Saturday, 1 January 2022

MGM Odds and Ends Part 3

The MGM cartoon studio went through some changes in the third quarter of its existence (1948-52). The biggest one involved director Tex Avery taking a little over a year off to deal with emotional issues, returning in 1951. When Dick Lundy came over from the Walter Lantz studio to fill in, Avery’s writer, Rich Hogan, got out of the animation business. This period has some of my favourite Avery cartoons: Magical Maestro, Lucky Ducky (“Technicolor Ends Here”), Bad Luck Blackie, Little Rural Riding Hood (“Kissed a cow”) and a bunch of others.

The other change was a two-parter. MGM decided to save money by getting rid of its third unit, the one directed by Preston Blair and Mike Lah. Both men returned to the Tex Avery unit, though Blair’s stay was brief. Metro then released some of the cartoons made for Harding College by John Sutherland Productions. The first was Meet King Joe (on screens as of May 28, 1949, 4½ months after the last Blair-Lah cartoon, Goggle Fishing Bear).

Let’s look at news from the studio through the eyes of the Hollywood Reporter. One thing noticeable in the squibs is producer Fred Quimby managed to get his name into almost all of them. In his book, director Joe Barbera was rather dismissive of Fred C., saying he napped most of the time he was actually in the building.

The articles feature a glistening array of shorts that existed in press-release name only. They were never made or even contemplated. They were simply an attempt to keep the studio’s name in the trades. The idea that bizarrely-coloured animation was re-used in Sleepy-Time Tom (1951) is another phoney bit of information (by the way, is that Paul Frees at the end of the cartoon?). Conversely, some things were not reported, including Avery’s departure and the signing of the deal with John Sutherland.

I haven’t figured out which cartoon Bob Shamrock voiced. His actual name was Bob Shannon and he died in Los Angeles in 2000. Merle Coffman is Red Coffey/Coffee, who took his duck voice to the Hanna-Barbera studio and appeared on the Huckleberry Hound and Quick Draw McGraw shows. Jimmy Weldon was hired when the duck was re-designed and given his own segment on The Yogi Bear Show.

March 22, 1948
Academy Award Candidates
Cartoons: “Chip An’ Dale,” Walt Disney, RKO. Walt Disney, Producer.
“Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse,” MGM. Frederick Quimby, Producer.
“Pluto’s Blue Note,” Walt Disney, RKO. Walt Disney, Producer.
“Tubby the Tuba,” Paramount. George Pal, Producer.
“Tweetie Pie,” Warner Bros. Edward Selzer, Producer.
Winner: “Tweety Pie.”

May 10, 1948
Fred C. Quimby, MGM cartoon producer and head of the company’s short subject production, was signed to a new five-year contract. Quimby has been an executive with MGM for 23 years, 12 years at the studio in charge of short subjects production and 11 years as general short subjects sales manager in New York.

July 6, 1948
MGM will produce 48 short subjects for its 1948-49 program, William F. Rodgers announced over the weekend. ...
The 48-short subject program, six less than last year, comprises four two-reel subjects and 44 one-reelers. The latter include 16 Technicolor cartoons, four Gold Medal reprint cartoons in Technicolor.

July 15, 1948
The entire personnel of the MGM cartoon department, under the direction of Fred C. Quimby, will start their annual two-week vacation tomorrow. The unit has been taking its annual vacation at the same time each year for the past ten years, a plan put into effect by Quimby after the first year of operation.

September 13, 1948
For the 1948-49 season MGM will release 16 cartoons, eight of which will star Tom and Jerry. This is the largest number of that series ever to appear on the studio’s shorts program for a one-year period.
The increase is bases on sales department and exhibitor demand, and was determined after conferences between sales chief William F. Dodgers [sic] and cartoon producer Fred Quimby.

October 4, 1948
Leaving his Ars Gratia Artis cage, MGM’s famous trademark, Leo the Lion, has roared into the field of acting. Feeling animated roles are his meat, Leo debuts with cartoon stars, Tom and Jerry in “Jerry and the Lion,” which William Hanna and Joseph Barbera co-direct and Fred Quimby produces. Plans are to star Leo in his own cartoon series in the future.

November 4, 1948
Fred Quimby started production yesterday at MGM on new Tom and Jerry cartoon series featuring foreign locales. First cartoon of series to be completed will be “Cheese Heaven” with locale in Holland. “Mouse in Mexico” and “Cat in Calcutta” are next on the production schedule.

November 29, 1948
MGM has scheduled four short subjects for December: “Mouse Cleaning,” Tom and Jerry cartoon [remaining are live action].

