Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Small Cries For Help

Another reason why I like Mike Maltese...

In “Bunny Hugged,” Ravishing Ronald is treated like a punching bag in the wrestling ring by The Crusher. Ronald’s mascot, Bugs Bunny, quickly decides to take his place. While the ring announcer is proclaiming the substitution (the main plot), Maltese has Ronald desperately push up little signs. As you can see from the last two drawings, they obey the rule of squash and stretch.



Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Ben Washam and Lloyd Vaughan animated this for the Chuck Jones unit. The cartoon was released in 1950 when TV wrestling (especially as called by Dick Lane on KTLA) was huge.

Monday, 19 January 2015

Hirschfeld

Al Hirschfeld’s caricatures are always fun to look at. The first ones that come to mind are the ones he drew for Fred Allen’s book Treadmill to Oblivion. This one’s from a 1953 trade publication (I can’t remember which one; I found it well over a year ago) showing some of the cast of film “Main Street to Broadway.”


© Al Hirschfeld. Al Hirschfeld is represented exclusively by the Margo Feiden Galleries Ltd., New York.

In the comments below, Margo Feiden has asked that the above note be attached. I’m happy to learn from her there is a Hirschfeld website. Please go to this site to see more of the fine work of Al Hirschfeld.

Cavorting Cannibals

Swaying palm trees turn out to be anything but in the 1930 Walt Disney cartoon “Cannibal Capers.”



The “trunks” of the trees shrink down to real they’re actually legs of some African jungle dwellers.





The background drawing now drops into place.



Synchronisation to music was still novel enough in 1930 to base plot-less cartoons around it. These are a couple of extremes of the Africans engaging in their opening dance.

Disneyshorts.org reveals Burt Gillett directed this cartoon.

Sunday, 18 January 2015

Jack on TV

Television had been growing slowly in the U.S. during the first years after the war with few stations (mainly in the East) and rudimentary programming. Things changed in 1948. All four networks finally had programming six nights a week. TV sets began flooding the market after a manufacturing ban imposed during the war ended. And Milton Berle became an almost overnight sensation on the “Texaco Star Theater.” The question for network programmers—and the stars of radio—what do we do now?

A few of the stars evidently knew the answer, and the proof is in the longevity of their shows in the new medium. One was Jack Benny.

Here’s a guest column by Benny in the Buffalo Courier-Express of December 31, 1950. He demonstrates a remarkable and excellent grasp of not only the industry as it stood at that time, but its future. Amazingly, with the exception of Eddie Cantor, Benny names the others from radio who went on to lengthy careers on camera: the others who, too, understood how to use TV to entertain their formerly “sightless” fans.

Don Tranter Comment On
Radio-TV

(Guest columnists fill this space while Don Tranter, Courier-Express radio editor, is on vacation.)
By JACK BENNY
When asked to write an article on television, my first answer was no. I didn't know very much about this new medium of entertainment and I didn't think I was qualified to speak for or against it—much less about it. But after reading what so many others have said, I decided that I might as well speak my piece too. I loved Ed Wynn's wonderful line half-way through his first television show. "I know as much about television as anyone else," Wynn cracked. "I've been in it fifteen minutes already." Since I did my first television show on October 28th, I, too, can qualify as something of an authority.
Anything new is always the subject of gags, and at this time, television is taking a beating from the comedians. We got a tremendous yell from the studio audience last year when I had Jack Warner on our program as a guest. Speaking about The Horn Blows at Midnight, Mr. Warner explained that if it were a little better, he might have gotten his money back from the theaters, and if it were a little worse, it would have been a natural for television.
Along the same lines, on a broadcast discussing my appearance on television, we had Mary talk about getting three stations at the same time. She said that all night I kept shooting it out with Hop-A Long Cassidy to see who would marry Gorgeous George. Big laugh.
Naturally, it's very simple for me or any other comedian to get a laugh out of television. And after seeing some of the programs on video, I feel that much of this ribbing is well deserved. But this phase is only temporary. I'm convinced that eventually, television will become the greatest source of entertainment in the history of the world. When talking pictures came along in 1927, it took the same sort of ribbing that television is getting now. (I was just a kid at the time, but I remember it well.) The talkies stepped from a groping experimental beginning to become a great industry—and so will television. ● ● ●
The art of video has made great strides in the past year or two and will continue to improve rapidly from here on. Sports coverage is wonderful and spot news events wilt bring the dramatized headlines into millions of homes while they are being made, as in the Kathy Fiscus tragedy when television set owners in the Los Angeles area sat glued to their sets alt night watching the rescue attempt. Dramatic programs have improved tremendously, and eventually will be almost as exciting as an evening in the theater. I say almost because I don't think anything will ever replace the live theater for drama and pure enjoyment. The theater has survived the threat of silent and sound motion pictures and then radio—and will survive the threat of television. ● ● ●
I don't think anyone is very much interested in my opinions on sports, news events or the drama, but someone might want to know my views on comedy in television, so here goes.
Comedy is the great unknown quotient in TV. No one knows how the art of comedy will progress or what new ingredients will be injected into the laugh programs of the future. However, I do think that the things that were funny on the stage will be funny in television and that the great funny-men of the stage, radio and motion pictures, will be just as funny on TV. Fred Allen's definition of TV is "tired vaudeville," and he is right to a certain extent. But now that television can afford to hire the top comedians and entertainers to its fold, it will not be "tired vaudeville." Because very soon, television coverage will be so great, that sponsors will be able to bring to it the top writers and other creative talent from radio, motion pictures and the theater. And between the comedians, the writers, the producers and the directors, comedy programs will be taken out of the classification of vaudeville shows. What they will result in, I do not know, but the television comedy program of the future will probably be a blend of the stage, radio and the ingredients that the television medium itself will produce.
The greatest problem of comedy in television will be the search for good comedy talent. There is no question but that Bob Hope, Eddie Cantor, Burns and Allen, Red Skelton and all the other comedy greats will shine on television, too, just as they have on the stage and in radio. But where will the comedians to supplement and succeed these people come from? This has been the constant cry of radio these many years, and very few new comics have been developed in that medium. Since television requires a visual as well as a vocal comedian, the hunt for new talent should be even more difficult.


