In the Disney adaptations, Owl is much more jovial and friendly. He enjoys telling stories about his relatives whenever a particular situation reminds him of one, but many of his stories are pointless or absurd. Owl has light tan plumage on his underside and brown plumage on his head, tail, and back. His three-taloned feet are also brown. He has a short tuft of white feathers just under his beak, somewhat resembling a
beard. The area around his eyes is a slightly lighter shade of brown. His eyes are black with pale yellow
sclera, and his eyebrows are dark brown. Owl's beak is yellow. In
Welcome to Pooh Corner, Owl always wears glasses (and often a cap and goggles when flying) and loves to cook. Owl first appears in the 1966 American
animated musical fantasy short film
Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. He is seen with
Christopher Robin, who is attempting to fix
Eeyore's tail, and gives his opinion that the tail needs to be moved to the right. Later, when he notices Pooh stuck in
Rabbit's front door, he decides that the situation needs the services of an expert, which turns out to be
Gopher. But when Gopher suggests he use
dynamite, Owl refuses. When Pooh is finally able to be removed, Owl is one of the characters to help pull him out. In the 1968 American
animated musical fantasy sequel
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, it is revealed that Owl lives in a small house located in a treetop. Pooh and Piglet come to visit him and wish him a Happy Winds Day, but during their visit, Owl's tree is knocked down by the strong winds and his home is damaged, prompting Eeyore to find him a new one. In the meantime, Owl begins telling a long story about a relative, with the narrator noting that he spoke: "from page 41 to page 62." In the midst of the later flood, Owl makes his way to Christopher Robin's home, the only area not underwater. When Christopher Robin finds
Piglet's message for help, he sends Owl, who can fly, to tell Piglet that help is on the way. Owl finds Piglet floating on a small chair. To calm Piglet, he begins speaking of another relative, completely oblivious to the fact that the two are about to go over a
waterfall. At the end of the short film, Eeyore finds a new house for Owl, which turns out to be Piglet's. However, Piglet selflessly gives Owl his home and goes to live with Pooh. In
Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore, after Pooh learns that Eeyore's birthday has arrived, he gets Eeyore a honey pot as a present, and visits Owl's house for help in writing out "Happy Birthday" on the pot. Despite only needing those two words, Owl misspells them numerous times and covers up the fact by claiming he wrote out an entire message instead. Owl then travels to tell Christopher Robin of Eeyore's birthday and is present for the latter's birthday party. Owl finally appears with the rest of the characters, playing
Pooh Sticks at the bridge, and then decides to go home. In ''
Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin'', Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Rabbit, and Eeyore go to Owl's house to read them a note from a honeypot that Christopher Robin left Pooh before he mysteriously left and Pooh accidentally got honey all over the note. After removing the honey from the note, Owl misreads the note, saying that Christopher Robin has gone to a place called "Skull" (really
school), which is a faraway and forbidden place. When Pooh and the gang decides to go on a quest to rescue Christopher Robin, Owl draws them a map and says that they'll face dangers along the way including
Heffalumps,
Woozles,
Jagulars, and the scariest one of all - the
Skullasauraus. Owl then sings the song "Adventure is a Wonderful Thing" and sends Pooh and the gang on their quest and he salutes them. It is later revealed that Owl told Pooh and the gang where to find Christopher Robin. At Skull, they must find him in the eye of the Skull. Towards the end, Owl is seen one last time flying over Christopher Robin saying, "Thank goodness, you got him!" In
The Tigger Movie, when Tigger looks for his family of Tiggers, he and
Roo go to Owl for help finding them, to which Owl suggests that Tigger should find his
family tree. Tigger follows Owl's advice. Later on, when Roo decides to write Tigger a letter from his family, he gathers