December 15, 1948
Sharp and prolonged negotiations between Screen Cartoonists Guild and the “big five” cartoon studios have ended in agreement to extend the guild’s present pact without change for another year, or to Nov. 1 next, SCG made known yesterday.
Until their last meeting at which the accord was reached, the guild sought a cost-of-living increase and the studios demanded a surrender [missing word] arbitration clause in the pact. Studios are MGM, Disney, Warners, Paramount and Lantz.

January 14, 1949
MGM’s animated department, under direction of Fred Quimby, has 18 cartoons in various stages of production. Ten of the group are in the Tom and Jerry series, and all 18 are in Technicolor. This year’s entire release schedule will be filled by these cartoons, and Quimby is heading plans for 1950’s animated production list.

February 9, 1949
“For every state, a Tom and Jerry” is the new policy of MGM’s cartoon department, producer Fred Quimby announced yesterday. “Mouse at the Mardi Gras” will plug Louisiana and “Ski Jump Tom” will plug Sun Valley, the follow up on “Texas Tom.” Chamber of Commerce promotion is planned in each state.

February 11, 1949
Academy Award Nominations
Cartoon
“The Little Orphan,” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; Fred Quimby, Producer.
“Mickey and the Seal,” Walt Disney, RKO Radio, Walt Disney, Producer.
“Mouse Wreckers,” Warner Bros. Edward Selzer, Producer.
“Robin Hoodlum,” United Productions of America, Columbia. United Productions of America, Producer.
“Tea for Two Hundred,” Walt Disney, RKO Radio, Walt Disney, Producer.

February 22, 1949
MGM’s “Lucky Ducky,” produced by Fred Quimby, has been voted “The Best Cartoon of 1948” in the annual poll conducted by Canada’s new Liberty Magazine.

March 14, 1949
With 23 one- and two-reelers in the can, comprising the balance of its 1949 shorts program, MGM finds itself in the best position of its 25-year history, according to Fred Quimby, shorts executive. At Technicolor, reading for printing, are eight cartoons.

March 25, 1949
Academy Award Winners
Cartoon: “The Little Orphan,” MGM, Fred Quimby, producer.

April 1, 1949
Long shot gamble of Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, is paying off. Prior to the Academy award voting, Quimby asked for postponing bookings on the Tom and Jerry “The Little Orphan,” except in New York and Los Angeles. Now that the short has won the fifth Oscar for Quimby, MGM is booking it in 500 theatres simultaneously on April 30, setting a new record for the company’s featurettes.

May 11, 1949
Its merchandising plan for Tom & Jerry cartoon characters heretofore limited mostly to comic books, MGM has now embarked on a broad plan of pushing by-products from the series. According to Fred Quimby, licenses have been given to manufacturers of ceramics, games, dollars, balloons, T-shirts, ties, belts and suspenders.

June 6, 1949
MGM will release a program of 46 short subjects during the 1949-50 season...Program will include 16 Technicolor cartoons (including the Tom & Jerry series); four Gold Medal reprint cartoons in Technicolor.

August 10, 1949
Fred Quimby, MGM short subjects department head, yesterday readied three cartoons for early release. The one-reels are: “The Cat and the Mermouse,” slated for Sept.; “Little Rural Riding Hood,” Sept. 17, and “Love That Pup,” Oct. 1.

August 23, 1949
Another debut this week of the Mary Kaye Trio performing for its first film sound track, a cartoon at MGM.

September 29, 1949
Roy Williams, story director at Walt Disney studio for 18 years, has been added to the story staff of MGM’s Cartoon Department, it is announced by Fred Quimby, producer.

October 19, 1949
Screen Cartoonists Guild next week will ask all cartoon producers for a straight 15 percent wage increase for all animators and allied workers, including those getting over minimum pay, and a system of “bonuses” to be paid temporary workers in lieu of sick leave, holidays and severance pay.
Negotiations will be undertaken with the Animated Film Producers Assn., headed by Donar Dyer, of Disney, chairman, and which includes Warners, Disney, MGM, Walter Lantz and George Pal. When the pay scale and other working conditions are set in the formal agreement with the association, they will likewise apply to television cartoon producers, according to William Littlejohn, business agent for the guild. Animators now get $125 for a forty-hour week.
The Guild is seeking to set up pro rata benefits for those employed less than a year and laid off. It will ask for four percent of gross pay for severance; two percent for holidays; four percent sick leave for women and two percent for men.

October 20, 1949
Bud Stefan, the soda jerk on the Fibber McGee show, narrated a 35 mm. color film strip for children called “Christopher Mouse”; William Hanna wrote it. All profits will go to the St. Michael of the Angels Episcopal Church in Studio City. (Note: this was not a cartoon but I include it here because of Hanna's involvement. Read about it on the Yowp blog.)