Nevertheless, new comic talent came that had no connection to radio. By 1960, TV shows starred Andy Griffith, Dick Van Dyke and Fred MacMurray. Granted, a few old-timers from the glory days of vaudeville were on the tube, too. Including Jack Benny.

Saturday, 17 January 2015

Cartoon Salesmen

Sherlock Holmes on the prowl for a bandit. A lighthouse keeper with his TV on the fritz. A bumbling drunk with a hankering for hair oil. What do they all have in common?

They were animated commercials that appeared on TV in 1956. (Preston Blair Productions, Bill Sturm Studios and Academy Pictures, respectively). They starred in amongst 75 animated spots shown at a festival in New York City at the end of November that year with 24 unionised studios taking part (Screen Cartoonists local 841 sponsored the showing).

It was a glorious era. Cartoons sold all kinds of things. Old-time animators found work on them when movie studios downsized. Alas, things changed. Soon, animated commercials were treated like animated cartoons—as strictly kid stuff, so they sold stuff aimed at kids (cereals, for example). And studios shooting live action became more sophisticated (better sets, lighting, film technique, etc.) which made spots with real people or things more attractive to agencies and advertisers.

The Associated Press didn’t quite cover the festival, but mentioned it in passing in a how-do-they-make-cartoons story. Here’s the longest version I could find. I. Klein was involved with the cartoonists union and had started in the business in the silent days at the Hearst International Studio. He later worked at both Terrytoons and Famous Studios in New York.

Animated Ads Growing In TV Popularity
By CHARLES MERCER
NEW YORK, Nov. 26 (AP) – While it’s far from being a great or significant development in television programming, animated cartoon advertising is completing a year of popularity on the home screen. Nearly everybody seems to like the little figures that do and say surprising things while urging you to buy this and that.
Whether viewed as art (which it is) or as a business (which it definitely is), animated cartoon advertising is worthy of a passing glance. An industry-wide film festival of its best efforts now showing in New York demonstrates that.
Animated cartoon advertising grossed $50,000 eight years ago. This year it will gross in the multi-millions—how many no two people quite agree.

As a business, animateds raise an interesting paradox. Basically animated cartoons use abstract and even futurist art techniques. As is well-known, the general public is not enthusiastic about abstract art; we average mortals prefer realism, meaning art that generally looks like the things we see with a mundane eye. Yet we like animated cartoons. Curious, isn’t it?
One of the best-known and most accomplished of animated cartoonists, I. Klein, was saying the other day that “to be a good animator you have to think about the inside and be a bit of an actor. And you have to be able to draw rapidly.”
Klein, a cartoonist for 35 years, finds genuine creative satisfaction in animated cartooning. He recently completed an advertisement for a soap power which was most complicated to execute and is, he says, “almost pure abstractions.” The use of animals and other symbols in animateds can be traced back as far as Egyptian hieroglyphics, he points out.
All animated cartoons are reduced to “frames.” There are 1,440 frames in a one-minute advertisement, and the average cost of producing this one minute is nearly $6,750. How come? Nearly everything is complex in television, and here Klein outlines the major steps that lead to the finished animated cartoon advertisement you see on your set:
The general idea for the ad originates with an advertising agency. Agency designers work out a general development on story boards, called “visualizers.” Using these, agency representatives confer with representatives of an animation studio.
Studio designers them rework the characters and background for the animated ad. Next actors—the voices of the animated characters—are obtained through auditions. Then a director takes the drawing layouts and mathematically coordinates sound and movement.
If you’re still with us (seriously, nothing is simple in television), the animator and director then go over the entire project to “emotionalize” it. Expressions of characters are discussed and emphasis of sounds sought.
Now the animator really goes to work (“He’s basically a ham,” says animator Klein. “He listens to the voice or voices of the actors. He mugs in a mirror. He may even get the actor to do a little acting for him so that he can bring life and emotions to his drawings.”)
When the animator completes his creative work, other artists clean up his drawings. Then inkers trace them on celluloid. Finally painters complete the job on celluloid. At last the celluloid is ready for the camera.
All this may not explain why you like animated cartoons advertising—if you do like it. But it does explain why it’s expensive to produce.


