In 1913, Colvig worked the
Pantages Theatre Circuit, briefly, before leaving for clarinetist in the Al G. Barnes Circus band for part of a season. Colvig performed
chalk talks in vaudeville. In 1919, Pinto produced "Pinto's Prizma Comedy Review" the first color cartoon, it is now considered a
lost film, In 1922, Colvig created a newspaper cartoon panel titled "Life on the Radio Wave" for the
San Francisco Chronicle. The feature ran three or four times per week on the newspaper's radio page, was syndicated nationally, and lasted six months. In 1922, Colvig and his family moved to Hollywood, working as an animator, title writer and comedian in silent comedies and on sound cartoons, In 1930, Colvig signed an eight-year contract Other notable characters he voiced include Practical Pig, the pig that built the "house of bricks" in the Disney short "
Three Little Pigs", and both Grumpy and Sleepy in
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. He directed (along with Erdman Penner and Walt Pfeiffer) the 1937
Mickey Mouse short ''
Mickey's Amateurs''. Colvig was associated with Disney for most of his career. After a falling out with Walt Disney, Colvig did not work for the Disney studio between 1939 and 1943. He was offered a job with
Fleischer Studios, then planning to produce a competing feature-length animated film in the wake of Disney's success with
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. He moved to Miami, then Fleischer's location, in early 1938. For Fleischer, Colvig worked on 1939's ''
Gulliver's Travels'', for which he voiced town crier
Gabby, who was spun off into his own short-lived series. He also voiced
Bluto for the studio's
Popeye the Sailor cartoons, replacing
Gus Wickie, who elected to remain in New York rather than move to Miami when the studio relocated. Colvig's departure from Disney meant that the increasingly popular Goofy went voiceless for several years. A select few shorts during the interim period of leave featured a soundalike voice for Goofy provided by
Jack Bailey. Colvig began working in radio, providing voices and sound effects, including the sounds of Jack Benny's Maxwell car for
The Jack Benny Program, later performed by
Mel Blanc. In 1939, Colvig returned to California, and began to devote himself to acting and doing voices in several cartoons for the
Warner Bros. animation studio and for
MGM, where he
voiced a
Munchkin in the 1939 film
The Wizard of Oz. In 1946, Colvig was cast as
Bozo the Clown for
Capitol Records. He played the role for a decade, which also included portraying the character on television. During this period, Colvig also recorded the "Filbert the Frog" song, which featured Colvig's virtuoso use of the
glottal stop as a musical instrument in itself. In 1967, Colvig's last known performance, as Goofy, was for the
Telephone Pavilion at
Expo 67. Colvig's dialogue for this exhibit was recorded six months before his death. ==Personal life==