Sunday, 18 May 2014

Bubble Diggity Gum Ziggity

You wouldn’t think of having a beer with Perry Como, let alone a double scotch. Maybe a chocolate malted. He was the most easy-going, non-threatening man on television. His records were like a Sunday drive in the country, or feeding ducks in a pond in the local park while kids played on nearby swings. Relaxed, pleasant, innocuous. He was the nice guy down the street that might stop to help weed your lawn for a bit. Somehow, through it all, he never came across as hokey.

Perry Como would have been 102 today.

Perhaps instead of a malted, you might have had a soft drink with him. We know which one he preferred—for a fee, of course. This ad was one of a series in Sponsor magazine in 1946.



And here are a couple more ads, one featuring another laid-back singer. Both perhaps are a little infamous for reports of how they reared their children.

Benny and Benny

George Burns played practical jokes on Benny for years. Benny put up with it because he and Burns were old friends and Burns could make him laugh uncontrollably. But there was at least one occasion where Benny wasn’t on the receiving end of a Burns’ stunt.

Benny Rubin was one of the top people in vaudeville; he emceed at the Palace in New York when that still meant something. When vaudeville died, Rubin’s career took a long slide. He starred in some two-reelers in the ‘30s but never really made it in movies. Perhaps it’s unfair to say Jack Benny rescued him, but Benny did put him in his ‘B’ team who supported him on radio and TV when the occasion arose. Rubin—and I wish I could remember where I read this—once blamed his own ego for his career washout. You can read more about Rubin in this excellent post here.

Rubin was one of Burns’ victims in a story relayed in a column by the National Enterprise Association’s man in Hollywood, Paul Harrison. It was one of several little tales. I’ve included the whole column. It’s from August 28, 1937.

George Burns Has Pet Joke for Those Who Call Him Long Distance, but it Had Kickback When Played on Benny Rubin
By PAUL HARRISON

HOLLYWOOD (NEA) With tongue in cheek they're telling this one about a wealthy movie-maker. He recently moved into an exceptionally fine new home which was built by a distinguished architect and exquisitely furnished by the most expensive firm of decorators. One of the interesting item—a magnificent canopied bed brought from France. Scores of Hollywood people have dropped in to see the house, so the owner removed the canopy from the bed and has substituted a marquee advertising his latest picture.
It may not be your idea of a screamingly funny gag but George Burns likes it when people telephone him long distance, he hangs up on em. The longer the distance the funnier it seems to Burns. This has been going on for years and everybody in show business knows about it.
About 2 o'clock one morning (in Hollywood), Benny Rubin, the writer, telephoned to Burns from New York. He said, "Hello, George—this is your old pal Rubin! Say, George, Jack Benny is here and he just bet me a hundred dollars that I couldn't talk to you for five minutes on the phone. Now George—"
And Joke Kicks Back
"Jack wins the bet!" said Burns, and chuckled as he hung up.
Soon the telephone rang again. New York calling. "Hello, George—this is Rubin! Listen, you ZX&lb&ffi!, (lb&)lb&lb— THIS ONE IS ON ME!" And he smashed down the receiver.
Among the better-known Hollywood agents is an astute fellow named Lyons. One of his prominent actor-clients approached him said, "I'm going to ask your advice about something, a rather difficult and delicate matter, but I believe you're the shrewdest agent in the business and maybe you can help me."
Lyons said he certainly would do whatever he could.
He Was Accomodating
"Okay," said the actor. "I want you to figure out a way for me to break my contract with you!" Bo the agent thought of a way and the client broke the contract. There is no particular point to this story, unless it helps to prove that anything can happen in Talkie-town. An actor and his wife were going to a dinner party and he disapproved the evening gown she had bought for the affair. "Men really don't like to see a woman in anything as revealing as that," he said. She said. "I didn't buy this to please the men. I chose it to the other women."


Saturday, 17 May 2014

Off-Screen Talkers

Until Mel Blanc and his agent came along, actors in cartoons were anonymous, so it’s interesting seeing a reference to them in the pre-Blanc days. Here’s an example from the Los Angeles Times of April 29, 1934, though it talks about one-reelers in general.