October 24, 1949
MGM’s Tom and Jerry cartoons will soon be syndicated newspaperwise throughout the country.

December 6, 1949
An elaborate exhibit, featuring every phase of cartoon production, will be made available by MGM to theatres, starting Jan. 1, when it will be shown for the first time at Loew’s State Theatre, New York.
Complete cartoon story will be shown, starting from the idea inception on a drawing board. Steps such as music and exposure cue sheets, animation and background layout, a finished scene in pencil, together with final colored ones, will all be shown.

December 8, 1949
Because of a misunderstanding on repair instructions on a Technicolor camera through which filters were set in the wrong way, MGM cartoon producer Fred Quimby got a sequence in strange pastel shades when he filmed “Hollywood Bowl Cat.” There was a moss green mouse, a magenta cat and a shell pink stage for Hollywood Bowl, so Quimby is using it as a dream sequence in a new cartoon, “Sleepy Time Tom.”

December 30, 1949
AP’s “Tom and Jerry” comic strip bows Feb. 6.

January 5, 1950
Fred Quimby, head of MGM shorts production, submits these titles of forthcoming “Tom and Jerry” cartoons: “Mouse Mops Up,” “Spick and Span,” “The Big Sweep,” “The Clean Years.”

January 17, 1950
“I’ll Be Skiing You,” is announced by Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, as the latest in the cartoon series covering sports subjects.

January 30, 1950
Jerry Mann, currently appearing in the stage show, “Oklahoma,” has been signed by MGM for the voice of “Casanova Cat” and “Love in Gloom,” Tom and Jerry cartoons.

February 3, 1950
Schedules have been set by Fred Quimby for three MGM cartoons. They are “The Flying Cat,” Feb. 15; “His Mouse Friday,” March 1, and “Magical Maestro,” March 5.

February 15, 1950
Academy Award Nominees
Cartoons
“Canary Row,” Warner Bros. Cartoons, Edward Selzer, producer.
“Magic Fluke,” United Productions of America, producer; Columbia.
“For Scent-Imental Reasons,” Warner Bros. Cartoons, Edward Selzer, producer.
“Hatch Up Your Troubles,” MGM; Fred Quimby, producer.
“Toy Tinkers,” Walt Disney, RKO Radio; Walt Disney, producer.

February 21, 1950
Producer Fred Quimby has enlisted Leo, the lion trademark of MGM, as the newest actor of MGM Technicolor cartoons. Leo will step out of the traditional circle of the Metro trademark to appear with Tom and Jerry in “Our Pal Leo.”

February 22, 1950
New York. – Formation of Hollywood Enterprises, Inc. to engage in merchandising of commercial royalty tieups is announced by William Ferguson, former exploitation manager of MGM, and Edward Carrier. New firm, with offices in the Paramount Building, also will function as international representatives for producers and distributors.
Hollywood Enterprises already has closed contracts to serve as exclusive royalty tieup agents for Metro’s MGM cartoons.

February 28, 1950
MGM has signed William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, co-directors of the “Tom and Jerry[”] cartoon series, to an unprecedented straight eight-year contract, Fred Quimby, head of the shorts department, confirmed yesterday. Hanna, a story man, and Barbera, an animator, first joined MGM in 1937. When Quimby teamed them in 1939 to co-direct their own unit, the two first created the cat and mouse characters.

March 6, 1950
Following signature of an eight-year contract last week, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera have been assigned 10 Tom and Jerry Technicolor cartoon subjects for this year by MGM shorts department head, Fred Quimby.

March 8, 1950
Use of excerpts from Johann Strauss’ “Die Fledermaus” in the MGM Technicolor cartoon, “Tom and Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl,” met with such favorable exhibitor reception that producer Fred Quimby has schedule[d] a new subject called “Strauss Mouse.”

March 17, 1950
Two new MGM short subjects have their world premiere with “Key to the City,” opening tomorrow at the Egyptian and Loew’s State. They are Pete Smith’s “Wrong Son,” human interest treatment of the subject of child adoption, and “The Cuckoo Clock,” Technicolor cartoon produced by Fred Quimby.

March 31, 1950
“Tom Van Winkle” has been scheduled by Fred Quimby for production as an MGM Technicolor cartoon.

April 10, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, has scheduled “Ventriloquist Cat,” “The Cuckoo Clock” and “Safety Second” for May, June and July release, respectively.

