Mickey of his tip money and throws him and Pluto off the lot. While collecting his stolen goods, Pete mistakenly places his cigar in his pocket, which sparks a fire that burns his overpriced trees, much to his despair.

    An Extremely Goofy Movie

    Pete plays a much smaller role in the sequel, amounting to little more than two fleeting cameos. Taking place a few years after the events of A Goofy Movie, P.J., Bobby, and Max are heading for college. Pete hosts a farewell barbecue for the boys, but shows no disappointment towards P.J.'s leaves - viewing it as his "last night of babysitting" before becoming a free man. Indeed, he openly intends to turn P.J.'s room into a bowling alley after his son leaves. Later on, after losing his job, Goofy is forced to finish college in order to get employed once more. He attends the same college as Max, making life increasingly complicated for him. After he flunks his midterm, Goofy considers dropping out and visits Pete for advice on how to make things right. Goofy suddenly gets a brainstorm for himself, however, and heads back to the college, leaving Pete confused and wondering if he missed anything.

    DuckTales

    In the first season of the 1987 TV series DuckTales, Pete appears in five episodes, albeit portrayed as a different character in each appearance (with two of which even living in different time periods from the others), as Scrooge McDuck never recognizes him despite any previous encounters he may have had with any of the other Petes. Thus, he isn't always a true villain, sometimes merely a selfish individual with no evil agenda, even making peace with Scrooge's group in some cases. In his first appearance, "Lost Crown of Genghis Khan", Pete is depicted as the historical figure Genghis Khan, and voiced by Jim McGeorge. While leading his army through the snowy slopes of Shadow Pass, he and the army are helpless to stop a monstrous snow beast from stealing Genghis Khan's treasured crown, forcing the army and their leader into retreat. Genghis Khan's crown would not be recovered until it was found by Scrooge eight centuries later. In all subsequent appearances, the remaining Petes are voiced Will Ryan, beginning with "Pearl of Wisdom", in which the first Pete to make a present day appearances is a nautical thief named Sharkey. After stealing the legendary Pearl of Wisdom from Banana Island, Sharkey (and his partner-in-crime, Yardarm) heads to Duckburg where he (disguised as a salesman named "Monsewer Ratt") sells the pearl to Scrooge McDuck. Upon learning of the pearl's magical properties, Sharkey and Yardarm steal it back from Scrooge and head back to Banana Island to use the Pearl's power to give themselves infinite wisdom. Scrooge chases them back to the island where, during a scuffle with Sharkey, the two are bathed in the Pearl's magic and, in their infinite wisdom, decide to simply give it back to its rightful owners. Afterwards, Sharkey and Yardarm, along with Scrooge and his nephews, join in the island's festivities. In "Merit-Time Adventure", another Pete appears as a seaman named Dogface Pete who works on Duckensack Island. After one of Scrooge's cargo ships, the Lucky Duck, is attacked and sunk by what appears to be a sea monster, the cargo is salvaged and claimed by Dogface Pete and his crew, much to the ire of Scrooge. Scrooge initially suspect Dogface Pete of being behind the sea monster, but eventually discovers the monster to actually be a construction crane disguised as a sea serpent, and controlled not by Dogface Pete but instead by the Lucky Duck's first mate, Archibald Quackerbill. In the end, Dogface Pete, Scrooge, and other sailors all team up to stop Quackerbill's scheme and have him arrested by Captain Tan of the Coast Guard. In "Time Teasers", after a time travel incident sends Bankjob Beagle, Babyface Beagle, and Bugle Beagle back to the year 1687, along with a ship full of Scrooge's entire fortune, both the trio and the money find themselves taken captive by the next Pete, Captain Blackheart, and his pirate crew. Scrooge and his nephews follow after them with Gyro Gearloose and his Time Tub, but they too are captured by Blackheart. All of the captives are then forced to sing at Captain Blackheart's birthday party, with the Beagle Boys successfully keeping the pirates distracted with their exceptional singing talents, while Scrooge, Gyro, and the nephews hook up the Time Tub to the ship with Scrooge's money. Once they signal the Beagle Boys to make a run for the ship, Captain Blackheart realizes the deception and orders his crew to give chase in their own pirate ship. The time travelers barely make it back to their own time before Captain Blackheart could blast their ship with cannonballs. The final Pete makes his appearance in "Duck in the Iron Mask" as the evil Captain Pietro, captain of the royal guard for the kingdom of Montedumas, ruled by the evil Count Ray. Ray had bought the services of Captain Pietro during his time in France, before returning to Montedumas with the captain in tow. The two seized power from the kingdom's true ruler, Ray's twin brother Count Roy, and began issuing severe taxes upon its people. When Scrooge McDuck and his family arrive in Montedumas a few years later, Captain Pietro wastes no time issuing them citations and bringing them to Count Ray, who orders the captain to have them all locked up. After an elaborate escape by the captives, Captain Pietro catches Roy, Scrooge, and Launchpad McQuack in the throne room with Ray and a sword fight breaks out, with Scrooge dueling and defeating Captain Pietro himself.

