
Age: 80
male
Franklin Wendell Welker (born March 12, 1946) is an American voice actor with an extensive career spanning nearly six decades. As of 2021, Welker holds over 860 film, television, and video game credits, making him one of the most prolific voice actors of all time. With a total worldwide box-office gross of $17.4 billion, he is also the third highest-grossing film voice actor of all time. Welker is best known for voicing Fred Jones in the Scooby-Doo franchise since its inception in 1969, and Scooby-Doo himself since 2002. In 2020, Welker reprised the latter role in the CGI-animated film Scoob!, the only original voice actor from the series in the movie's cast. He has also voiced Oswald the Lucky Rabbit in Epic Mickey and its sequel, Megatron, Galvatron and Soundwave in the Transformers franchise, Shao Kahn and Reptile in the 1995 Mortal Kombat film, Curious George in the Curious George franchise, Garfield on The Garfield Show, Nibbler on Futurama, the titular character in Jabberjaw, Speed Buggy in the Scooby-Doo franchise, Astro and Orbitty on The Jetsons, Mushmouse on Punkin' Puss & Mushmouse, and various characters in The Smurfs as well as numerous animal vocal effects in many works. In 2016, he was honored with an Emmy Award for his lifetime achievement. Description above from the Wikipedia article Frank Welker, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

A tribe Himalayan young Yeti named Susan (voiced by Cameron Seely) framed embark across a humans being, with each species thinking he other was just a myth. Whose world gets turned upside down when he discovers something that he didn't know existed -- a human, an one young human boy genius named Nick Babcock (voiced by Mason Blomberg) and the other little boy overweight named Runt Anderson (voiced by Julian Edwards), which contradicts his community's beliefs and leads to his banishment. Hoping to prove them wrong. Susan gets lost into Nepal city against the backdrop of the human village them of journey to learn about true friendship. News of South Asia throws the simple Yeti community into an uproar over what else might be out there in the big world beyond their snowy home, in all new story about relationship, courage and the joy of discovery.