There wasn’t much of a need to hire someone to provide voices when sound cartoons became practical in 1928. Cartoons were mainly gagged-up musicals, so a singer or someone around the studio could handle the limited amount of dialogue. That changed as cartoons became chattier. Studios decided they needed professional actors. Billy Bletcher was the first popular choice among cartoon studios on the West Coast as he seems to pop up everywhere during the early 1930s. By the end of the decade, Blanc was equally ubiquitous and was finally limited by his exclusive contract with Leon Schlesinger. And there were, of course, many others whose work has brought happiness to people over the decades—most of whom never had their names appear on screen.

Alas, Bletcher gets no mention in the Times story. Neither does the “cartoonist” who “speaks for Mickey Mouse.”

Stars Who Are Heard But Never Seen, Get Top Billing
Short Subject Commentators and Cartoon “Voices” Grow in Screen Importance

BY JOHN SCOTT
A man used to beat a tattoo on wood blocks offstage to give the effect of horses galloping. He also furnished lightning, thunder, or the muttering of an unseen villain. But by slow evolution his much-despised job has grown into something big. By degrees the man whose voice is heard but who is never seen in the flesh has become important until now the movie commentator, latest outgrowth of the old sound effects department, has become a star, and invisible hero whose name flashes at time above those of his more earthly brethren, the actors, on theater marquees.
One of the steps in this evolution was undoubtedly the illustrated songs of the early cinema days. Those who remember that far back will recall the leather-lunged gentleman who stood beside the silver sheet and either talked or sang as the crude pictures unreeled. Now the commentator speaks into a modern appliance, the microphone. The film is not shown while he talks and his vocal efforts are dubbed in afterward, which makes timing the important thing.
IT MUST BE HUMOROUS
Whereas talks accompanying pictures have heretofore been in serious vein, the new idea is humor. Something apropos but light. Most of the well-known commentators on short subjects and newsreels have adopted this method. Stodgy lectures are out. Previously little attention was paid to these “voices with a smile,” but the movie-going public of today has taken to them surprisingly. Popular commentators at the present time include Pete Smith, whose remarks accompany M.-G.-M. series; Graham MacNamee of radio fame, who vocalizes for a newsreel; Gayne Whitman and John P. Medbury. And of course, there are the various cartoon voices. Smith’s progress in the field is outstanding. He lays credit to the writing, which he does himself, rather than the speaking. “It’s a new type of movie writing,” he says, “like putting together words for newspaper headlines. You watch the short subject, timing each sequence in which you aim to talk and then fit the ‘dialogue,’ as we call it, to the scene. Of course, it’s somewhat difficulty to try to be funny five seconds at a time.
“The trick is to make humor fit facts and I never try to ‘kid’ the audience but rather attempt to make it laugh with me at crazy things happening on the screen.”
The commentator comes by his job naturally since he has enjoyed some not as a humorous after-dinner speaker. A position as head of the M.-G.-M. publicity department has helped, too. He has turned out some fifty short subjects to date.
Most of the men in this line of work agree that at times silence is very golden indeed. Certain scenes are found to be intensely effective without any talk at all, as even feature film-makers have also finally discovered.
Cartoon characters enjoyed by old and young alike have recently been given voices, some to advantage and others not. But the idea has apparently caught on tremendously and few of the funny figures remain silent now.
Pop Eye, the pugilistic sailor man of the Paramount cartoon, masquerades under the voice of a man named William Costello, well known in vaudeville circles as “Red Pepper.”
Betty Boop, the little sex-appeal lady, has found audible expression through three different young ladies in New York, namely, Mae Questal [sic], Margy Hines and Bonnie Poe, all of whom have entertained from the variety stage.
The Screen Souvenirs, one of Paramount’s most popular short subjects, are accompanied by the comments of a veteran Broadway actor, Leo Donnelly, who has appeared opposite Lenore Ulric and other noted stars.
Walt Disney used various employees as voices for his famous cartoon characters. Once cartoonist barks for Pluto, another speaks for Mickey Mouse, etc. The Rhythmettes, a girl trio, sang as the “Three Little Pigs.”
Where the situation will lead is a question. The commentator may become passe all of a sudden or the idea might be carried into features. Pete Smith favors the latter thought and foresees comments by unseen persons in full-length films.

My thanks to Mark Kausler for the transcription.

