In Tom's later attempts to catch Jerry, he has to deal with Spike for bothering his son. In 1949's
Love That Pup, Spike was given a puppy son, Tyke, who became another popular supporting character in the
Tom and Jerry cartoons. His voice was taken over by
Daws Butler, who styled Spike's voice after
Jimmy Durante taking after his 1940s radio series with
Garry Moore. He is named
Spike from then on and is not changed again. When Tyke is introduced, Spike is given a softer approach (mainly towards his son) and is kinder and less aggressive, but is still portrayed as a dumb animal on more than one occasion. Spike's love and affection towards Tyke becomes Jerry's newest weapon against Tom, as his strategy goes from luring Tom towards Spike to inflicting harm on Tyke, and even when it is perfectly obvious that Jerry is responsible and not Tom, as seen in
Love That Pup. Spike fails to notice this and still blames Tom (although this can be partially due to Spike's dislike of Tom). A short-lived
Spike and Tyke cartoon series was produced by MGM in 1957; only two entries were completed. Within a year, the
MGM cartoon studio had shut down, and Hanna and Barbera took Spike and Tyke and retooled them to create one of the first television successes for
Hanna-Barbera Productions,
Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy. Spike and Tyke would not appear in new
Tom and Jerry cartoons, until the 1970s
The Tom and Jerry Show, the 1980s
The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show, and 1990s
Tom & Jerry Kids (in which Tom and Jerry themselves were made younger, but Spike and Tyke remained the same ages, and appeared both with Tom and Jerry, and in new episodes of their own with a girlfriend for Tyke). He had also made a
cameo in the 1967
MGM Animation/Visual Arts production
Matinee Mouse, which reused footage from
Love that Pup and
The Truce Hurts, and added some new animation in the final punchline. Spike would continue to appear in
Tom and Jerry full-length features released in the early 2000s and finally,
Tom and Jerry Tales. Spike and his son Tyke also appear as regulars in
the recent reboot series. Spike made an appearance in the 2021 film,
Tom & Jerry under the ownership of Ben. He was voiced by
Bobby Cannavale. ==Comics appearances==