Kanga, Pooh, Piglet, and Eeyore at Owl's house and has Owl write the letter. After each individual gives their own message, Owl finishes the letter with, "Wishing you all the best. Signed, Your family." The next day, when Tigger shows the letter to his friends, he tells them that his family of Tiggers is coming to visit him tomorrow. Roo then decides that he, Owl, and the others should dress up as other Tiggers and act as Tigger's family, to which they do. When they arrive at Tigger's house dressed up as his family, everything goes according to plan until Roo accidentally bounces into Tigger's closet, causing his mask to fall off. Tigger pulls off all of the others' masks, including Owl's, which makes him mad, and he leaves to find his real family. After Tigger is found, Owl, Kanga, and Christopher Robin show up and they manage to explain to Tigger that they are his family by reciting what the letter said. In the end, Tigger gives his family a party and gives Owl a yo-yo for a present. Owl then, along with the others, gets a family picture taken with Tigger so Roo can put it in the heart-shaped locket that Tigger gave him as a present. In ''
Piglet's Big Movie'', when Piglet goes missing, Pooh and the gang go to Owl's House to ask Owl if they've seen him to which Owl tells them that he's seen Piglet many times and that he just passed by. As Owl starts to talk about his second cousin Rupert, Pooh and the gang sneak off, to which Owl continues to talk, not even noticing that his friends have left. Owl then appears in the story about everyone finding the North Pole, to which Owl joins Christopher Robin, Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Kanga, Roo, Eeyore, and Rabbit on an expedition to find it. On the way, Pooh, Piglet, Roo, Kanga, and Tigger get separated from Christopher Robin, to which Christopher Robin remains with Owl, who starts talking about his family again. When Christopher Robin and Owl find Pooh and the gang, Christopher Robin sees that Pooh has a stick in his paws and says that Pooh has found the North Pole which is the stick. Owl and the others all cheer for Pooh, not knowing that it was really Piglet who found the stick and handed it to Pooh. In the end, Owl and the others throw Piglet a hero party in honor of his bravery throughout the many adventures in the Hundred Acre Wood. In
Winnie the Pooh, after a five-year absence, Owl returns in this film with a more prominent role. Owl is first seen writing a memoir of his life beginning at the very tree in which he was born. He is then greeted by Pooh and Eeyore who is currently looking for a solution to the dilemma of Eeyore's missing tail. Owl suggests starting a contest and flies over to Christopher Robin. Christopher sends Pooh out to inform the other residents. At the meeting, Owl suggests a reward is to be distributed if one was to find the tail or a decent replacement. A jar of honey is deemed the prize and the search for replacements begin. After several failed attempts, Owl provides Eeyore with a chalkboard labeled "Tael". Just as Owl accepts the jar of honey, Pooh arrives with a mysterious message from Christopher Robin. Owl interprets the note as a distress call as Christopher has been kidnapped by a creature Owl spotted not too long before, a creature known as the
Backson. Rabbit comes up with a plan to capture the beast by luring it into a pit using toys, games, books, and other things Backsons enjoy as bait. Owl joins the friends but they all accidentally end up trapped in the pit themselves. Though Owl has the ability to fly, the group is too absent-minded to realize. With no hope of escaping, Owl decides to recite his memoir to his friends. Pooh spots the jar of honey at the top of the pit, so he creates a ladder using the book's text. Owl and the others then make their escape. When they're freed, Christopher Robin appears and explains that he was only in school for the day. The gang then look at Owl in anger or confusion, the latter being responsible for the whole misunderstanding, and he quickly flies off. Back at his home, Pooh visited him to ask for some honey and notices Eeyore's real tail being used as a bell ringer. Owl didn't notice his bell ringer being Eeyore's tail until Pooh came about and gladly gave the bear the tail. Owl and the others then reward Pooh with a massive honey jar in gratitude for recovering Eeyore's tail. In
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Owl appears regularly as a secondary character. Owl is shown to live in the same treehouse that was seen in