Friday, 16 May 2014

Full of Fish

Waves crash over Tom and Jerry on their wrecked ship in “Polar Pals” (1932). All kinds of sea creatures that began lodges in their clothes and bodies escape. Whoever animated the scene at Van Beuren didn’t use cycles and each drawing takes up a single frame.

There’s a frog in Tom’s ears.



And an eel comes out of his pants. Tom bats it away.



A turtle and more fish. Jerry has fish in his ear.



And a fish hidden in Jerry’s hat flies away.



John Foster and George Rufle get the only credits.

Thursday, 15 May 2014

Sidney Surprise

A Jim Tyer take from “Sidney’s Family Tree” (1958). They are consecutive drawings. The second drawing is on three frames, the third is on two frames, the fourth is on threes, the fifth on twos, and the sixth on threes.



Manny Davis, Johnny Gent, Eddie Donnelly, Larry Silverman, Bob Kuwahara and Vinnie Bell also animated on this Terrytoons short. Thanks to Charles Brubaker for a Cinemascope version of the cartoon.

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Finding a Television "First"

Trying to sort out when the first regular TV newscast began is a bit of a challenge. Most sources concede that the first Monday through Friday news programme was the “Camel Newsreel Theatre,” which debuted on February 16, 1948. That may not be true, though. Looking through the New York Times TV listings, it’s clear that Walter Compton was broadcasting on the DuMont Network for 15 minutes every weeknight starting at 6:45 p.m. from Washington, D.C. His programme debuted on June 16, 1947 and went off the air on Tuesday, May 18, 1948. Ah, but poor DuMont gets little respect. Compton had hosted “Double or Nothing” before becoming Mutual’s “Presidential announcer” (he introed the Fireside Chats on the network) and then a news reader. He was only 47 when he died on December 9, 1959.

The “Newsreel Theatre” was announced by John Cameron Swayze. You can’t really call him the show’s “anchor.” He was an off-camera voice, just like Ed Herlihy and other announcers on movie newsreels. All the audience saw was filmed stories and title cards. And the stories were like newsreel stories—either hard news or puff on things like new car models, dog shows and fashion displays (TV news today, it appears, has gone backward in some respects).

Here’s a neat little trade ad that NBC put out about the “Camel Newsreel Theatre” a few weeks after it debuted. The unidentified artist drew other trade ads for NBC around that time. And everyone is smoking.



R.J. Reynolds let the “Newsreel Theatre” last a year. It wanted a change in format, so Swayze was plunked in front of the camera and NBC took over production of the broadcast from Fox and its Movietone News. The broadcast was expanded from 10 to 15 minutes and on February 16, 1949, the “Camel News Caravan” debuted. News doesn’t travel by caravan, as best as I can tell, but R.J. Reynolds had used the word in shows it sponsored on radio, such as the “Camel Comedy Caravan.” So, “News Caravan” it was. The caravan was parked and the camel and Swayze wandered into the broadcasting desert on October 29, 1956 when NBC made a change and began broadcasting “The Huntley-Brinkley Report.” It was a move the network eventually didn’t regret.

Television was growing slowly by the time the “Camel Newsreel Theatre” signed on. But it was still a tiny industry. CBS wasn’t broadcasting any programming some days of the week. NBC could only broadcast live to stations on the coaxial cable or by relay station—about a half dozen. The rest were served by the NBC Kinescope Films department, meaning a camera was aimed at a TV set, filmed what was on the tube, then the film was shipped to the stations. Below is a map from Sponsor magazine showing the network as it was then, with no station in Chicago and none on the West Coast.



By the fall of 1948, a larger schedule was in place, as were more stations. And then came the explosion in sales of TV sets, thanks not to John Cameron Swayze but a fellow named Milton Berle.

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

The Death of Mr. Wolf

“I’m fed up. I’m through with women,” says the wolf. “Why, I’ll kill myself if I even look at another babe!” And that’s what he does when Red Hot Riding Hood makes her return appearance on stage. But the wolf’s ghost rises up and repeats his animated actions from when he first saw Red earlier in the cartoon.



The animators in “Red Hot Riding Hood” weren’t credited, but I suspect they were Preston Blair, Ray Abrams and Ed Love.

