Mr. Websley is an anthropomorphic duck who is Della's father, Mr. Frog and Professor Quigley's employer, and the owner of the factories. He helps his employees to create his own books (such as "The Websley Alphabet book" and "The Websley Talking ABC book"). Mr. Websley first appeared in The Letter Factory and his last appearance was in A Tad of Christmas Cheer. He was voiced by Kevin Schon in 2003-2004 and the late Doug Boyd from 2005-2007.
Characteristics[]
Mr. Websley is a middle-aged, overweight white duck with green eyes, a big, yellow beak, black eyebrows, a tuft of feathers on the back of his head, wrinkles underneath his eyes, and a big tail. He wears glasses and a blue tuxedo outfit complete with a red bow tie and black, vertical stripes on his pants.
List of Appearances[]
Videos[]
- The Letter Factory (debut)
- Talking Words Factory
- Talking Words Factory 2: Code Word Caper
- Math Circus
- Learn to Read at the Storybook Factory
- A Tad of Christmas Cheer (final appearance)
LeapPad Games[]
Quotes[]
- "The Websley Alphabet Book is filled with all the letters of the alphabet." (The Letter Factory)
- "(quacking) I'd get very grumpy if I have to wait for anything." (The Letter Factory)
- "(quacking) This better be good; letters that make sounds. (quacking) I'll believe it when I hear it." (The Letter Factory)
- "I'm ready for this presentation to start... (quack) now!" (The Letter Factory)
- "Quite the kids you've got there. (quacking)" (Reading and Writing: Tad’s Great Day at the Letter Factory)
- "(quacking) This better be important." (Talking Words Factory 2: Code Word Caper)
- "(quacking) Where did everyone go?" (Learn to Read at the Storybook Factory)
Trivia[]
- A terrible dramatic sting plays ("Dun dun!") every time Mr. Websley's name is uttered. This is a running gag throughout the original LeapFrog videos.
- He speaks with an English accent.
- He often has a grumpy personality due to his lack of patience.
- He refers to Mr. Frog as "Frog".
- In Math Circus, when Mr. Websley says, "No!", what he means is "I mean.".