April 12, 1950
W.F. Rogers, MGM general sales manager, after consultation by phone with cartoon producer Fred Quimby, is alerting the distribution department to make a blanket booklet of the Tom and Jerry cartoon, “Safety Second,” for “saturation” coverage the week of July 4. Booklet tells in an amusing way how to avoid juvenile injuries through fireworks burns.

April 13, 1950
Bob Shamrock will do the voice of Jimmy Durante for an MGM cartoon.

April 18, 1950
Pinto Colvig, former comedy story constructionist for the MGM cartoon department, has returned to the studio in a new capacity. Now known on the radio as “Bozo the Clown,” Colvig has signed with Fred Quimby, cartoon producer, to do the Voice of the Seal in “The Little Runaway,” a Tom and Jerry cartoon.

April 26, 1950
This week is said to be the first time in L.A. theatre history that one brand of cartoons has shown in eight local first-runs in one week. The record goes to Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, whose “Jerry and the Lion” is showing at the Chinese, Los Angeles, Uptown and Wilshire; “Yankee Doodle Mouse” at the Fine Arts; “Safety Second” at the Egyptian and Loew’s State.

May 25, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, is rushing a print of “Yankee Doodle Mouse” through the Technicolor laboratory. Cartoon is set to pay with “The Third Man” at Grauman’s Chinese, Loyola, Wilshire, Uptown and Los Angeles theatres.

June 15, 1950
Debut of MGM Records into novelty platters with “Tom and Jerry Circus Album,” based on cartoon characters of Metro Technicolor shorts produced by Fred Quimby, has resulted in top sales with disks being spotted at top of various best-selling lists.
Accompanied by a 16-page color book of Tom and Jerry, the album is the first in a series of children’s appeal albums to be offered by MGM Records.

June 20, 1950
Lillian Randolph, the “Madame Queen” of the “Amos ‘n’ Andy” radio show and also appearing on the “Beulah” and “Goldilocks” shows, has been signed by Fred Quimby to “voice” a featured character in a new MGM cartoon, “Cat of Tomorrow.”

June 21, 1950
Technicolor lab is rushing prints on MGM’s “Yankee Doodle Mouse” and “Safety Second.” Cartoon producer Fred Quimby has placed these in the exchanges to be available for Fourth of July bookings.

The film industry will be represented at the World Boy Scout Jamboree, Valley Forge, Pa., July 1-6 by the “Tom Cat,” “Jerry Mouse,” “Droopy the Dog” and “Barney the Bear” patrols. The 38 boys in the patrols are from troops in the Venice, Santa Monica, Ocean Park, Westwood and Culver City areas. The insignia representing famous cartoon stars were arranged by Scoutmaster Reg. Cochrane, Troop 48 Culver City, with Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer.

June 26, 1950
An increase to 72 percent next season in MGM shorts filmed in Technicolor is announced by Fred Quimby, shorts producer. The figure includes 22 color cartoons and eight James FitzPatrick “People on Parade.”

June 29, 1950
Following up the Tom and Jerry “geography series” and “sports series,” MGM cartoon producer Fred Quimby is starting a dance series. The first will be “La Conga Cat,” scheduled for immediate production. Other titles in preparation are “Charleston Cat,” “Marimba Mouse,” “Polka Puss” and “Square Dance Tom.”

July 5, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, has scheduled two Tom and Jerry subjects on the popular subject of sleep. They are “Sleepy Time Tom” and “Good Yawning Tom.”

July 6, 1950
“Albert in Blunderland” will be the fourth and last, for 1950, of a special cartoon series, “Fun and Facts About America,” distributed by MGM. Fred Quimby announces it as an August release. Others have been “Meet King Joe,” “Make Mine Freedom” and “Why Play Leapfrog?”

July 10, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, announces that his department will take its usual annual vacation en masse from July 28 until Aug. 14. Only a maintenance and repair crew will stay on.

July 27, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, huddled yesterday with Sam Tate, studio maintenance head, on plans for refurbishing and remodeling the cartoon building when all employees leave July 28 for a “mass” two-week vacation.

August 3, 1950
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, has added four more titles to what he called “The United Nations Series.” These are “Cuban Cat,” and “Mountie Mouse” (Canada), Tom and Jerry subjects, and “Caballero Droopy” (Mexico) and “Chilly in Chile,” starring Droopy. Already in production are “The Two Mouseketeers” (France) and “Tom and Jerry in Dutch” (Holland).

August 15, 1950
Story of “Hickory, Dickory Doctor” has been okayed by Fred Quimby for an early start as an MGM Tom and Jerry cartoon.

October 4, 1950
MGM’s cartoonery has latched onto the flying saucer gimmick with Barney Bear set for “Flying Disk Jockey.”