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh. Despite not appearing as often as others, he does feature prominently in a few episodes. In "My Hero", Tigger becomes Piglet's servant, due to a policy stated by Owl that when one is rescued, the rescuee must serve the rescuer as a form of repayment. In the episode "Owl Feathers", the gang believes that Owl is going bald after they find a pile of feathers. It is later revealed that the feathers were not Owl's, but were from Christopher Robin's pillow because Pooh and Christopher Robin had a
pillow fight the previous night. In the episode "Prize Piglet", Owl reveals that his Uncle Albert once raced from
Albania to
Zanzibar. Like always, Owl often talks about his relatives, and several appear in the show. He has a younger cousin named
Dexter, who appears in the episodes, "Owl in the Family", alongside Owl's Great
Uncle Torbett and
Aunt Ophelia, and in "The Bug Stops Here", in which he is babysat by Pooh, and befriends an enormous, yet friendly
bug after it was kicked out of its group due to his big appetite for food. He was soon presented as a replacement bug for Christopher Robin's science project after his first one ran away by accident. After he was released, he was welcomed back into the clan by his fellow bugs after Rabbit begrudgingly gave up everything from his garden to satisfy his hunger. In "Owl's Well That Ends Well", Owl is revealed to be a terrible singer, though he himself doesn't realize it. However, Rabbit comes to appreciate the singing, as it keeps the
Crows out of his garden. He is absent in
My Friends Tigger & Pooh completely. Owl appears in the 2018 film
Christopher Robin, in which he is portrayed as being an
Eurasian eagle owl. He is seen to have an argumentative and competitive (though still friendly) relationship with Rabbit over who is the smartest of the Hundred Acre Wood's animals. His role is relatively minor, as he first appears with the rest of the inhabitants of the Hundred Acre Wood to celebrate Christopher Robin's departure for
boarding school. Years later, Pooh asks the adult Christopher Robin to help him find Owl and the other animals after they go missing. Owl's house is shown to have been knocked out of a tree (yet again by a strong wind just as in
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day), having been scared into hiding alongside Piglet, Kanga, Roo, Tigger, and Rabbit by the noise made by the
weathervane atop his roof, which sounded like a
Heffalump. He mistakes Christopher Robin for a Heffalump when he first appears, and watches with one of his eyes through a hole in a log he and the other animals are hiding in when Christopher Robin pretends to drive away the nonexistent Heffalump with Eeyore's help. Once Christopher Robin made it look like the Heffalump was gone, Owl is glad to realize that he has returned at long last. He is last seen welcoming Christopher Robin's wife Evelyn and his daughter Madeline to the Hundred Acre Wood, and is cheerfully seen picnicking with the family and the other animals at the end of the film.
Casting history Owil has been voiced by
Hal Smith (1966–1991),
Junius Matthews (
A Happy Birthday Party with Winnie the Pooh),
Sam Edwards (Disneyland Records),
Andre Stojka (1997–2007), and
Craig Ferguson (2011). In
Christopher Robin, he was voiced by
Toby Jones.
Appearances Theatrical featurettes •
Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966) •
Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968) •
Winnie the Pooh Discovers the Seasons (1981) •
Winnie the Pooh and a Day for Eeyore (1983) •
Once Upon a Studio (2023)
Feature-length films •
The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) • ''
Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin'' (1997) DVD •
Seasons of Giving (1999) DVD • ''
Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas'' (cameo) (1999) •
The Tigger Movie (2000) •
The Book of Pooh: Stories from the Heart (2001) DVD • ''
Mickey's Magical Christmas: Snowed in at the House of Mouse'' (2001) DVD • ''
Mickey's House of Villains'' (2002) DVD • ''
Piglet's Big Movie'' (2003) •
Winnie the Pooh (2011) •
Christopher Robin (2018)
Television series •
Welcome to Pooh Corner (1983–1986) •
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988–1991) •
Recess (1997–2001) (cameo) ("Bachelor Gus") •
House of Mouse (2001–2003, cameo appearances) •
The Book of Pooh (2001–2003) •
At Home With Olaf (2020)
Television specials •
A Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving (1998) •
A Valentine for You (1999)
Video games • ''
Tigger's Honey Hunt'' •
Kingdom Hearts • ''
Piglet's Big Game'' • ''
Winnie The Pooh's Rumbly Tumbly Adventure'' •
Kinect: Disneyland Adventures •
Winnie the Pooh: Adventures in the Hundred Acre Wood •
Disney Magic Kingdoms •
Disney POP TOWN ==Other film adaptations==