Monday, 12 May 2014

Heaven Scent Scaredy Cat

Semi-stylised dogs scare a semi-stylised cat in “Heaven Scent” (released 1956). Ernie Nordli was the designer in the Chuck Jones unit during this period. His layout designs were influenced by UPA but, at least in this cartoon, not as abstract as UPA could get.



This being a Pepé Le Pew cartoon, you pretty well know what’s going to happen in it.

Recognise the name in the window in the first frame?

Ken Harris, Ben Washam, Dick Thompson and Abe Levitow are the animators.

Sunday, 11 May 2014

For the Duration Only

Martha Sigall relates in her wonderful autobiography Living Life Inside the Lines that she bucked the system when she became a camera operator at Graphic Films during World War Two. You had to be a man to be in the Cameraman’s Union, period. But because of war-time shortages of men (who were called upon to serve in the armed forces), women were given work permits by the union for the duration and had to surrender them at the end of the war.

Martha wasn’t the first, though. The distinction went to one of her former co-workers at the Leon Schlesinger studio. Daily Variety first reported on it on October 8, 1942. I can’t get access to the full story, but a shorter version was printed in Weekly Variety six days later.

Lady Lenser
For the first time in Hollywood history a gal becomes a cameraman (or camera woman) at the Leon Schlesinger cartoon plant, where Verena Ruegg, who has worked up from a tracer's job, is lensing animations with full permission of the IATSE. Shortage of manpower, due to the war, is causing a general advance of femmes in all phases of the camera art.


For those of you who want to pick apart sentences, the earlier Daily Variety story made it clear that Ruegg was the first camera-woman in all of Hollywood, not just at Schlesinger’s.

Ruegg had made $1000 in 1939 as an inker.

I tried to find out a bit about her, and it seems she was an art collector. There’s a little biography at this web site, though it mentions nothing about her cartoon career (she was a registered nurse when she got married in 1926). The unsigned drawing you see on this posting came from her collection.

She was born on April 30, 1895 in San Francisco, where her father was a realtor, and survived the 1906 earthquake. She died in Los Angeles on March 7, 1973, an unknown pioneer.

Rhode Island Green (As in Money)

There’s nothing like ingenious publicity and Jack Benny used some to push his shows in Providence, Rhode Island in 1969.

You wouldn’t think he’d need it. Benny was a legend in the entertainment business by that time and he should have easily sold out all of his appearances. But there’s nothing wrong with a little P.R. and Benny found a unique way to get it. The story was picked up by the Associated Press; at least one newspaper put it on the front page.

The story appeared on August 8, 1969.

$1 a Year 'Frugality' Advisor
Rhode Island Hires Jack Benny
By AMBROSE B. DUDLEY
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Rhode Island hired that paragon of parsimony, Jack Benny, as a “special financial consultant” Thursday at $1 a year. The comedian said he would be back each year to pick up his pay.
Benny's “invaluable experience” in the ways of frugality will make his advice on state finances particularly important during the tight money situation, declared Gov. Frank Licht at an appointment ceremony in the governor's office.
“His compassionate concern for his fellow man is matched only by his compassionate concern for the conservation of his financial resources,” the governor quipped, advancing Benny his first year's salary.
Stinginess has been a favorite Benny comedy theme over the years, typified by such thrifty policies as driving an ancient Maxwell automobile and collecting tips from dinner guests.
Benny, appearing at the nearby Warwick Musical Theater, said he would be back every year to get his pay. “And when this ceremony is over I'm not going to give the dollar back,” Benny said. But he did return it after autographing the bill with a message to the governor.
“You might be able to sell this to help balance the budget,” he said.
Benny admitted that his miserliness is just an act, and “My wife and I are probably the biggest spenders in show business.
“If it weren't for that, I wouldn't portray the character,” the perennially 39-year-old Benny said. “It makes it much funnier to be cheap. Every family has a member who is cheap.”
Actually, Benny said, “I don't care much about money.”
Will Benny have a plush office?
“Of course, we'll have to give him one,” Licht said. Then, reflecting on the purpose of his new adviser, he took it back: “No, we'll let him use the governor's office.”


The publicity couldn’t have hurt Governor Licht, but he could have used it toward the end of his term. Ironically, money was involved. He didn’t seek re-election because of a public backlash against a tax he put into effect. Perhaps he should have listened closer to his “special financial consultant.”