September 7, 1950
World premieres of two MGM shorts will be a feature of the opening of Dore Schary’s “The Next Voice You Hear” at Four-Star Theatre next Tuesday. They are the cartoon, “George the Goldfish,” [sic] and a James A. FitzPatrick MGM Technicolor Traveltalk, “Touring Northern Ireland.”

[repeat of UN cartoon details from August 3rd]

September 8, 1950
Marie Francois, 6, and her French accent have moved over from MGM’s feature, “An American in Paris,” to the cartoon department. Fred Quimby has signed Marie’s voice for Tom and Jerry cartoon, “The Two Mouseketeers.”

September 11, 1950
Fred Quimby has set three Barney Bear cartoons for immediate production at MGM. They are “Cobs and Robbers,” “Busybody Bear” and “Gopher Bear.” Two Tom and Jerry cartoons with Hawaiian background, “Cruise Cat” and “Waikiki Kitty,” also have been scheduled by Quimby.

October 19, 1950
The program of shorts to be released by MGM in 1950-51 is about three-fourths completed, according to Fred Quimby, who returned yesterday from New York conferences with general sales manager W.F. Rogers.
All 16 of the new cartoons for the new season are either finished, editing or filming. In addition, six Gold Medal Reprints, making a total of 22 cartoons, will be finished.

November 6, 1950
Fred Quimby has signed a new MGM term contract to continue as head of the short subject department and cartoon producer. It marks the 25th anniversary for Quimby at MGM and his 37th year in the short subject field.

November 28, 1950
Paul Frees, radio actor and currently working at RKO in “The Thing,” has become the voice of MGM cartoons. He recently completed doing Barney Bear in “Busybody Bear” and he is now at work for the Tom and Jerry cartoon “Cruise Cat.”

December 7, 1950
Universal’s “Phantom of the Opera,” triple Academy Award winner in 1943 will be screened Sunday at the Academy Award Theatre. The feature was honored for the best color cinematography, color art direction and color interior decoration. “Yankee Doodle Mouse,” MGM Award-winning cartoon, also will be presented at the screening.

December 12, 1950
MGM cartoon department is readying a series of Tom and Jerry mystery comedies under producer Fred Quimby. First short on the list will be “Private Catseye.”

December 19, 1950
MGM’s next “Tom and Jerry” cartoon subject, “First Class Scout,” will deal with Boy Scout activities.

January 5, 1951
New York. – Formation of MGM Cartoon Character Enterprises to handle licensing of products utilizing Tom and Jerry and other cartoon characters is announced by Fred Quimby, head of MGM short subjects. Max Weinberg will be in charge of the new division.

January 31, 1951
The MGM cartoon department has switched to acetate “cells” exclusively in the making of its product, according to Fred C. Quimby, head of company’s short subject department. The new type “cells” eliminate fire hazard.

February 9, 1951
Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, will make eight “Barney Bear” subjects this year, compared with two annually for the past 11 years.

February 13, 1951
Academy Award nominations
Cartoons
“Gerald McBoing-Boing,” United Productions of America, Columbia; Stephen Bosustow, executive producer.
“Jerry’s Cousin,” MGM; Fred Quimby, producter.
“Trouble Indemnity,” United Productions of America, Columbia; Stephen Bosustow, executive producer.

February 15, 1951
A cartoon strip with a GI slant will be made by MGM’s Fred Quimby for 700 Army, Navy and Marine Corps papers.

February 18, 1951
A.H. Tremann, owner of the new Strand Theatre, Preston, Minn., made it an “all MGM premiere” of his new theatre by billing Red Skelton and Arlene Dahl in “Watch the Birdie,” Pete Smith’s “Sky Divers” and the MGM cartoon “Daredevil Droopy.” In honor of the occasion, Tremann received congratulatory wires from Skelton, Miss Dahl, Pete Smith and Fred Quimby.

February 22, 1951
Valley Forge, Pa. – MGM’s “Stars in My Crown” took first honor among motion pictures in the annual Freedoms Foundation awards presented here this morning “for outstanding contributions to a better understanding of freedom by the things which they write, do, or say.” ...
Third places, $200 and medals, went to...MGM’s “Albert in Blunderland.”

April 3, 1951
The book of six “Tom and Jerry” cartoons, tied together as “The Adventures of Tom and Jerry,” proved so successful in a three-week run at the Marcel Theatre that manager Jim Nicholson will repeat the innovation with a new set of MGM subjects next month. The MGM sales department also will try to have the idea adopted in other double-feature situations.

April 12, 1951
Fred Quimby, MGM short subjects head and cartoon producer, has radio-phoned from Paris that he will remain in Europe for a month after the end of the United Nations Film Conference on Saturday [14th].

