Red Riding Hood calls Goldilocks at the Three Bears’ house (she just happens to have the number) to say the wolf is coming over there to get her. Then, ignoring the screen, Red hands Goldie the wolf’s note.

Goldie thanks Red and the two hang upleave the scene.

Avery’s not finished. He uses another one of his bits—the theatre audience is watching a cartoon and the characters in it know it’s happening. There’s a metal clinking that anyone who has used a pay phone will recognize as the sound of a coin falling into the coin return. Goldilocks comes back into the scene and tries to fish out the nickel. Then, she realises the theatre audience can see her doing it, and retreats out of the frame.




Bugs Hardaway is given a story credit, but this doesn’t feel like a Bugs Hardaway cartoon.
Sara Berner is Red. Berneice Hansell is Goldilocks.
All I can remember when reading this point is that scene in Tortoise Beats Hare where Cecil Turtle calls his cousin.
ReplyDelete"point"
DeleteI mean post.
https://media1.tenor.com/m/l9W0IjMDldgAAAAd/patrick-star-minor-s.gif
"Give him the works!"
DeleteBenny Hill used a variation of this gag in a 1986 parody of nighttime soaps, "The Herd." It involved Benny as a member of a family who made their fortune in cattle, looking at who were the invited guests to a party being held at their mansion. He seemed to be a fan of the old cartoons, given how he replicated many such gags (i.e. the "hair in the gate" gag from Avery's "Magical Maestro" used in an ending chase sequence from 1984).
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