Note: the cels in this story are from commercials made at Playhouse Productions in Los Angeles.

Friday, 16 January 2015

Starring Art Davis

Artie Davis not only animates, but appears in the 1933 Scrappy cartoon “The World’s Affair.” It’s a spoof of the inventions displayed at that year’s Chicago World’s Fair.

In a hair-restoration scene, a man has hair brushes help grow hair on the top of his head, but lose it on the sides. Then, it’s vice versa. Next the brushes up top create a dent in his head. A mallet bashes his chin from below and the head becomes round again, with one hair up top. The man is delighted.



Art was already bald when the Charlie Mintz studio packed up at left New York for Los Angeles in 1930 when he was 24. He stayed with the studio for a while after Mintz died in late 1939, then moved over to Warner Bros. where he achieved his greatest fame and made his best cartoons.

My thanks to Milton Knight for tipping me off about this cartoon.

Thursday, 15 January 2015

Baloney

Favourite Private Snafu cartoon? I love the flying baloneys in the Leon Schleinsger-produced “Rumors” (1943). Why? Eh, it’s just something about the idea of flying baloneys that I like.

Baloney is an easily grasped synonym for rumours. Propaganda cartoons (even aimed at your own army) are never subtle.

The baloneys wing their through Private Snafu’s camp, passing over a tent with two soldiers who sound like writers Tedd Pierce and Mike Maltese.



The rumours slowly drive Snafu mad. His baloney sandwich talks to him.



He’s chased by baloneys and some Seussian-like creatures.



He rides a baloney that woo-hoos like Daffy Duck (and is played by Mel Blanc).



Snafu is locked away in a padded cell. A crazy baloney (you can tell by the Napoleon hat) bounces around with him to almost end the cartoon.



The short ends with a play on the old newsreel ending with the grinding camera and the words “Sees all, hears all, knows all.” This camera is grinding a baloney.



The Friz Freleng unit was responsible for this cartoon.

Note: E.O. Costello, in the comments, corrected a mistake in the original version of the post. The Paramount News was being parodied in this short. Carl Stalling even does a mock variation on the newsreel’s march theme. Thanks for the correction, Eric. We don’t want to feed anyone any baloney around here.

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

Radio's Smart Dummy

There was a time when the most popular show on network radio starred someone who wasn’t real.

Charlie McCarthy was an invention of ventriloquist Edgar Bergen, who took advantage of the fact that radio was a sound medium. On radio, you couldn’t see that Charlie was a ventriloquist’s dummy. But you could hear the sarcasm and insults McCarthy directed at every man in his path (with movie starlets, his behaviour was predictably different), so he sounded like any real, flesh-and-blood person who came through the radio speaker. People say that ventriloquism shouldn’t have worked on radio. It’s very simple. No one listening thought of Bergen and McCarthy as a ventriloquist act or, at least, filed it in the back of their minds. They thought of Charlie as someone who was larger than life.

Bergen was blessed with Zeno Klinker, Keith Fowler (a drinking buddy of Charlie’s on-air nemesis, W.C. Fields) and other fine writers who managed to avoid making McCarthy’s invectives sound forced, as well as his own quick-wittedness to add his own when the occasion suddenly presented itself.

Someone noted for barbs was Herald-Tribune critic John Crosby. He continually aimed at overused and obvious premises, trite plots and inane dialogue which filled Old Time Radio. The 1946-47 season arrived. On a Monday, Crosby gave a qualified passing grade to the low-key Ethel and Albert. The next day, he decried Judy Canova as non-inspirational. The following day, he turned to his old friends Bergen and McCarthy. Crosby had his perennial favourites—Jack Benny, Fred Allen and Henry Morgan (who he reviewed that week) to name some—and Charlie McCarthy was on the list. But Crosby had no reservations about telling the big stars they stunk. He did that in the following column:

MCCARTHY is IN SEASON AGAIN
By JOHN CROSBY

NEW YORK, Sept. 11.—The flame trees are turning scarlet on Fire Island, the Atlantic feels like shaved ice, and the smell of wood smoke is in the air again. On a recent Sunday night, like the smell of burning leaves, came another small but unmistakable sign that Autumn is almost here.
“Why are you late?” inquired Edgar Bergen of that small razor-tongued hedonist whose voice is familiar to about 70,000,000 Americans.
“Because I didn’t get here on time,” said Charlie, who hasn’t changed a bit.
“Why didn’t you get here on time?”
“Because I was late. You want to go around again?”
Lordy, lordy, I said to myself, I’ve been treading water all summer long and at last land is in sight. The McCarthy show was the first smart comedy program I’ve heard in what seems like forever. If I get a little hysterical, ignore it; I’m over-wrought. In fact, I’m fed up with Summer, let’s face it. I’m tired of wet bathing suits and sand in my hair and Flynn’s bar and grill. I’d like a martini, very dry, at the St. Regis and I want to wear shoes again, the leather kind, and I wish Fred Allen were back.
SHARP AS EVER
Charlie was in rare form. He’d intended, he said, to spend the Summer improving his mind but spent most of it improving his technique. And his technique, one of the most subtle and sure-footed in radio, is as sharp as ever.
After considerable meditation, Charlie tells Bergen he plans quit radio. “You don’t know what you’re saying,” says Bergen. “Oh, yes, I do. I read your lips.”
Bergen points out that quitting radio is a serious step but Charlie is adamant. “I decided I’m getting no place and you’re helping me.”
“But, Charlie . . .”
“No no no no no no. I say no and that’s final. I’m using my veto power. I’m walking.”
“But you mean so much to everyone.”
WHAT’S SATAN'S PAYROLL?
“Especially you. You get your pound of flesh for 75 cents.”
“But if you left radio, what would you do? Remember, Charlie, Satan has work for idle hands.”
“Yeah? What does he pay?”
I’ve heard better dialogue but one thing every McCarthy show has is a distinctive McCarthy flavor. Charlie is a rounded, fully developed character with more flesh and blood than a dozen Abbott and Costellos. Over the years, Bergen has endowed this small self-possessed cynic with a heart and a soul as well as a highly articulate set of vocal chords. Charlie is America’s Pinocchio.
I’ve never been a Mortimer Snerd man. Snerd, it seems to me, is one joke, endlessly repeated. But, in my new benign end-of-summer moody my feeling changed toward this slack-jawed imbecile who is only barely conscious he is alive. Mortimer, in case you hadn’t heard, spent the Summer in school. It came as a great shock to him to discover that school has been out all Summer, though, he said, he’d become a little suspicious when he won all the games at recess.
Guest star on the McCarthy program on that Sunday was Jimmy Stewart who proved again that movie stars, particularly one who has been in the Army for five years, shouldn’t get mixed up with the experts in front of a microphone. Mr. Stewart, bless his shy, wide-eyed American soul, was just plain awful and, if he didn’t have such a fine war record, I’d tell him so.


While a star that was a wooden dummy proved not to be a problem on radio, television was a bit of a different matter. Radio listeners already envisioned Charlie McCarthy as a living, breathing, talking, walking character, not something sitting on a guy’s knee. That made it a little difficult to build a televised comedy/variety show around him. Still, Bergen and McCarthy found a place on the TV game show “Who Do You Trust” (sitting at a desk was the only thing necessary). The pair retired in the mid-60s, only to return to the stage five years later (sitting on a stool was the only thing necessary). He announced his impending farewell to an audience in Las Vegas in 1978. It really was “farewell.” Bergen died two weeks later on September 30th at the age of 75. Charlie moved to the Smithsonian, showing his lasting impact he had on American culture.

Note: Crosby’s next column dealt with a special show on Mutual with a unique framing device: the “Unknown Soldier” of World War Two rose from the grave and discovered how little the world had progressed in the year since peace was signed with Japan, thanks to greed, hypocrisy, racism and and the prospect of atomic war.

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Hipster in Shock

Hipster John races to see Mary and is shocked to find she’s obese with piles of kids and diapers in “Symphony in Slang.” Here are the first five drawings of his reaction, on five consecutive frames. No Wolfie eye pops in this Tex Avery cartoon.



Variety’s lone note about the cartoon is on August 5, 1949:
John Brown, radio "trick voice" man, will present three different characters in the new MGM Technicolor cartoon, "Symphony in Slang."
It was released June 16, 1951.

Mike Lah, Walt Clinton and Grant Simmons are the animators in this cartoon.

Monday, 12 January 2015

Wake Up Fox

Loan shark Hudson C. Dann gets woken up by Woody Woodpecker knocking on his door. He flails around his arms and legs.



He jumps over his desk...



... and rushes to the door. There are plenty of outlines, pretty standard for a Woody cartoon around this time.



Frank Tipper gets the only animation credit in “The Loan Stranger” (1942).

That's a 1942 Hudson C. Dann. And this is a 1942 Hudson sedan.