April 26, 1951
Paul Frees has made his third recording as the new voice of MGM cartoon character Barney Bear.

April 30, 1951
Fred Quimby returns to his desk at the MGM cartoon studio today following his trip abroad. He was Hollywood’s representative at the 18-nation film conference called by UNESCO in Paris.

May 24, 1951
MGM cartoons are being given a musical change of pace from classical to popular. First in the new format is “Juke Box Mouse.” Dealing entirely with popular music, it follows a long series of cartoons featuring classical tunes.

May 25, 1951
MGM’s short subjects program for 1951-52 includes 32 one-reelers and two special two-reel subjects.
The single reel subjects include 16 MGM cartoons in Technicolor, 10 Pete Smith Specialties and six Gold Medal reissue cartoons in Technicolor.

June 25, 1951
Fred Quimby and his entire short subjects department at MGM will go on a two-week vacation starting Aug. 6. Pete Smith and his crew will be off the last half of August.

June 29, 1951
After a year’s illness, director Tex Avery has returned to work in Fred Quimby’s cartoon department at MGM.

July 12, 1951
An entire year’s lineup of MGM cartoons can be booked at one time for the first time since the company has been making these shorts, according to producer Fred Quimby. Quimby has ready the 1951-1952 program, which starts Sept. 1, finished Technicolor prints for 16 out of the 22 scheduled subjects. This unusually early availability has boosted advance sales of the product to a new high, Quimby says.
Tom and Jerry subjects ready include “Slicked Up Pup,” “Nitwitty Kitty,” “Cat-Napping,” “Flying Cat,” “Duck Doctor,” “Triplet Trouble,” “Smitten Kitten,” “Little Runaway,” “Fit to Be Tied,” “Push Button Kitty.”
The 1951-1952 program will start off with the cartoon “Car of Tomorrow,” being rushed for release during Automobile Show time in September. Other MGM cartoons ready to go are “Inside Cackle Corners,” “Droopy’s Double Trouble,” “Musical Maestro,” [sic] “One Cab's Family” and “Rock-a-Bye Bear.”

July 26, 1951
“State Fair,” 20th-Fox’s 1945 Academy Award winner starring Dana Andrews, Jeanne Crain, Dick Haymes and Vivian Blaine, will be screened Sunday at the Academy Awards Theatre. Also being screened on the same program is “Quiet Please,” 1945 cartoon winner produced by MGM.

August 2, 1951
Fred Quimby’s MGM cartoon department takes its en masse two-week vacation tomorrow night. Immediately on return of the cartoon workers, a similar mass vacation is set for Pete Smith and his short subjects staff.

August 7, 1951
Hal Elias, assistant to Fred Quimby, is the sole occupant of the MGM cartoon department building during the current two-week mass vacation. Elias is supervising changes in facilities and equipment.

Paul Frees, who recently did roles in RKO’s “The Thing” and Paramount’s “A Place in the Sun,” has resumed his MGM cartoon chores as the voice of Barney Bear.

August 21, 1951
The two sections of MGM’s shorts division did a switch yesterday, with Fred Quimby and 120 members of the Cartoon Department returning to work from a mass two-week vacation and Pete Smith’s unit, in turn, taking off for a fortnight.

September 12, 1951
General Motors chairman Alfred Sloan has wired MGM’s Fred Quimby for a special preview of “Car of Tomorrow,” Technicolor cartoon, for GM executives in Detroit. The subject is being released Sept. 22 to hit the auto show season.

September 13, 1951
Concert pianist Jakob Gimpel has been signed by Fred Quimby to play the Johann Strauss music for a new MGM Technicolor cartoon, “Johann Mouse.” Stan Freberg will narrate the subject.

September 26, 1951
Ten features that won “Oscars” in 1946, along with several award-winning shorts, have been scheduled by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for showing in its 19th series of Sunday evening screenings at the Academy Award Theatre beginning next Sunday. ...
“The Seventh Veil,” starring James Mason and Ann Todd, will be screened Oct. 21...”Cat Concerto,” award winning MGM cartoon, will also be shown.

October 2, 1951
Dawes Butler [sic], creator of the voice of Beanie in TV’s “Time For Beanie,” and Colleen Collins, radio’s “girl of a thousand voices,” have been signed by Fred Quimby for vocal work in MGM’s Technicolor cartoon, “Little Johnny Jet.”

October 17, 1951
Stan Freberg, character actor has been signed by Fred Quimby to comment on the life of Johann Straus for a new Tom and Jerry cartoon “Johann Mouse.”