    Goof Troop

    Pete is the main antagonist of the 1992 TV series Goof Troop (though he is not portrayed as villainous). Like Goofy, Pete has a family of his own; it consists of his wife, Peg, their two children, Peter Junior Pete (or PJ for short) and Pistol, and their dog, Chainsaw. They live next door to Goofy and his son, Max. Pete owns a used-car dealership, and although no longer openly villainous, he is intimidating, guiltless, and lacks self-control and integrity. His wife Peg strives to rid Pete of his uncivilized attitude but fails. Pete often exploits his great-hearted and somewhat addled 'friend', Goofy. He frequently openly manipulates, pushes, offends, and threatens his son, PJ as well. Usually, his schemes will backfire, although very rarely he will just feel ashamed about his intimidating, oafish behavior and work to set things right. PJ often shows fear of his father, of spending time with him, and of disobeying or failing him. Worse, Pete seems to interpret this fear as respect. PJ is eager to leave, and their father-son relationship clearly revolves around fear and control. Despite this, Pete believes he is a good father and has a strong desire for PJ to be successful. In his narcissism, Pete wants PJ to be just like him; however PJ is nothing like his father and has no desire to be. It is eventually revealed in the show's pilot episode "Forever Goof" that one of the main reasons why Pete dislikes Goofy so much is that when Pete was a high school quarterback in a big football game, it was Goofy who accidentally caused Pete to fumble the ball and get hit in the face by a pom-pom (Goofy was on the cheerleading squad at the time), causing the team to lose the game. However, he might have put off the grudge in A Goofy Movie and An Extremely Goofy Movie, since he seems to be more friendly with the Goofs. He often fought with Goofy in the show. Jim Cummings provided Pete's deep booming voice in the series and, to date, in all other media.

    Mickey Mouse Works

    In the Mouse Works series of shorts, Pete was a recurring antagonist, most frequently portrayed as a local thug. In some cartoons, he was given a less controversial profession, such as that of a NASCAR racer, or the co-worker of Donald in a small music shop. In Mickey's Cabin, he was accompanied by his dimwitted cousin Zeke, in a scheme involving a captive Mickey. He also served as the villain of the short segments Mickey to the Rescue, in which he kidnaps Minnie and traps her within his not-so-hidden lair, forcing Mickey to endure elaborate traps in order to rescue her.

    In the early years of the Mickey Mouse newspaper comic strip, Pete was portrayed as Sylvester Shyster's sidekick and looked noticeably more muscular than his screen counterpart. His portrayal was eventually changed in 1934's "The Captive Castaways" to better match his depiction in the cartoons, and he gradually started to work up on his own. In comic strips and comic books, Pete is consistently depicted as a hardened criminal. In the 1943 comic strip story Mickey Mouse on a Secret Mission, he was an agent of Nazi Germany, working as the henchman of Gestapo spy Von Weasel. In the 1950 comic strip story The Moook Treasure, he's even portrayed as the Beria-like deputy chief of intelligence in a totalitarian state on the other side of the Iron Curtain.

    Pete was the main antagonist in Disney Legend Carl Barks' first Donald Duck comic story, Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold (adapted by Barks and Jack Hannah from the unproduced animated film "Morgan's Ghost"), and remained a recurring villain in Barks' comics.

    In later Mickey comics, Pete often teams up with Mickey's other enemies, such as Eli Squinch and the Phantom Blot, or sometimes is accompanied by his own henchman, Weasel. Pete sometimes also teams up with other Disney bad guys, such as Scrooge McDuck's enemies (the Beagle Boys and Magica De Spell), Mad Madame Mim, Captain Hook, and the witch from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

    In the Italian stories, Pete (called Pietro Gambadilegno, literally Pete Woodleg), is a recurring antagonist: he's a professional criminal, a thief, bank robber, and burglar, and in this continuity his activities are seen as a normal, despite despicable and still persecuted, profession; many stories show that Pete's just filling up his spot in the society: being a villain. In his Italian stories, he usually works with his unintelligent pal Weasel, his mad-scientist cousin, Portis (original Italian name Plottigat) and his girlfriend, Trudy Van Tubb. Pete alternates in the role of Mickey Mouse's nemesis with the Phantom Blot and is also the main antagonist in many Mickey Mouse stories set in other ages or universes (the so-called Costume Stories) and in retellings of famous tales (known in Italy as Disney Parodies). As per tradition, Pete is depicted with two legs, but it's occasionally mentioned one of them is fake.

    Mickey Mousecapade

    Pete appears as the captain of a pirate ship in the American version of the NES game Mickey Mousecapade (or simply Mickey Mouse in Japan). The player fights him at the end of the level and, later, has a rematch with him in Maleficent's castle. (In the original Japanese version, Captain Hook was the boss.)

    QuackShot

    follows the adventures of Donald Duck as he, with the aid of his three nephews, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, set out to obtain some treasure from a map he found. Pete appears as the antagonist of the game. Near the end of the game, he kidnaps Donald's nephews and demands to be given the map and must be fought immediately prior to the final stage and boss of the game.

    World of Illusion

    In this game, he is the main antagonist and is portrayed as the cloaked Master of illusion, though it is only at the final boss stage that his face is revealed. After Mickey and Donald find his magic box and step inside, he throws down a challenge to them that if they find and defeat him, he will help them find their way back home. They succeed and he sends them back home. He is later shown amongst the audience watching Mickey and Donald's magic show and makes a thumbs up at the player. He is also seen as a Joker Card at the main menu operated by Goofy.

    For decades, Pete's then-only known physical appearance in the Disney theme parks was in Disneyland's Fantasy On Parade, in which he donned his bowler hat and cigar. He also appeared in the Walt Disney's World on Ice show Mickey Mouse's Diamond Jubilee, in which he donned his traditional one-strap overalls and his captain's hat from Steamboat Willi...

    has a listing of the appearances by Pete.

  6. Pete appears in the 2013 Mickey Mouse cartoon series, and its 2020 spin-off The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse. In both shows, he is designed based on his appearances in the early Mickey Mouse cartoons, complete with a peg-leg.

  7. Mickey and his friends Minnie, Donald, Pluto, Daisy, Goofy, Pete, Clarabelle and more go on fun and educational adventures.

  8. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse - Full Cast & Crew. CG animation featuring Mickey Mouse and his friends in stories designed to teach basic maths skills, such as problem-solving, adding and matching.

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