As a permanent character of the comic strip, Franklin is also a frequent character in the animated
Peanuts television specials and movies. Unlike most characters, however, he did not appear in animation until the 1970s with his debut being a silent role in the 1972 movie
Snoopy Come Home at Snoopy's farewell party. His first speaking role is in the 1973 special ''
There's No Time for Love, Charlie Brown'', in which he is voiced by Todd Barbee. In a
Weekend Update commentary on a 1992 episode of
Saturday Night Live,
Chris Rock, who hyperbolically stated that Franklin had not said a single word for 25 years, related his own childhood experience as the only black student in his grade school class. In another
Saturday Night Live cold opening in February 2000, the Saturday after Schulz's death,
Tim Meadows portrayed a grown-up Franklin (with facial appliances to make his head look as round as the comic strip), eulogizing Schulz on
Nightline, saying, "Charles Schulz understood regardless of race, we're all the same; we have heads as large as our bodies, and our mouths disappear when we turn sideways." In the 1994
animated television special ''
You're in the Super Bowl, Charlie Brown'', Franklin's full name is given as Franklin Armstrong. According to
Robb Armstrong, the African-American creator of the comic strip
Jump Start, Schulz called him during the special's production and asked if he could make "Armstrong" Franklin's last name, and Robb Armstrong, considering it a "tremendous honor", gave his permission. Since this surname is never mentioned in the comic strip (nor in any other special for three decades), it is generally considered to be outside of
Peanuts canon. Franklin reappeared as a supporting character in 2015's
The Peanuts Movie. In November 2020,
BBC Radio 4 broadcast
Franklin, a radio play based around Schulz's creation of Franklin. In February 2024,
Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin, a special revolving around Franklin's introduction to Charlie Brown and his friends, was released. Robb Armstrong continued his contributions to Franklin's legacy by co-writing the special, which again gives his surname as Armstrong. ==Voice actors==