November 14, 1951
J.G. Lindstrom, head of the Film and Communication section, Public Information Division of the United Nations, yesterday conferred with Fred Quimby, head of MGM Shorts Department, regarding a new cartoon, “Peace on Earth,” which has just started in production, as well as other subjects of possible United National interest. Lindstrom was accompanied by Scott Hanson, Hollywood resident representative of the United Nations.

November 27, 1951
Concert pianist Jakob Gimpel performed seven Johann Strauss waltz numbers in the MGM Technicolor cartoon, “Johann Mouse,” produced by Fred Quimby.

January 17, 1952
The entire year’s cartoon program for MGM has been shipped to exchanges seven months ahead of schedule, the first time this has happened, according to producer Fred Quimby.
Six months ago, Quimby stepped up the pace of production and as a result all cartoons due from MGM until Sept. 1, the end of the production year, already are in the exchanges.
Included are 15 Tom and Jerry cartoons and seven others.

January 18, 1952
Sixteen different licensees manufacturing 63 different products have been signed up for tie-ups with the MGM Tom and Jerry cartoon characters. Fred Quimby, producer, says the articles range through 23 kinds of Tom and Jerry pottery and chinaware, toy autos, coin banks, ties, mufflers, suspenders, scarves, T-shirts, puzzles, dolls, belts, viewers for motion picture film, and other promotions.

February 4, 1951
Scott Bradley, after 15 years as composer and musical director for MGM’s cartoon department, will play the role of John Philip Sousa in “The One Piece Bathing Suit.”

February 12, 1952
Academy Award Nominations
Cartoons
“Lambert, the Sheepish Lion,” Disney-RKO. Walt Disney, producer.
“Rooty Toot Toot, United Productions of America-Columbia. Stephen Bosustow, executive producer.
“Two Mouseketeers,” MGM. Fred Quimby, producer.

March 21, 1952
Academy Award Winners
Cartoon: “Two Mouseketeers.”

April 7, 1952
The Academy Award winning Tom and Jerry cartoon, “The Two Mouseketeers,” has been set as a joint bill with “[Singin’ in the] Rain” at the Egyptian Theatre here and in over 100 other engagements throughout the country over the next three weeks. National Screen Service has prepared a special trailer on the team of the two pictures.

April 15, 1952
Two more Tom and Jerry cartoons in the group planned by Fred Quimby, MGM cartoon producer, with a view to promoting international good will have been placed in work. They are “My Friend Toto,” with an Italian background, and “The Londonderry Ghost,” British subject.
Already released in the series, undertaken by Quimby after serving as delegate to the UNESCO conference in Paris last year, are “The Two Mouseketeers” and “Johann Mouse.” Others in preparation concern Denmark, Sweden, South America and Mexico.

April 18, 1952
Fred Quimby’s next Tom and Jerry “costume cartoon” for MGM following the successful “Two Mouseketeers” will be “Scaramouse.”

May 1, 1952
Merle Coffman, impersonator, has been signed by Fred Quimby to do the voice of a baby duck in MGM’s Tom and Jerry cartoon “Just Ducky.”

May 15, 1952
It’s a boy for James E. Paris [Faris], MGM cartoon film editor.

June 10, 1952
MGM’s short subject slate for 1952-52 will include two two-reelers, to be released as specials, and the following one-reelers:
Sixteen MGM Cartoons in Technicolor, six Gold Medal Reprint Cartoons in Technicolor, 10 Pete Smith Specialties, eight FitzPatrick Traveltalks in Technicolor and four Prophecies of Nostradamus.

June 24, 1952
MGM cartoon producer Fred Quimby has placed a new Tom & Jerry, “Baby Butch,” in production.

July 7, 1952
MGM’s two short subject units split the month of August with their usual “mass vacations.” Fred Quimby will let all his cartoon workers go the first two weeks, while Pete Smith and his writing and production staff will leave the last two weeks.

July 22, 1952
Although the current releasing season still has two months to go, all 22 MGM cartoons produced by Fred Quimby and the Pete Smith Specialties have already had local first runs at the Egyptian, Loew’s State, Four Star or Orpheum Theatres.
Pre-release bookings are already set for the new 1952-1953 product which normally would not appear in Los Angeles until September.

July 30, 1952
About 150 theatres of the Interstate Circuit in Texas will stake a “12th Birthday Party” for MGM’s cartoon characters, Tom and Jerry, according to word received by cartoon producer Fred Quimby from Bob O’Donnell, head of the circuit.
The stunt proved so successful at one Dallas house that it was decided to duplicate it throughout the circuit.

August 5, 1952
The 21st Sunday evening series of screenings sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for its members will start Aug. 10 and run through Nov. 9, with programs devoted to films that figured in the 1948 Academy Awards. ...
Nov. 2: “The Naked City,” Mark Hellinger-U-I... “The Little Orphan,” MGM cartoon, will also be shown.

August 6, 1952
The MGM cartoon department’s first provisions for direct 16mm filming of animated subjects are being installed while the department, headed by Fred Quimby, currently is taking its annual two-week mass vacation.
Entire new equipment for 35mm photography also is being installed as part of improvements being made in the department.

August 8, 1952
MGM cartoon characters Tom and Jerry will have co-starring roles opposite Esther Williams in “Dangerous When Wet,” Technicolor musical set to role this month.
The cat and mouse, who made their debuts with live actors in “Anchors Aweigh,” will perform an underwater ballet with Miss Williams and swim to music with cartoon fish, octopi, and sea horses.

August 25, 1952
Fred Quimby’s MGM cartoon department, back at work after their annual two-week mass vacation, started on two new Tom and Jerry subjects, “Mouse for Sale” and “Broncho Peso.”

October 15, 1952
Joseph Barbera, whose new dramatic comedy, “The Maid and the Martian,” opens tonight at The Gallery Stage, authored last year’s Academy Award cartoon, MGM’s “Two Mouseketeers.” Gordon Hunt directed the new comedy, with performances to be given nightly except Mondays.

December 17, 1952
Fred Quimby has scheduled “Touche Pussy Cat!” as a sequel to the Academy Award cartoon, “The Two Mouseketeers.”

December 19, 1952
Fred Quimby, MGM shorts head, has scheduled new national releases for January as follows:...Technicolor cartoons “The Missing Mouse” and “Barney’s Hungry Cousin.”

December 23, 1952
Fred Quimby today previews six months’ output of Tom and Jerry Technicolor cartoons with four executives of Whitman Publishing Co., Dell Publishing Co. and Western Printing & Lithograph, who publish the Tom and Jerry comic magazines.

December 26, 1952
Fred Quimby has completed production of “Puppy Tales,” a new MGM Tom and Jerry Technicolor cartoon. Into its place on the drawing boards goes “Down-Hearted Duckling.”

7 comments:

  1. “Good Yawning Tom” likely became Cat Napping, while “Cat of Tomorrow” is most definitely Push Button Kitty!

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  2. My kids were puzzled by the hair-in-the-projector gag in "Magical Maestro." Such things no longer happen in today's world where media originates from digital sources.

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    1. It's interesting, isn't it, how theatrical animation festivals don't spotlight cartoons with visual gags that assume an audience in an auditorium--like the "hair" gag, and animated silhouettes depicting audience members that the on-screen characters interact with--that don't "play" on television.

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    2. Such activity, and CinemaScope still around the corner! You'd never guess that the department would be shut down in five years.

      I'm glad Quimby rethought Stan Freberg narrating "Johann Mouse" and got Hans Conreid, aren't you?

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    3. I find Johann Mouse quite dull, actually. I can't say whether Conried's presence helped. It didn't hurt. Freberg did narration elsewhere so he would have been okay; just different.
      Isn't Johann the cartoon where the woman who played the French mouse got so annoyed she wasn't cast that she wouldn't watch it for years?

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    4. Am I going insane or do I seem to recall this post having an August 14th 1950 clipping saying that the crew is back from the annual vacation and that "The Duck Doctor", "Triplet Trouble", "Smitten Kitten" and "Little Runaway" would resume production while "Cat of Tomorrow" and "Two Mouseketeers" would begin production? Good thing I seemed to have taken those notes a couple months ago because I don't see it here anymore.

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    5. This post didn't have it. Whether the Hollywood Reporter had it and I missed it because of an OCR error, I don't know. But Daily Variety reported on Aug. 8, 1950:
      Fred Quimby, head of MGM's cartoon department, has set three Technicolor cartoons to start when department resumes work Aug. 14. These are "Little Wise Cracker," "Two Mousketeers" and "Caballero Droopy." Work also will be resumed on six cartoons interrupted by department's en masse vacation, "Duck Doctor," "One Cat's Family," "Triplet Trouble," "Smitten Kit ten," "Little Runaway," "Rocka-bye Bear."
      And on August 10th....
      Entire staff of Metro's cartoon department headed by Fred Quimby returns to work Monday following annual vacation of the group. Four pictures are slated for preparation, including Barney Bear's "Wise Quacker;" Droopy's "Caballero Droopy;" and two Tom and Jerry subjects, "Cat of Tomorrow" and "Two Mousketeers."

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